We've been seeing this problem for a while now and I'm really trying to wrap my head around what's causing it.
A couple of times a day we'll see periods where web pages start throwing "[Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver]Timeout expired" then shortly afterward pages start throwing "[Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver][DBNETLIB]SQL Server does not exist or access denied."
We have many different applications that connect to this database server. It averages around 2500 concurrent connections processing on average 10,000 transactions per second. Most of our applications have no problems whatsoever, the problems seem only to happen on the web server. (Perhaps it's related to connection pooling?)
I'm not sure what to attribute this problem to. The SQL server in question is vastly overpowered for the work that it does, and is equipped with per-processor licensing. So I don't think we're looking at a licensing/performance issue.
I thought maybe there was an IP connectivity issue, so I changed the ConnectionString to use the IP address and ran some long-running pings. I got 0 packets lost between the Web server and the Database server.
The ASP connection string now looks like this:
Provider=MSDASQL; Driver={SQL Server}; Server=10.0.100.100; Database=DBName; UID=WebUserName; PWD=WebUserPassword; ConnectionTimeout=15; CommandTimeout=120;
The user is a non-domain user connecting using Sql Server authentication. So I don't think it's a domain-related issue. I've checked the SQL server log files and have found nothing whatsoever corresponding to the incidents.
I've found another stackoverflow question describing similar behavior, but without a resolution.
The Details:
- Web Server: Windows 2003 Standard SP2, IIS 6.
- Database Server: Microsoft SQL Server 9.0.4035
Has anyone seen/resolved this type issue? Does anyone have any suggestions as to where I should look next?
Thanks!
-Zorlack
EDIT
Can anyone tell me what the best practice is for performing sql queries in classic high-load asp? Do we want to try to leverage connection pooling?
In looking at the code, quite a lot looks like this:
Set objCn = Server.CreateObject("ADODB.Connection")
objCn.Open(Application("RoConnStr"))
'do some stuff
objCn.Close
Set objCn = Nothing
Solution (per ScottE's advice)
This article described, to a tee, my problem. I made the registry change and then rebooted the server.
Problem Solved!