I am using an SQLite database, and inserting records into it. This takes a hugely long time! I have seen people who say they can process a couple thousand in a minute. I have around 2400 records. Each record takes 30s-2m to complete. Recreating the database is not an option. I have tried to create one transaction different ways. I need to use the timer, because I am using a ProgressBar to show me that something is happening. Here is the code I am using:
string con;
con = string.Format(@"Data Source={0}", documentsFolder);
SQLiteConnection sqlconnection = new SQLiteConnection(con);
SQLiteCommand sqlComm = sqlconnection.CreateCommand();
sqlconnection.Open();
SQLiteTransaction transaction = sqlconnection.BeginTransaction();
Timer timer2 = new Timer();
timer2.Interval = 1000;
timer2.Tick += (source, e) =>
{
URL u = firefox.URLs[count2];
string newtitle = u.title;
form.label1.Text = count2 + "/" + pBar.Maximum;
string c_urls = "insert or ignore into " + table + " (id,
url, title, visit_count, typed_count, last_visit_time, hidden) values (" + dbID + ",'" + u.url + "','"
+ newtitle + "',1,1, " + ToChromeTime(u.visited) + ", 0)";
string c_visited = "insert or ignore into " + table2 + " (id,
url,
visit_time, transition) values (" + dbID2 + "," + dbID + "," +
ToChromeTime(u.visited) + ",805306368)";
sqlComm = new SQLiteCommand(c_urls, sqlconnection);
sqlComm.ExecuteNonQuery();
sqlComm = new SQLiteCommand(c_visited, sqlconnection);
sqlComm.ExecuteNonQuery();
dbID++;
dbID2++;
pBar.Value = count2;
if (pBar.Maximum == count2)
{
pBar.Value = 0;
timer.Stop();
transaction.Commit();
sqlComm.Dispose();
sqlconnection.Dispose();
sqlconnection.Close();
}
count2++;
};
timer2.Start();
What am I doing wrong?
This is what I would address, in order. It may or may not fix the problem, but it won’t hurt to see (and it might just do some magic):
Ensure the Database is not being contended with updates (from another thread, process, or even timer!). Writers will acquire locks and unclosed/over-long-running transactions can interact in bad ways. (For updates that take “30 seconds to 2 minutes” I would imagine there is an issue obtaining locks. Also ensure the media the DB is on is sufficient, e.g. local drive.)
The transaction is not being used (??). Move the transaction inside the timer callback, attach it to the appropriate SQLCommands, and dispose it before the callback ends. (Use
using).Not all SQLCommand’s are being disposed correctly. Dispose each and every one. (The use of
usingsimplifies this. Do not let it bleed past the callback.)Placeholders are not being used. Not only is this simpler and easier to use, but it is also ever so slightly more friendly to SQLite and the adapter.
(Example only; there may be errors in the following code.)