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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T11:36:51+00:00 2026-05-15T11:36:51+00:00

I’m using SQLite ( system.data.sqlite v. 1.0.60.0 ) on a Fluent NHibernate project. I

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I’m using SQLite (system.data.sqlite v. 1.0.60.0) on a Fluent NHibernate project.

I have one program that writes to the DB, and another that reads from it. Occasionally, I get SQLITE_BUSY exceptions, and I need to fix this.

I found several Google references to sqlite_busy_timeout, which (if I understand correctly) will cause SQLite to re-try before throwing the exception. This would probably be sufficent for my needs.

However, this does not appear to be in the system.data.sqlite assembly.

When I search for SetTimeout using the Object Browser, I get two hits:

System.Data.SQLite.SQLite3.SetTimeout(int)

System.Data.SQLite.SQLiteBase.SetTimeout(int)

but I can’t seem to use them in my code – they don’t show up in Intellisense, and VS2008 shows a red underline for SQLite3, with the message "Can’t access internal class here".

Can anyone give me a sample (in C#) that shows the exact syntax for this method?

Or is this even the right approach? I could probably check for SQLITE_BUSY in my code, but have not found any good examples demonstrating that approach either.

Finally, do Fluent NHibernate or NHibernate have any mechanisms to provide simple shared access to a SQLite database?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T11:36:52+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:36 am

    Just like you said, SetTimeout() is internal, so you (or NHibernate) can’t call it. The method only wraps
    sqlite_busy_timeout and throws, and you definitely don’t want to use those unsafe methods in your application code.

    According to this, the SQLite provider should retry for 30 seconds.

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