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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T18:18:26+00:00 2026-05-14T18:18:26+00:00

When running a stored procedure, we’re getting the error 297 The user does not

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When running a stored procedure, we’re getting the error 297

“The user does not have permission to perform this action”

This occurs during times of heavy load (regularly, when a trim job is running concurrently). The error clears up when the service accessing SQL Server is restarted (and very likely the trim job is finished as well), so it’s obviously not a real permissions problems. The error is reported on a line of a stored procedure which access a function, which in turn accesses dynamic management views.

What kind of situations could cause an error like this, when it’s not really a permissions problem?

Might potentially turning on trace flag 4616 fix this, as per this article? I’d like to be able to just try it, but need more info. Also, I’m baffled by the fact that this is an intermittent problem, only happening under periods of high activity.

I was trying to reproduce this same error in other situations (that were also not real permissions problems), and I found that when running this on SQL Server 2005 I do get the permissions problem:

select * from sys.dm_db_index_physical_stats(66,null,null, null, null)

(66 is an invalid DBID.)

However, we’re not using dm_db_index_physical_stats with an incorrect DBID. We ARE using dm_tran_session_transactions and dm_tran_active_transactions, but they don’t accept parameters so I can’t get the error to happen with them. But I was thinking perhaps that the issue is linked.

Thanks for any insights.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T18:18:27+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:18 pm

    Would it be related to concurrency issues?

    For example, the same data being processed or a global temp table being accessed? If so, you may consider sp_getapplock

    And does each connection use different credentials with a different set of permissions? Do all users have GRANT VIEW SERVER STATE TO xxx?

    Finally, and related to both ideas above, do you use EXECUTE AS anywhere that may not be reverted etc?

    Completely random idea: I’ve seen this before but only when I’ve omitted a GO between the end of the stored proc definition and the following GRANT statement. So the SP tried to set it’s own permissions. Is it possible that a timeout or concurrency issue causes some code to run that wouldn’t normally?

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