I have a T-SQL stored procedure (which returns a single scalar value called @HourDifference as an output parameter); you can see the execution below:
DECLARE @HourDifference_output TINYINT; -- I declare a variable to capture the output parameter-- EXEC dbo.sproc_XYZ_Notification @HourDifference = @HourDifference_output OUTPUT; SELECT @HourDifference_output AS HourDifferenceCaptured
I need to have two schedules, one at 7 AM, the other at 7 PM in the SQL Server Agent.
Can someone provide the code and guide me through this process?
750k 181 181 gold badges 1.4k 1.4k silver badges 1.5k 1.5k bronze badges asked Dec 9, 2019 at 20:53 user3812887 user3812887 443 1 1 gold badge 12 12 silver badges 39 39 bronze badgesI would question if sending emails via sql server is the best avenue. If you go this route then you will need to configure database mail.
Commented Dec 9, 2019 at 20:59Database Mail is fine; am okay with that; it is a requirement in our organization; the only challenge I have is to take the output parameter as the base for the email.
Commented Dec 9, 2019 at 21:04You could create an SQL Server agent job, with a t-sql step which uses msdb.dbo.sp_send_dbmail for sending an e-mail, when required (please see here, for the stored procedure complete reference).
Try something similar to the following:
DECLARE @HourDifference_output TINYINT; EXEC dbo.sproc_XYZ_Notification @HourDifference_output OUTPUT; -- SELECT @HourDifference_output AS HourDifferenceCaptured IF @HourDifference_output > 12 BEGIN EXEC msdb.dbo.sp_send_dbmail @profile_name = 'db_mail_profile_i_have_already_created', @recipients = '[email protected]', @body = 'Too many hours difference.', @subject = 'Automated Message' ; END
You must have already configured a database mail account, a database mail profile and granted appropriate access to the user running the job step. The second link also contains sample scripts for creating a database mail account and profile, adding the account to the profile and granting access appropriately (I personally prefer to configure database mail via the SSMS db mail wizard).
A decision to be made is whether to create a public or a private profile. You can find more information about the differences here.
Finally, it is, in my opinion, good practice to notify an administrator (via SQL Server Agent build-in mechanisms) when a job / step fails.