Because we have the full power of vbScript there is a lot of sophisticated processing available. We can also leverage ADO database connections to pull data from any accessible relational data source.
This post focuses on import scripts. In a recent project I ran into two issues that gave error messages, one of which was not particularly useful and the solution undocumented.
The situation is a working script that pulls data from a SQL datamart for a single entity. The script generates a SQL command that includes a WHERE clause which uses the FDQM POV to define the location. The customer wanted another copy of the script to pull data for all entities, then use that new script as the import format for the parent location.
Easy-peasy. We copy the script, rename it, update our WHERE clause to pull for all entities, create another import format that uses the new script, and assign that format to our parent location. In this case the initial script was called HFMSQL and our edited copy is called HFMSQL_ALL. (I'm won't detail the mechanics of managing the import formats and locations since that is well documented.)
Error 1
The first error is reasonably descriptive.
Error: An error occurred importing the file.
Detail: Script filename [HFMSQL_ALL.uss] is different from
the procedure name entered in the script file
Detail: Script filename [HFMSQL_ALL.uss] is different from
the procedure name entered in the script file
The first line of an import script defines a function. That function has to have the same name as the import script file.
The error was caused by keeping the original the function name HFMSQL for the new HFMSQLscript HFMSQL_ALL.
Making the function name match the script name resolves the error.
Error 2
This is the error that gave me fits.
Error: Import failed. Invalid data or Empty content.
This looks like we aren't getting any data out of our edited query. A handy troubleshooting tool is to use the vbScript FileSystemObject to dump information to a text file.
Create a FileSystemObject and then use the CreateTextFile method to make the debug file. The parameter True indicates that we will overwrite an existing file.
Later in the script I write the SQL query string which is generated by the script to the debug file
The WriteLine method writes the SQL string to the debug file. The next step sends the SQL string to the SQL connection and pulls it into the record set that gets processed later in the script.
I re-ran the import, then opened the debug file and copied the SQL query and ran that directly on the SQL server. The query returned the records we expected. So I don't have empty content, but how could the data be invalid?
Just to be sure I added similar debugging statements to the original working script and adjusted the new script to pull from just the location where the working script was attached. The SQL statements that got generated were identical and running them directly on the SQL server returned the same results set.
Sometimes it helps to bring in a fresh pair of eyes so I worked with an associate who double checked my findings. We then created another copy of the working script and ran into the issue in Error 1. While fixing that error when he suggested searching for the original script name. At the bottom of the script we found this:
This is a standard practice most sample scripts you find. After the load completes you set the ActionType and ActionValue which gives the success message on completion. But note the last line which sets the function to return True to signal a successful completion to FDQM. This variable name has to match the function name which has to match the script name.
So this is another easy fix but it took a while to resolve, partly because we weren't paying attention when we copied the scripts, but mostly because the error message does not indicate the real source of the problem. Hopefully this post can save someone trouble next time they run into this error.
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