AppD Archive

CallGraph Snapshot Export Summary - JDBC Count

CommunityUser
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Hi Community,

I am just looking for an explanation what this count means (see attachement) ? Is this the result set or how many calls are made? 

0 Karma
1 Solution

Rajesh_Putta
Communicator

Hi Timo,

If the same JDBC SQL calls are recurring on continuous basis, we do not want to send it for each JDBC invocation, instead we maintain an index and show all those indexes referring to SQL calls. Glad that my request for PDF file made it clear to you even before i responded to it :slightly_smiling_face:

Yes count is the number of rows fetched from those SQL calls. Can we close this case now :slightly_smiling_face:


Thanks

Rajesh

View solution in original post

0 Karma

Rajesh_Putta
Communicator

Hi Timo,

If the same JDBC SQL calls are recurring on continuous basis, we do not want to send it for each JDBC invocation, instead we maintain an index and show all those indexes referring to SQL calls. Glad that my request for PDF file made it clear to you even before i responded to it :slightly_smiling_face:

Yes count is the number of rows fetched from those SQL calls. Can we close this case now :slightly_smiling_face:


Thanks

Rajesh

0 Karma

Rajesh_Putta
Communicator

Hi Timo,

Could you please send us the exported PDF to provide you with more details.

Thanks

Rajesh

0 Karma

CommunityUser
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Hi, 

sorry for my delay. Sure, I can. 

The complete PDF has a size of 45MB. I greped out the important pages and found something interesting by my own. THANKS for having a look on it.

Details of the Call Graph:

image.png

 1st JDBC Call stack listed in the call graph

image.png

I checked the whole call graph export again and found something new for me. The [n] is a refferer / index for a specific SQL Call listed down in the document (my example is SQL query #3) 

image.png

A query summary is also listed in the document

image.png

 So, the "magic" behind the [3] is clear now. 

Last question to round everything up: The count value in my last screenshot is the number of rows / results sent by the database? 

If so, i am totaly fine now!

Timo

0 Karma

Mohammed_Rayan
Contributor

Timo,

You can refer the explanation given in the below link

https://docs.appdynamics.com/display/PRO42/Call+Graphs#CallGraphs-JDBCandJDBCResultSetIterationinCal...

Regards,

Mohammed Rayan

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

See just what you’ve been missing | Observability tracks at Splunk University

Looking to sharpen your observability skills so you can better understand how to collect and analyze data from ...

Weezer at .conf25? Say it ain’t so!

Hello Splunkers, The countdown to .conf25 is on-and we've just turned up the volume! We're thrilled to ...

How SC4S Makes Suricata Logs Ingestion Simple

Network security monitoring has become increasingly critical for organizations of all sizes. Splunk has ...