I'm a C# dev using SQL Compare 5.0 to compare two databases named SourceDB and TargetDB. I call the register method on the Database a la
SourceDB.Database.Register(SourceDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions);
TargetDB.Database.Register(TargetDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions);
I get the difference by calling:
Differences differences = TargetDB.Database.CompareWith(SourceDB.Database, Options.IgnorePermissions);
I now want to ignore permissions and users for both so i figured i'd use the bitwise OR operator on the Options enum as in:
SourceDB.Database.Register(SourceDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers );
TargetDB.Database.Register(TargetDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers);
and get the difference by using
Differences differences = TargetDB.Database.CompareWith(SourceDB.Database, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers);
This doesn't seem to work as i still have Users in my differences object. I can get rid of them by looping through each Difference object in the differences collection and checking for where DatabaseObjectType == ObjectType.User but surely this is a bit of an overkill. Is there a way i can get round this or is there a glaring mistake in my code? Any help will be appreciated. :shock:
SourceDB.Database.Register(SourceDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions);
TargetDB.Database.Register(TargetDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions);
I get the difference by calling:
Differences differences = TargetDB.Database.CompareWith(SourceDB.Database, Options.IgnorePermissions);
I now want to ignore permissions and users for both so i figured i'd use the bitwise OR operator on the Options enum as in:
SourceDB.Database.Register(SourceDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers );
TargetDB.Database.Register(TargetDB.ConxProps, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers);
and get the difference by using
Differences differences = TargetDB.Database.CompareWith(SourceDB.Database, Options.IgnorePermissions | Options.IgnoreUsers);
This doesn't seem to work as i still have Users in my differences object. I can get rid of them by looping through each Difference object in the differences collection and checking for where DatabaseObjectType == ObjectType.User but surely this is a bit of an overkill. Is there a way i can get round this or is there a glaring mistake in my code? Any help will be appreciated. :shock: