%META:TOPICPARENT{name="GlossaryEntriesS"}% ==Glossary of Technical Terms== [[GlossaryEntriesA|A]] [[GlossaryEntriesB|B]] [[GlossaryEntriesC|C]] [[GlossaryEntriesD|D]] [[GlossaryEntriesE|E]] [[GlossaryEntriesF|F]] [[GlossaryEntriesG|G]] [[GlossaryEntriesH|H]] [[GlossaryEntriesI|I]] [[GlossaryEntriesJ|J]] [[GlossaryEntriesK|K]] [[GlossaryEntriesL|L]] [[GlossaryEntriesM|M]] [[GlossaryEntriesN|N]] [[GlossaryEntriesO|O]] [[GlossaryEntriesP|P]] [[GlossaryEntriesQ|Q]] [[GlossaryEntriesR|R]] [[GlossaryEntriesS|S]] [[GlossaryEntriesT|T]] [[GlossaryEntriesU|U]] [[GlossaryEntriesV|V]] [[GlossaryEntriesW|W]] [[GlossaryEntriesX|X]] [[GlossaryEntriesY|Y]] [[GlossaryEntriesZ|Z]] [[GlossaryEntriesSymbols|#]] ==SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT== The SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT parameter appears in the [Client] section of your virtuoso.ini file. The ODBC standard SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT value is 0 or "indefinite." However, this setting is impractical in many cases. Therefore, Virtuoso's SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT allows you to set the initial timeout value--in seconds--for connected clients. Be advised, if a client application passes its own SQL_QUERY_TIMEOUT value, it will override the value passed in the virtuoso.ini file.