SQL Script
SQL Script
SQL Script
Copyright
2008 Invensys Systems, Inc. All Rights Reserved. All rights reserved. No part of this documentation shall be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Invensys Systems, Inc. No copyright or patent liability is assumed with respect to the use of the information contained herein. Although every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this documentation, the publisher and the author assume no responsibility for errors or omissions. Neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein. The information in this documentation is subject to change without notice and does not represent a commitment on the part of Invensys Systems, Inc. The software described in this documentation is furnished under a license or nondisclosure agreement. This software may be used or copied only in accordance with the terms of these agreements. Invensys Systems, Inc. 26561 Rancho Parkway South Lake Forest, CA 92630 U.S.A. (949) 727-3200 http://www.wonderware.com For comments or suggestions about the product documentation, send an e-mail message to productdocs@wonderware.com.
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Contents
Welcome............................................ 9
Documentation Conventions ..............................................9 Technical Support .............................................................10
Contents
Contents
GetParameterByName() ................................................43 GetRow() .........................................................................43 SaveChangesAsync() ......................................................44 SaveChangesSync() ........................................................44 SelectRow() .....................................................................45 SelectTable() ...................................................................45 SetCurrentRow().............................................................46 SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() .................................47 SetCurrentRowColumnByName() .................................48 SetParam Type Methods for SQL Server and Oracle...49 Output Parameters ....................................................50 SetBitParameterByName() .......................................50 SetCharParameterByName() ...................................51 SetDecimalParameterByName() ...............................52 SetDateTimeParameterByName() ...........................53 SetDoubleParameterByName() ................................53 SetFloatParameterByName() ...................................54 SetIntParameterByName() .......................................55 SetLongParameterByName().....................................55 SetParam Type Methods for OLEDB ............................56 SetBitParameterByIndex() ........................................57 SetCharParameterByIndex() .....................................58 SetDateTimeParameterByIndex().............................59 SetDecimalParameterByIndex()................................60 SetDoubleParameterByIndex()..................................61 SetFloatParameterByIndex().....................................61 SetIntParameterByIndex() ........................................62 SetLongParameterByIndex() .....................................63 Properties...........................................................................64 CommandTimeout .........................................................64 CurrentRowNumber.......................................................64 CurrentTableNumber.....................................................64 Disposed .........................................................................65 ExecutionState ...............................................................65 LastExecutionError........................................................65 RowCount........................................................................65 Public Enumerations.........................................................66 aaDBCommandState .....................................................66 Created .......................................................................66 Queued .......................................................................66 Failed .........................................................................66 Completed ..................................................................66 Canceled .....................................................................66
Contents
Disposed ..................................................................... 66 aaDBCommandType .....................................................67 sqlStatement .............................................................. 67 storedProcedure ......................................................... 67 aaDBParameterDirection .............................................67 Input........................................................................... 67 InputOutput .............................................................. 67 Output........................................................................ 67 ReturnValue .............................................................. 67
Contents
Contents
Welcome
This guide describes using the ArchestrA SQLData Script Library and provides practical examples of its use. You can view this document online or you can print it, in part or whole, by using the print feature in Adobe Acrobat Reader. This guide assumes you know how to use Microsoft Windows, including navigating menus, moving from application to application, and moving objects on the screen. If you need help with these tasks, see the Microsoft online help. This guide also assumes that you know how to use Microsoft SQL Server. For help with SQL Server, see the Microsoft online help. In some areas of the Application Server, you can also rightclick to open a menu. The items listed on this menu change, depending on where you are in the product. All items listed on this menu are available as items on the main menus.
Documentation Conventions
This documentation uses the following conventions:
Convention Used for
Initial Capitals
Bold Monospace
Paths and file names. Menus, commands, dialog box names, and dialog box options. Code samples and display text.
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Technical Support
Wonderware Technical Support offers a variety of support options to answer any questions on Wonderware products and their implementation. Before you contact Technical Support, refer to the relevant section(s) in this documentation for a possible solution to the problem. If you need to contact technical support for help, have the following information ready:
The type and version of the operating system you are using. For example, Microsoft Windows XP, SP1. Details of how to recreate the problem. The exact wording of the error messages you saw. Any relevant output listing from the Log Viewer or any other diagnostic applications. Details of what you did to try to solve the problem(s) and your results. If known, the Wonderware Technical Support case number assigned to your problem, if this is an ongoing problem.
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Chapter 1
Using the SQLData Script Library
The SQLData Script Library provides database integration using ArchestrA scripting. The SQLData Script Library provides the following benefits:
Your resources are managed more efficiently because the connection manager reduces the number of open connections to the database provider. This activity is known as connection pooling. You can process scripts asynchronously, which reduces impact on the hosting engine during the following activities:
Opening a connection to a data source Running SQL queries Running SQL transactions
Note It is recommended, to avoid returning excessive amount of data using script library commands, for example executing 15,000 SQL commands which each select 200 records from the Person.Contact table in the AdventureWorks sample database. This can lead to a crash of the host engine. To avoid this problem, consider using the TOP command to limit the number of records returned.
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On the main menu, click Galaxy/Import/Script Library. After you import the SQLData Script Library, you can access the library functions from the Script Function Browser in the Script tab of any object. The functions are visible in the Types section.
For more information about working with function libraries, see the Wonderware Application Server Users Guide.
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You can find details about these objects as well as their methods, properties, and enumerations in the remaining chapters in this guide. The following figure shows connection pooling in the SQLData Script Library. Although each script generates its own connection object in the script library, scripts with identical connection strings are allocated to the same connection pool. The result is fewer connections to the database.
Synchronous scripts on all objects on AppEngine X
Database A
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The following figure shows a conceptual diagram of the relationships among the various components of the SQLData script library.
aaDBRow
GetRow()
aaDBCommand
CreateCommand()
CreateTransaction()
aaDBConnection
Note that aaDBRow is one mechanism provided by aaDBCommand to read and modify data returned from the SQL query. The other mechanisms are implemented as methods of aaDBCommand.
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Create a connection object. Create one or more command objects using the CreateCommand() method of the connection object. For each command object whose SQL statement contains parameters, initialize each parameter by using either the Set<Type>ParameterByName() method or the Set<Type>ParameterByIndex() method of the command object.
Run the command object either synchronously or asynchronously. When command processing is complete, you can retrieve and modify the returned dataset. If you modify the dataset, you can save it back to the database either synchronously or asynchronously.
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You can reuse command objects indefinitely. When finished, clean up the command objects by calling their Dispose() methods.
Create a connection object. Create a transaction object by using the CreateTransaction() method of the connection object. Add one or more command objects to the transaction by using the CreateCommand() method of the transaction object. For each command object whose SQL statement contains parameters, initialize each parameter by using either the Set<Type>ParameterByName() method or the Set<Type>ParameterByIndex() method of the command object. Run the transaction object either synchronously or asynchronously.
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If any of the commands fails or returns an error, the transaction and any commands that ran within the transaction are rolled back. The transaction is returned with the appropriate indicator When transaction processing is complete, you can retrieve and modify the returned dataset for each command in the transaction that returns data. If you modify a dataset, you can save it back to the database either synchronously or asynchronously. You can reuse transaction objects indefinitely. When finished, clean up the transaction object and command objects by calling their Dispose() methods.
The following examples show how to write connection strings for the most commonly used data providers.
Using aaDBConnectionType.Sql is synonymous with the form of GetConnection() that takes only a connection string. Use the connection string example shown in Connecting to a SQL Server Data Source in place of me.ConnectionString.
Example Scripts
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Example Scripts
The following two examples illustrate the use of the SQLData Script Library to access a database.
Note These scripts are provided only as a reference.
The script provides an object that other requesting objects can use to read the specified column of a row whose part number is given and then return the column value to the requesting object. The requesting object provides the row name, part number, and start signal in UDAs. The sample object returns the requested row value and done signal in UDAs.
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Create a connection object and supply the connection string. The connection string in this example is a literal string, but you can use a connection string supplied by another ArchestrA object through a UDA. If you are using transactions, create a transaction object on the connection object that you created. Create a command object. This example supplies a literal string for the SQL statement, but it could be supplied by another ArchestrA object through a UDA. Note that the SQL statement is a query with a parameter, which allows the requesting object to specify the column to read:
a b
2 3
If you are not using transactions, create the command object on the connection object. If you are using transactions, create the command object on the transaction object.
Because the SQL statement of the command object contains a parameter, you must initialize that parameter object (or the transaction that contains it). Run the transaction or command using either the ExecuteAsync() or ExecuteSync() methods. If the command or transaction is processed synchronously, the SQLData Script Library does not return from the ExecuteSync() method until the command is complete. Because processing can take an extended period of time, you should use an asynchronous script (that is, a script that is not synchronized with the scan of the ArchestrA AppEngine). If the command or transaction is executed asynchronously, poll for completion as follows:
5 6
If your script runs synchronously with the scan of the ArchestrA AppEngine, you must signal polling to occur by a script once per scan cycle of the engine. This example script starts a second polling script, but you can write a single script with a state variable that starts processing in one state and polls in the other state.
Example Scripts
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If your script runs asynchronously with the ArchestrA AppEngine, you can poll in the following lines of the same script that starts processing using a while loop, which can take an extended period of time to finish.
When the command or transaction completes without an error, the result can be read from the command object using the parameter that was initialized before the command object was run. Check for errors at each of the major script processing steps.
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Example Scripts
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Example Scripts
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Example Scripts
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Rows = Command1.RowCount; LogMessage("Row count returned from command is " + Rows); 'Use other methods of script library to read data and assign to UDAs, etc. if Rows > 0 then LogMessage("Getting column '" + me.ColumnToRead + "' from row 0"); Command1.SelectRow(0); 'Return the requested column value from this row, signal done. me.ColumnValue = Command1.GetCurrentRowColumnByName(me.ColumnToRead); me.ColumnReadDone = true; endif; 'When done, dispose the command. Command1.Dispose(); endif; 'When done, dispose the transaction. Transaction.Dispose(); endif; 'Reset for next time me.ReadTransaction = false;
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Chapter 2
aaDBAccess Object
aaDBAccess Object
The aaDBAccess object exposes only static methods. Use static methods with the aaDBAccess object to request a connection to the data source by providing a connection string. You can use two categories of methods to create a database connection:
By default, the SQLData Script Library assumes that a connection to a SQL Server database is requested and establishes a physical connection by using the System.Data.SqlClient namespace. For details about methods that you can use with this object, see Methods on page 30.
For more information, see Connecting to Databases Other Than SQL Server on page 31.
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For more information, see Connecting to Databases Other Than SQL Server on page 31.
aaDBAccess Object
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For authentication, you can use one of the following security modes:
The keyword Integrated Security=True in the connection string overrides any other authentication control. If the Integrated Security=True keyword is present, you get Windows User Authentication for the user who is currently logged on, even if you also include credentials for a different user. If you want to impersonate another Windows users credentials, Integrated Security=True must be omitted from the connection string.
Windows Account
In the ConnectionString parameter, you must provide the following information: domain, user name and password. The domain and user name must be specified using the following syntax:
User ID=<Domain>\<UserName>; Password=<pasword>;
Removes domain, user name, and password from <ConnectionString>. Sets Integrated Security=True in <ConnectionString>.
Configures the connection manager with the specified domain, user name, and password and then requests impersonation of this user. The SQLData Script Library impersonates the user based on the properties that were provided in the connection string.
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The SQLData Script Library directly passes <ConnectionString> through to the SQL Server database. The aaDCM object uses <ConnectionString> as is. There is no need for impersonation.
Methods
You can use the following methods with the aaDBAccess object.
CreateConnection()
Use the CreateConnection() method to request a connection to a SQL Server data source.
Syntax
aaDBConnection.CreateConnection( string ConnectionString)
Parameters
ConnectionString A previously formatted connection string or a reference to an attribute in any ArchestrA object.
Remarks The CreateConnection() method returns a connection object to
object. Each connection object represents a separate connection that uses the same connection string. This method is best used to provide different connections for different purposes. For example, when one connection is used to query and another is used to update the database. You can check the status of a connection by using the ConnectionState read-only property.
Example
The following example shows a connection string for use with SQL Server. The connection string can also be stored in an attribute in an Archestra object:
me.ExampleConnectionString
Methods
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Parameters
OleDb Oracle
GetCommand()
Use the GetCommand() method to retrieve a reference to an aaDBCommand object created previously with the same or a different script. Do not create a new aaDBConnection object to access a previously created command object.
Syntax
aaDBCommand.GetCommand( string CommandId)
Parameters
commandId The Id is generated internally by the SQLData Script Library. For details, see GetId() on page 42.
Remarks
If CommandID does not represent a valid ID, GetCommand() returns a null reference.
GetConnection()
Use the GetConnection() method to request a connection to a data source.
Syntax
aaDBConnection.GetConnection( string ConnectionString)
Parameters
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used for subsequent SQL Server requests. Each time that GetConnection() is called with the identical connection string to a previous call, it returns the same connection object for reuse. This method is best used with a script that runs repeatedly, where a new connection object for each iteration would constitute a risk of memory leakage. You cannot assume that a physical connection occurs after requesting a connection to a data source. Connections are opened only on an as-needed basis to perform an operation. The only time that you can check connectivity status is immediately after an operation completes. This method immediately provides a connection object to be used for subsequent SQL requests. The first call to GetConnection() returns a unique connection object for the specified connection string, similar to CreateConnection(). Subsequent calls to GetConnection() return references to the same connection object. Thus, you can make multiple calls to reuse the same object. The connection returned by GetConnection() is never the same object as the one returned by CreateConnection(). This difference enables you to place GetConnection() calls at the top of a script that run once per scan without constantly creating connection objects.
Note Be sure to call Dispose() on connection objects that have been created with this method. The aaDBAccess SQLData Script Library contains a reference to the objects. Garbage collection cannot be performed on them until you call Dispose().
You can check the status of the connection by using the ConnectionState read-only property.
Authentication
The following three database authentication methods are supported:
You must provide a standard connection string that is created from keyword = value pairs separated by semicolons. Follow this link for a list of connection string keywords: http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms254499.aspx
Methods
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For Windows Integrated Security specify the following parameter in the connection string:
Integrated Security=true;
For Windows Account authentication, specify a connection string that adheres to the following syntax:
User ID=<domain>\<username>;Password=<password>;
For SQL Server Authentication, specify a connection string that adheres to the following syntax:
User ID=<UserName>;Password=<password>;
Parameters
OLEDB Oracle
GetDiagnostics()
Use the GetDiagnostics() method to return diagnostic information about all connections in a dataset.
Syntax
void GetDiagnostics()
Remarks
The returned dataset contains multiple tables. The table with index 0 contains the global diagnostic information. The remaining tables in the dataset correspond to each DCM connection object. For details about diagnostic properties, see the SQLData Object Help.
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GetTransaction()
Use the GetTransaction() method to obtain a reference to an aaDBTransaction object created previously in the same or a different script. Do not create a new aaDBConnection object to access a previously created transaction.
Syntax
aaDBTransaction GetTransaction( string TransactionID)
Parameters
TransactionID The ID is generated internally by the SQLData Script Library. See GetID() on page 85.
Remarks
If TransactionID does not represent a valid ID, GetTransaction() returns a null reference.
LogDiagnostics()
Use the LogDiagnostics() method to create a snapshot of all diagnostics available for a connection to be dumped to the logger. For details about diagnostic properties, see the SQLData Object Help.
Syntax
void LogDiagnostics()
RemoveCommand()
Use the RemoveCommand() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to remove internal references to the aaDBCommand object referenced by CommandID, release all resources used by the object, and clean up all references to the object in memory.
Syntax
void RemoveCommand( string CommandID)
Parameters
CommandID The unique ID, generated internally by the SQLData Script Library. For details, see GetId() on page 42.
Remarks
You must call RemoveCommand() if you previously requested CommandID. Otherwise, the memory cannot be released until the engine process is shut down. Do not keep this command object in memory, especially when it is associated with a large dataset.
Methods
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RemoveTransaction()
Use the RemoveTransaction() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to remove all references to the aaDBTransaction object referred to by TransactionID, release all resources used by the object, and clean up all references to the object in memory.
Syntax
void RemoveTransaction( string TransactionID)
Parameters
TransactionID The unique ID, generated internally by the SQLData Script Library. See aaDBTransaction.GetID() on page 85.
Remarks
Internally, the SQLData Script Library ensures that all aaDBCommand objects explicitly added to this object are removed. You must call this method if you previously requested the transaction ID. Otherwise, the memory cannot be released until the engine process is shut down. Do not keep this command object in memory, especially when it is associated with a large dataset.
ResetDiagnostics
Use the ResetDiagnostics() method to reset the current diagnostic values associated with the DCMConnectionMgr and all DCMConnections.
Syntax
void ResetDiagnostics()
Shutdown()
Use the Shutdown() method to gracefully cancel outstanding command object requests and release references to all persisted aaDBCommand and aaDBTransaction objects. Call this method just once from a shutdown script in the hosting engine.
Syntax
void Shutdown()
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Chapter 3
aaDBCommand Objects
This section contains reference information about aaDBCommand object and the methods and properties that you can use with it.
aaDBCommand Object
Use objects of type aaDBCommand to process SQL statements and stored procedures or to access a single table or view. Create instances of type aaDBCommand by calling CreateCommand() on an instance of the aaDBConnection object. For example, assuming that the aaDBConnection instance is called Connection:
Connection.CreateCommand()
When a script requests the command object ID, the command object is flagged to be persisted. The aaDBCommand objects are persisted across scripts and scan cycles but not across failover or shutdown.
Note You must call Dispose() on each instance of aaDBCommand where an ID was created. You can also call aaDBAccess.RemoveCommand() with the ID.
You can retrieve an aaDBCommand object at any time by calling the static method aaDBAccess.GetCommand() and passing the previously acquired string ID. The aaDBCommand object provides support for types that make sense for QuickScript. Other types may be supported by database columns, such as large text files or generic
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binary large objects (BLOBs), but a script might not be able to generate or analyze them. In general, if the script cannot manipulate objects of a particular type, such as a BLOB of type char[] or byte[], it might still be possible to read or write an object of that type to or from some alternate script library while storing it as type object within the script. In these cases, the object may be blindly written to a database using SetCurrentRowColumnByName() or SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() and may be blindly read from a database using GetCurrentRowColumnByName() or GetCurrentRowCollumnByIndex(). The life cycle of the aaDBCommand object follows this pattern:
1 2 3 4
The object is created by calling the aaDBConnection.CreateCommand() method. Parameters are added to the command object as necessary. The command object is run synchronously or asynchronously. The dataset object wrapped by the aaDBCommand object is accessed and manipulated. This process may involve writing the dataset object back to the database. Steps 2 through 4 can be repeated as needed.
Methods
You can use the following methods with the aaDBCommand object.
AddRow()
Use the AddRow() method to add an empty row to a memory table and make it current. You can then add values to the row by using the following methods:
SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() SetCurrentRowColumnByName() SetCurrentRow()
Syntax
result AddRow()
Remarks
The actual update to the data source is delayed until you call SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync().
Methods
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DeleteCurrentRow()
Use the DeleteCurrentRow() method to mark the currently selected row for deletion. The current row is not deleted from the data source until you call SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync().
Syntax
result DeleteCurrentRow()
Dispose()
Use the Dispose() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to free all memory resources associated with the command object. If the command is running, Dispose() cancels it. It is preferred to cancel the command before calling Dispose().
Syntax
Void Dispose()
command fail. If an ID has been retrieved for this command object, you must call Dispose() or aaDBAccess.RemoveCommand(). If you requested the ID of this command object, it is very important that you call Dispose() so it can flag the SQLData Script Library to clear all the references to this object. When you request a dataset it is very important for you to call the Dispose() method when you are no longer interested in the results of a specific command object. If you have made changes to the memory dataset such as updating, deleting, or adding, but did not issue SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync(), all changes are discarded. Subsequent method calls to request scrolling or to modify the memory dataset fail and return either a null object or error code 1016.
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ExecuteAsync()
Use the ExecuteAsync() method to queue a command object in the connection for later processing. ExecuteAsync() returns immediately, and processing occurs in the background.
Syntax
result ExecuteAsync( )
Remarks
You can check for status by reading the ExecutionState read-only property. After ExecuteAsync() is processed, you can still obtain a reference to the command objects and analyze their ExecutionState and LastError properties. To free all resources allocated for the command object, you must call Dispose().
ExecuteAsyncCancel()
Use the ExecuteAsyncCancel() asynchronous method to cancel the operations of a running command. If the command has already started running, it may run to completion. If the command is queued while waiting for other commands, it is removed from the queue without running.
Syntax
result ExecuteAsyncCancel( )
Remarks
To check for status, you can request the ExecutionState read-only property. After the method has successfully completed, the command object is canceled.
ExecuteSync()
Use the ExecuteSync() method to run the command object. This method runs synchronously and blocks the engine thread.
Syntax
result ExecuteSync( )
Remarks
To check for status, you can request the ExecutionState read-only property. After ExecuteSync() is processed you can still obtain a reference to the command object and analyze its ExecutionState and LastError properties.
Methods
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To free all resources allocated for the command object, you must call Dispose().
GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex()
Use the GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() method to obtain a specific column value from the current row. Use this method to read a single column value. For more information, see SelectRow() on page 45. You must provide a zero-based column index.
Syntax
object GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex( int ColumnNumber)
Parameters
The object returned on failure is Null. The requested index is either negative, larger than the number of columns, or there is no valid current row.
GetCurrentRowColumnByName()
Use the GetCurrentRowColumnByName() method to obtain a specific column value from the current row by column name. Use this method to read a single column value. For more information, see SelectRow() on page 45. You must provide a column name.
Syntax
object GetCurrentRowColumnByName( string ColumnName)
Parameters
GetDataSet()
Use the GetDataSet() method to retrieve the dataset stored in memory that was generated when the command object finished processing.
Syntax
DataSet GetDataset( )
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Remarks
It is not recommended that you use this method under normal conditions, because the actual dataset may contain large amount of data (huge number of rows). This method is provided for advanced users that want to directly use the SQLClient namespace to interact with the dataset.
Note If you execute this method in a synchronous script with a large number of rows, the script may time out. If you plan to use
this method, it is recommended that you configure the script to run asynchronously. ArchestrA QuickScript uses 1-based indexing when square-bracket notation is used with numeric indexes, such as DataSet.Tables[7]. To avoid confusion, use square-bracket notation with collections that support strong name indexing, such as DataSet.Tables["Customers"]. You can also bypass the dataset object by using the wrapping accessor functions described in the next sections.
GetId()
Use the GetID() method to retrieve the ID of an aaDBCommand object instance for use in a different script or scan. The SQLData Script Library generates a unique command object ID, which remains unique across all scripts on the engine.
Syntax
string GetId()
Return Value
The SQLData Script Library returns a string value, but the script engine automatically attempts to cast this value to other types. If the script assigns the returned ID to any type other than string, the ID is corrupted and does not work in future GetCommand(ID) calls.
GetParameterByIndex()
Use the GetParameterByIndex() method to retrieve output or to return parameters after the command object has been processed. If the parameter cannot be evaluated, the returned value is null.
Syntax
object GetParameterByIndex( int Index)
Methods
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Parameters
GetParameterByName()
Use the GetParameterByName() method to retrieve output or return parameters after the command object has been processed. If the parameter cannot be evaluated, the returned value is null. You must provide a parameter name.
Syntax
object GetParameterByName( string ParameterName)
Parameters
It is not considered an error if the ResultSet returned from a query contains no rows. Zero-row results can also be expected as results of queries that contain parameters, so this might be an expected result, depending on the purpose of the query.
Note Use this method only for parameters defined in a non-OLEDB-type query, as specified by the connection object. If the connection type is not OleDb, null is returned.
GetRow()
Use the GetRow() method to quickly scroll through the records in the memory table and examine the row values and determine an index to be used for selecting a row of interest. For more information, see SelectRow() on page 45. You must provide a zero-based row index.
Syntax
aaDBRow GetRow( int RowNum)
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Parameters
RowNum A zero-based row index less than the row count in the memory dataset.
Remarks
This method executes synchronously. The aaDBRow returned object has two members:
columnNames: An array filled with column names. columnValues: An array filled with column values corresponding to the row index.
The array items must be converted to strings before you can use them in string manipulation. After the command object is successfully run you can use the columnValues array to set ArchestrA attributes.
Note Before setting ArchestrA attributes you may need to cast the individual items from the columnValues array.
SaveChangesAsync()
Use the SaveChangesAsync() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to write back to the data source all changes made to the memory dataset. The dataset must have been acquired by calling ExecuteAsync() or ExecuteSync().
Syntax
result SaveChangesAsync()
Remarks
This method runs asynchronously. The request for updating the data source is queued and the method completes immediately. You must check for status by getting the ExecutionState property value.
SaveChangesSync()
This method is similar to SaveChangesAsync() except that it runs synchronously.
Syntax
result SaveChangesSync()
Remarks
This method blocks the engine thread when the script itself is synchronous.
Methods
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It is highly recommended that you use this method only in asynchronous scripts. When you configure the asynchronous script, make sure that the TimeoutLimit value is large enough to accommodate the time that this method may take to run the command object.
SelectRow()
Use the SelectRow() method to select the row with the index rowNumber in the memory table.
Syntax
result SelectRow( long RowNumber)
Parameters
After you select a row, you can then read, delete or update the row using the following methods:
GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() GetCurrentRowC() SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() SetCurrentRowColumnByName() SetCurrentRow()
SelectTable()
Use the SelectTable() method to select the table with the index TableIndex in the memory dataset. You can then read, delete, or update this DataTable.
Syntax
result SelectTable( long RowNumber)
Parameters
By default, immediately after a command object returns a non- empty dataset that runs successfully the table with index 0 is selected.
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SetCurrentRow()
Use the SetCurrentRow() method to set values for multiple columns at the same time. You must provide the column names to set and the corresponding values to be set, respectively, in the following two members of the Row parameter:
columnNames columnValues
Syntax
result SetCurrentRow ( aaDBRow Row)
Parameters
Row You can construct two ArrayList objects by using string constants or valid Archestra reference strings.
Remarks
When you construct the input ArrayList object, you can specify constants as well as valid ArchestrA reference strings. Necessary conversions are performed internally to cast values to the specific column type. The actual update to the data source is delayed until you call SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync(). If SetCurrentRow() encounters a failure to change a column, some columns may have already been changed in the internal dataset. In this case, the internal dataset reverts to the state it had immediately after the last update or SaveChanges() call. It is possible that this reversion of the internal dataset could undo changes applied prior to the current SetCurrentRow() call. For instance, if the script has a loop to modify 10 rows with SetCurrentRow() and nine rows return without a bad error code but the tenth row returns a bad error code, the internal dataset reverts to its state before the first SetCurrentRow() call. Example
Dim inputCol as System.Collections.ArrayList; Dim inputVal as System.Collections.ArrayList; Dim inputRow as aaDBClient.aaDBRow; inputCol = new System.Collections.ArrayList(); inputCol.Add("Name"); inputCol.Add("Description");
Methods
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inputCol.Add("DateTime"); inputVal = new System.Collections.ArrayList(); inputVal.Add("Name"); inputVal.Add(me.strValue); inputVal.Add(me.DT); inputRow.columnNames = inputCol; inputRow.columnValues = inputVal;
SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex()
Use the SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() method to update the column at index columnNumber in the currently selected row.
Syntax
result SetCurrentRowColumnByIndex ( int ColumnNumber, object NewValue)
Parameters
ColumnNumber The zero-based index of the column in the memory table. NewValue You can specify a constant or a valid ArchestrA reference string. Both relative references and fully qualified references are supported. For example:
me.ShortDesc relative reference UD1.status fully qualified reference string "John Smith" constant
Remarks
Necessary conversions are performed internally to cast newValue to the column type. When you try to change a value using this method and the type passed in does not match the type specified for the column in the database table, one of the following outcomes occurs:
The value is written with an automated type conversion The transaction fails completely because the conversion would result in loss of data.
The actual update to the data source is delayed until you call SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync().
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SetCurrentRowColumnByName()
Use the SetCurrentRowColumnByName() method to update the column named ColumnName in the currently selected row.
Syntax
result SetCurrentRowColumnByName ( string ColumnName, object NewValue)
Parameters
ColumnName String constant that is enclosed in quotation marks or another ArchestrA reference that can evaluate to a string. For example: "LastName" Spaces are allowed. For more details see SQL Server documentation regarding column naming rules. NewValue You can specify a constant or a valid ArchestrA reference string. Both relative references and fully qualified references are supported. For example:
me.ShortDesc relative reference UD1.status fully qualified reference string "John Smith" constant
Remarks
Necessary conversions are performed internally to cast newValue to the column type. When you try to change a value using this method and the type passed in does not match the type specified for the column in the database table, one of the following outcomes occurs:
The value is written with an automated type conversion The transaction fails completely because the conversion would result in loss of data.
The actual update to the data source is delayed until you call SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync().
Methods
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You must use the version of the method that matches the way that you created your connection object. When you create a connection object with aaDBConnectionTypeOleDb, you must use the method Set<Type>ParameterByIndex(). For all other connections, use the method Set<Type>ParameterByName(). Parameters are usually mapped to a table column, which always has a specific type. The method properties that you must supply with each of the methods in this subsection depend on the column type that they map to. Separate methods are necessary because different column types require that you specify different method parameters. For example, a column of type NVarChar requires a length be specified while a column type of Decimal requires precision and scale. The method parameters that are common across all methods are:
You can specify null for parameterValue when the Parameter Direction is Output or ReturnValue. Parameter Direction (parameterDirection) enumerated values are:
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Output Parameters
The GetParameterByIndex() and GetParameterByName() methods return values to the script through InputOutput, Output, or ReturnValue parameters. It is not possible to return values directly to ArchestrA attributes through InputOutput, Output or ReturnValue parameters, only DIM script variables. This is a constraint of the scripting infrastructure implemented in Application Server version 3.0. If you want the value returned by GetParameterByIndex() or GetParameterByName() to set a value to an ArchestrA attribute reference, perform the following steps:
1
Declare a local script variable and return the InputOutput, Output, or ReturnValue parameter by making a GetParameterByIndex() or GetParameterByName() method call. Use this local variable to set the desired ArchestrA reference.
SetBitParameterByName()
Note Do not use this method for the Oracle data type Boolean value. Use SetIntParameterByName instead.
Use the SetBitParameterByName() method to configure a bit parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetBitParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
ParameterName String identifier used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the parameter name is boolValue.
"SELECT StateProvinceID ,StateProvinceCode ,CountryRegionCode ,IsOnlyStateProvinceFlag ,Name ,TerritoryID ,rowguid ,ModifiedDate FROM AdventureWorks.Person.StateProvince WHERE IsOnlyStateProvinceFlag = @boolValue"
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51
ParameterValue
0 false me.boolValue
Example
SetBitParameterByName ("boolValue", me.boolValue, aaDBParamDirection.Input)
SetCharParameterByName()
Use the SetCharParameterByName() method to configure a character string parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetCharParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection, int Length)
Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier that is used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the input parameter is "lastName."
"SELECT * FROM Person.Contact WHERE (LastName = @lastName)"
ParameterDirection For possible values, see aaDBParameterDirection on page 67. Length Specifies the maximum length of the parameter. If the length of the parameterValue is greater, the parameterValue is truncated to the specified length.
Example
SetCharParameterByName ("lastName", "Smith",aaDBParamDirection.Input, 50)
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SetDecimalParameterByName()
Use the SetDecimalParameterByName() method to configure a decimal parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetDecimalParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection, short Precision, short Scale)
Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the name of the parameter is "RejectedQuantity".
"INSERT INTO Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail (PurchaseOrderID ,DueDate ,OrderQty ,ProductID ,UnitPrice ,ReceivedQty ,RejectedQty ,ModifiedDate) VALUES (4,'2008-01-28',4,4,4,12.89,@RejectedQuantity, '2008-01-28') "
ParameterValue This parameter supports float, double or string values. You can also specify a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
ParameterDirection For possible values, see aaDBParameterDirection on page 67. Precision A number that indicates the total number of digits. Scale A number that indicates the number of digits to the right of the decimal point.
Example
SetDecimalParameterByName ("RejectedQuantity", me.Quantity,aaDBParamDirection.Input, 8, 2)
Methods
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SetDateTimeParameterByName()
Use the SetDateTimeParameterByName() method to configure a DateTime parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetDateTimeParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier used in the SQL statement. For example, in the following SQL statement, the name of the parameter is "NewDate"
"INSERT INTO Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail (PurchaseOrderID ,DueDate ,OrderQty ,ProductID ,UnitPrice ,ReceivedQty ,RejectedQty ,ModifiedDate) VALUES (4,'2008-01-28',4,4,4,12.89,12.56,@NewDate)"
ParameterValue The DateTime, string value, or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
SetDoubleParameterByName()
Use the SetDoubleParameterByName() method to configure a double parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetDoubleParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
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Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the output parameter name is "AvgReject"
"SELECT @AvgReject = Avg(RejectedQty) FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail "
ParameterValue A double-precision floating number or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
123.333 me.Limit
SetFloatParameterByName()
Use the SetFloatParameterByName() method to configure a float parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetFloatParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection
Parameters
ParameterName String identifier used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the name of the output parameter is "AvgReject."
"SELECT @AvgReject = Avg(RejectedQty) FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail "
123.333 me.Limit
Methods
55
Example
SetFloatParameterByName ("AvgReject", null, aaDBParamDirection.Output)
SetIntParameterByName()
Use the SetIntParameterByName() method to configure an integer parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Note Use this method for the Oracle data type Boolean.It is specific to Oracle. Syntax
result SetIntParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier that is used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the name of the output parameter is "Cnt"
"SELECT @Cnt=Count (*)(RejectedQty) FROM Person.Contact "
SetLongParameterByName()
Use the SetLongParameterByName() method to configure a long parameter by the name encoded into the text of a SQL statement using the @ character.
Syntax
result SetLongParameterByName ( string ParameterName, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
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Parameters
ParameterName The string identifier that is used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the name of the output parameter is "ProdID"
"SELECT ProductID, SUM(WorkOrderID) AS OrderCnt FROM Production.WorkOrder WHERE ProductID = @ProdID GROUP BY ProductID"
Methods
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It is necessary to have separate methods because different column types require that you specify different method parameters. For example a column of type NVarChar requires that you specify a length, while a column type of Decimal requires that you specify precision and scale. The following method parameters are common across all methods:
Parameter Index (Index) this is 1-based Parameter Value (parameterValue) You can specify null for parameterValue when the parameterDirection is Output or ReturnValue.
SetBitParameterByIndex()
Use the SetBitParameterByIndex() method to configure a bit parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetBitParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement, the parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
"SELECT StateProvinceID ,StateProvinceCode ,CountryRegionCode ,IsOnlyStateProvinceFlag ,Name ,TerritoryID ,rowguid ,ModifiedDate
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Example
SetBitParameterByIndex (0, me.boolValue, aaDBParamDirection.Input)
SetCharParameterByIndex()
Use the SetCharParameterByIndex() method to configure a character string parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetCharParameterByIndex ( int Index, string ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection, int Length)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the input parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character.
"SELECT * FROM Person.Contact WHERE (LastName > ?)"
Methods
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Length The maximum length of the parameter. If the length of the parameterValue is greater, the parameterValue is truncated to the specified length.
Example
SetCharParameterByIndex (0, "Smith",aaDBParamDirection.Input, 50)
SetDateTimeParameterByIndex()
Use the SetDateTimeParameterByIndex() method to configure a DateTime parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetDateTimeParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection Parameterdirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. For example: In the following SQL statement the parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
"INSERT INTO Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail (PurchaseOrderID ,DueDate ,OrderQty ,ProductID ,UnitPrice ,ReceivedQty ,RejectedQty ,ModifiedDate) VALUES (4,'2008-01-28',4,4,4,12.89,12.56,?)"
ParameterValue DateTime, string value, or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
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SetDecimalParameterByIndex()
Use the SetDecimalParameterByIndex() method to configure a decimal parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetDecimalParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection, short Precision, short Scale)
Parameters
Index Sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. For example: In the following SQL statement the parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
"INSERT INTO Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail (PurchaseOrderID ,DueDate ,OrderQty ,ProductID ,UnitPrice ,ReceivedQty ,RejectedQty ,ModifiedDate) VALUES (4,'2008-01-28',4,4,4,12.89,?,'2008-01-28') "
ParameterValue This parameter supports float, double, or string values. You can also specify a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
ParameterDirection For possible values, see aaDBParameterDirection on page 67. Precision A number that indicates the total number of digits. Scale A number that indicates the number of digits to the right of the decimal point.
Example
SetDecimalParameterByIndex (1, me.Quantity,aaDBParamDirection.Input, 8, 2)
Methods
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SetDoubleParameterByIndex()
Use the SetDoubleParameterByIndex() method to configure a double parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetDoubleParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement, the output parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
"SELECT ? = Avg(RejectedQty) FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail "
ParameterValue A double-precision floating number or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
123.333 me.Limit
SetFloatParameterByIndex()
Use the SetFloatParameterByIndex() method to configure a float parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetFloatParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement.
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In the following SQL statement the output parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
"SELECT ? = Avg(RejectedQty) FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail "
ParameterValue A double-precision floating number or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
123.333 me.Limit
SetIntParameterByIndex()
Use the SetIntParameterByIndex() method to configure a integer parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetIntParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the output parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character.:
"SELECT ? = Avg(RejectedQty) FROM Purchasing.PurchaseOrderDetail "
ParameterValue A double-precision floating number or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
123.333 me.Limit
Methods
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SetLongParameterByIndex()
Use the SetLongParameterByIndex() method to configure a long parameter as encoded into the text of an OLEDB SQL statement.
Syntax
result SetLongParameterByIndex ( int Index, object ParameterValue, aaDBParameterDirection ParameterDirection)
Parameters
Index The sequential index of the parameter as used in the SQL statement. In the following SQL statement the output parameter corresponds to the question mark (?) character:
" SELECT ProductID, SUM(WorkOrderID) AS OrderCnt FROM Production.WorkOrder WHERE ProductID = ? GROUP BY ProductID"
ParameterValue A double-precision floating number or a valid ArchestrA reference string. For example:
123.333 me.ProductID
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Properties
You can use the following properties with the aaDBCommand object.
CommandTimeout
This property accesses the underlying CommandTimeout property of the DCM command object. The DCM command object in turn, accesses the ADO.NetDbCommand.CommandTimeout property. According to MSDN, this CommandTimeout property gets or sets the wait time before terminating the attempt to run a command object and generating an error.
Notes:
If the DCM command object has been removed or is otherwise invalid, reading this property returns 0; writing it has no effect. An exception is not thrown. When aaDBConnectionType=Oracle, this property is not supported. Setting a command object timeout has no effect, and the value returned is always 0.
CurrentRowNumber
This read-only property returns the row value most recently set by the last call to SelectRow() or the new row number that has been created if AddRow() has been called since SelectRow(). This property returns a value of -1 if any of the following conditions occurred:
A call to SelectRow() was not made. An invalid row number was passed in the last call to SelectRow().
DeleteCurrentRow() was called.
Syntax
long CurrentRowNumber;
CurrentTableNumber
This read-only property returns the table index most recently set by the last call to SelectTable(). This property returns 0 by default immediately after a command object (returning a dataset that is not empty) is run successfully.
Properties
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Syntax
long CurrentTableNumber;
Disposed
This read-only property returns a Boolean value that indicates whether the command object has been disposed. If disposed, the command object can no longer be used.
ExecutionState
This read-only property returns the execution state of a SQL command. Because command processing can be asynchronous, you must determine whether the command has been processed before you request the execution state.
Syntax
aaDBCommandState.ExecutionState
LastExecutionError
This property returns the last error, if any, that is the error string generated by the provider. Use this property in conjunction with the ExecutionState property. The LasExecutionError property returns the error generated by the provider for the failed command object.
Syntax
string LastExecutionError
RowCount
Use this read-only property to obtain the number of records in the memory dataset that was retrieved by a SQL command. When it is used with a SQL action command such as INSERT, DELETE, or UPDATE, the property returns the number of records affected. This property returns a value of zero in the following cases:
The SQL command has not been queued. The SQL command has been queued but is not completed.
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Syntax
int RowCount;
Public Enumerations
The following public enumerations apply to the aaDBCommand object.
aaDBCommandState
This public enumeration indicates the state of an aaDBCommand object.
Created
This value indicates that the command has been created. However, the command has not yet run, and you can assign parameters to the command.
Queued
This value indicates that the command is queued for execution. This state occurs immediately after the call to aaDBCommand.ExecuteAsync() or aaDBCommand.ExecuteSync(). Queued is a transitional state that changes to either Failed or Completed.
Failed
This value indicates that the command failed.
Completed
This value indicates that the command completed successfully.
Canceled
This value indicates that the command has been canceled.
Disposed
This value indicates that Dispose() has been called for the command object. Disposed is automatically set when aaDBAccess.RemoveCommand() is called, or when Dispose() is called on the connection object or transaction object that owns the command.
Public Enumerations
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aaDBCommandType
This public enumeration describes how the command text for an aaDBCommand object is used.
Note When you use the aaDBCommandType enumeration, be aware that not all requests work with all data providers. For example, Microsoft Access does not support stored procedures. The InputOutput direction is not supported by all data providers. Always check the documentation for the data providers about supported options.
sqlStatement
Indicates that the command text is a valid SQL statement.
storedProcedure
Indicates that the command text is a stored procedure name.
aaDBParameterDirection
This public enumeration indicates the direction of parameters used for SQL statements.
Note When you use the aaDBParameterDirection enumeration, be aware that not all requests work with all data providers. For example, Microsoft Access does not support stored procedures. The InputOutput direction is not supported by all data providers. Always check the documentation for the data providers about supported options.
Input
This value indicates that the parameter is input only.
InputOutput
This value indicates that the parameter is capable of both input and output.
Output
This value indicates that the parameter is output only.
ReturnValue
This value indicates the presence of a return value from an operations such as a stored procedure, built-in function, or user-defined function.
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Chapter 4
aaDBConnection Object
This section discuses aaDBConnection object and the methods and properties that you can use with it.
aaDBConnection Object
Use objects of type aaDBConnection to create a new aaDBCommand object or aaDBTransaction object. You can create instances of aaDBConnection only through the static methods aaDBAccess.CreateConnection() or aaDBAccess.GetConnection(). Creating an instance of the aaDBConnection object is not equivalent to creating and maintaining a physical connection to the data source. The actual physical connection opens on demand when a request is made to run aaDBCommand objects or aaDBTransaction objects. The physical connections are controlled by the Database Connection Manager (DCM). The SQLData Script Library does not expose any mechanism to allow you to fine-tune its behavior, such as defining how many connections to use.
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Connection Pooling
When you request a SQL command or transaction to be run on the aaDBConnection object, an actual physical connection is opened on demand and closed when the command or transaction finishes processing. The SQLData Script Library uses the DCM common component in regard to connection pooling. When an aaDBConnection object is first created, no attempt is made to achieve a physical connection. The ConnectionState property remains in the Disconnected state. The physical connection is attempted only after a command object is run (a stand-alone command object or a command object that is part of a transaction). After the first command object that requires a physical connection runs, the physical connection remains open for an unspecified period (depending on loading) and closes automatically after a time. If a script requires confirmation of a successful physical connection, it must issue some benign SQL statement and then check the ConnectionState property of the connection.
Note You must call Dispose() on each instance of aaDBConnection.
Methods
You can use the following methods with the aaDBConnection object.
CreateCommand()
Use the CreateCommand() method to create a new aaDBCommand object.
Syntax
aaDBCommand CreateCommand( string CommandText, aaDBCommandType CommandType, bool ReturnDataset)
Methods
71
Parameters You can also configure the newly created object by adding parameters and then executing them. The parameters are identified in the SQL statement by the at sign (@) character when ProviderType is SQL. The following SQL statement has one parameter, lastName:
"SELECT * FROM Person.Contact WHERE (LastName > @lastName)"
In this case, you configure the parameters by index and not by name. Be aware that you cannot mix configuration parameters by index and by name.
Return Value
If a failure occurs, this method returns null. Getting the ExecutionState property of the newly-created command object returns Created.
Parameters
CommandText One of the following: SQL Statement Stored Procedure name CommandType Specifies how the SQL statement is handled: sqlStatement storedProcedure
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ReturnDataset Boolean, indicates if the command object is to return a dataset If True, you want a data table to be returned. For example: sqlStatement ="SELECT * FROM Person.Contact" If False, you want to modify only the database or get the Output or ReturnValue parameter. Examples are INSERT, DELETE, and UPDATE SQL statements. The data that is returned upon successful execution of a query (Table, View or StoredProcedure) is stored in memory. Scalar values are not returned, other than by being part of the returned dataset. You can then access this data by using the interface provided by the aaDBCommand object.
CreateTransaction()
Use the CreateTransaction() method to create a new aaDBTransaction object.
Syntax
aaDBTransaction CreateTransaction()
Return Value
If a failure occurs, this method returns null. Getting the ExecutionState property of the newly-created aaDBTransaction object returns Created.
Remarks
You add aaDBCommand objects to this object that are processed as a whole in the order that they were added.
Dispose()
Use the Dispose() method to free all memory resources associated this database connection object.
Syntax
void Dispose()
Remarks
If commands or transactions are running when Dispose() is called, Dispose() cancels the command or transaction object.
Properties
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GetDiagnostics()
Use the GetDiagnostics() method to return a set of diagnostic information about all connections in a dataset.
Syntax
void GetDiagnostics()
Remarks
The returned dataset contains multiple tables. The table with index 0 contains the global diagnostics. The rest of the tables in the dataset correspond to each DCMConnection object. For details about diagnostic properties, see the SQLData Object Help.
LogDiagnostics()
Use the LogDiagnostics() method to dump a snapshot of all available connection diagnostic information to the logger. For details about diagnostic properties, see the SQLData Object Help.
Syntax
void LogDiagnostics()
ResetDiagnostics
Use the ResetDiagnostics() method to reset the current diagnostic values of the connection object.
Syntax
void ResetDiagnostics()
Properties
You can use the following properties with the aaDBConnection object.
ConnectionName
Use this property to enable the log of diagnostics that was generated by calling aaDBAccess.LogDiagnostics() to include a meaningful name. Having a meaningful name may be necessary if a debugging effort requires you to distinguish one connection from another. To see the connection name in the logged diagnostics, look for the line that reads as follows:
aaDBIntegration ConnectionName, <Name>, , Clilent assigned conection name,
The <Name> part of the line is replaced with the name that the script has applied to the ConnectionName property of the aaDBConnection object. If the ConnectionName property has
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not been assigned a name by the script, it defaults to a name of the form SQLScriptConnection<N>, where <N> is an incrementing integer value.
Syntax
String ConnectionName
ConnectionState
Use this read-only property to verify that the connection string specified by GetConnection successfully establishes the initial connection to the data source.
Note You cannot use this property to determine the status of an actual physical connection to the data source. No polling mechanism is available to detect a broken connection.
If intermittent network failures occur, ConnectionState does not indicate the failure until a command or transaction is run. However, when a command is run, the ConnectionState property updates the current connection state. The return type is an enumerated value of type aaDBConnectionState.
Syntax
aaDBConnectionState ConnectionState
Disposed
This read-only property indicates whether Disposed() has been called for a connection object. If the property returns True, no other method or property can be called on this instance.
Syntax
Bool Disposed
LastError
Use this read-only property with the ExecutionState property. It returns the last error string generated by the provider. This property shows a description of errors that were encountered while parsing the connection string. The string comes from exceptions thrown by the Microsoft object or data provider objects.
Syntax
string LastError
Public Enumerations
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Public Enumerations
The following public enumerations apply to the aaDBConnection objects.
aaDBConnectionState
This public enumeration determines the state of the aaDBConnection object. Each value reflects the current state of the connection in the DCM.
Disconnected
Disconnected is the state of the aaDBConnection object immediately after it transitions through Connected or fails to connect. The disconnect timing is controlled by the underlying ADO.Net communication pooling logic. The Disconnected state remains active until the DCM is required to create a physical connection in response to a command. A previous connected state can transition to a disconnected state if a command is run and the physical connection has been lost.
Connecting
This value indicates a transition state. It indicates that the DCM has started a physical connection to a database based on its internal connection pooling logic and the connection is not complete or has not yet failed.
Connected
This value indicates that the DCM has established a physical connection to a database in response to a command.
Created
This value indicates the initial state for a connection after creation until a transaction or command is run on it. After the state changes to something else, the state can never return to Created.
Disposed
This value indicates that Dispose() has been called for the connection.
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aaDBConnectionType
This public enumeration determines the type of connection that an aaDBConnection object is being created for.
Sql
This value indicates a connection for a Microsoft SQL Server database.
OleDb
This value indicates a connection using Microsoft OLEDB.
Oracle
This value indicates a connection for an Oracle database server.
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Chapter 5
aaDBRow Object
This section describes the aaDBRow object and the methods and properties that you can use with it.
aaDBRow Object
Use objects of type aaDBRow to access (set or get) a single row from the memory dataset generated while an aaDBCommand object is running. An instance of the aaDBRow object is returned by aaDBCommand.GetRow(). SetCurrentRow() also requires an instance of this type as an input parameter. You can modify the aaDBRow object returned by GetRow() and feed it back to SetCurrentRow(), or you can construct a new aaDBRow object specifically for SetCurrentRow(). The aaDBRow object has two public members both of type ArrayList:
columnName columnValue
Note You can use this type to update a row in the memory table by configuring only a subset of the columns.
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Methods
You can use the following methods with the aaDBRow object.
Properties
79
GetColumnName()
Use the GetColumnName() method to retrieve the name of the column specified by ColumnNum.
Syntax
string GetColumnName( int ColumnNum)
Return Value
If ColumnNum is equal to or greater than the number of columns stored in the row, as returned by the ColumnCount property, null is returned.
GetColumnValue()
Use the GetColumnValue() method to retrieve the value of the column specified by ColumnNum.
Syntax
object GetColumnValue( int ColumnNum)
Return Value
If ColumnNum is equal to or greater than the number of columns stored in the row, as returned by the ColumnCount property, null is returned.
Note The value is returned as a generic object and must be cast by the script to the intended type.
Properties
You can use the following properties with the aaDBRow object.
ColumnCount
Use this read-only property to retrieve the number of columns stored in the row object.
Syntax
int ColumnCount
ColumnNames
Use this read-only property to retrieve the ArrayList that internally stores the column names for the row.
Syntax
ArrayList ColumnNames
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ColumnValues
Use this read-only property to retrieve the ArrayList that internally stores the column values for the row.
Syntax
ArrayList ColumnValues
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Chapter 6
aaDBTransaction Object
This section explains how to use the aaDBTransaction object and the methods and properties associated with it.
aaDBTransaction
Use objects of type aaDBTransaction to process multiple aaDBCommand objects as a single unit. Create instances of type aaDBTransaction by calling the CreateTransaction() method on an instance of the aaDBConnection object. For example, assuming that the aaDBConnection instance is called Connection:
Connection.CreateTransaction()
If you want to ensure that all SQL commands are run as a whole or not run at all, you must create an instance of the aaDBTransaction object. Use the instance to create aaDBCommand objects. When the transaction object is run, all aaDBCommand objects that are added to this aaDBTransaction object are run in the order that they were added. If the transaction is rolled back, none of the objects are run. Commands added to a transaction cannot be run as stand-alone command objects but are automatically processed when the transaction runs. When a script requests the transaction object ID, the transaction object is flagged to be persisted. The SQLData Script Library persists the object across scripts and scan cycles.
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You can retrieve an aaDBTransaction object at any time by calling the static method aaDBAccess.GetTransaction () and passing the previously acquired string ID.
Note You must call Dispose() on each instance of aaDBTransaction.
Methods
You can use the following methods with the aaDBTransaction object.
CreateCommand()
Use the CreateCommand() method to create a new aaDBCommand object. You can configure the new object by adding parameters and then running it.
Syntax
aaDBCommand CreateCommand( string CommandText, aaDBCommandType CommandType, bool ReturnDataset)
Remarks
Dispose()
Use the Dispose() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to free all resources allocated for the transaction object and all commands that were added as part of this transaction.
Syntax
void Dispose()
Remarks
If the transaction is currently running, Dispose() automatically cancels the transaction before removing it. The SQLData Script Library issues Dispose() calls for every command in the transaction. If an ID has been retrieved for this command, you must call Dispose() or aaDBAccess.RemoveCommand().
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ExecuteAsync()
Use the ExecuteAsync() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to queue all command objects in the transaction that are queued for later processing. ExecuteAsync() returns immediately and processing occurs in the background.
Syntax
Result ExecuteAsync()
Remarks
You can use the ExecutionState property to check for status. If any commands complete with an error, the SQLData Script Library issues a transaction rollback to prevent changes to the data source. After ExecuteAsync() is processed, you can still obtain a reference to any commands that were added and analyze their ExecutionState and LastExecutionError properties. When the transaction object runs, all aaDBCommand objects that are added to the aaDBTransaction are run in the order that they were added. The following outcomes can occur as the result of processing a transaction:
Success: All commands succeeded. Each command shows an ExecutionState of Completed. Any dataset for that command is associated with it. Cancellation: Each command in the transaction shows an ExecutionState of Canceled. Any data associated with the command is removed. Failure: When one command in a transaction fails, the command has an ExecutionState of Failed. All commands preceding it show an ExecutionState of Completed and retain any datasets that were part of their successful processing.
To free all resources allocated for the transaction object and the commands, you must call Dispose().
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ExeuteAsyncCancel()
Use the ExecuteAsyncCancel() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to roll back all commands that are queued as part of a transaction.
Syntax
Result ExecuteAsyncCancel()
Remarks
You can use the ExecutionState property to check for status. As a result of successful execution, all command objects created from this transaction are canceled.
ExecuteSync()
Use the ExecuteSync() method to instruct the SQLData Script Library to run all commands that are queued as part of a transaction.
Syntax
Result ExecuteSync()
Remarks
You can use the ExecutionState property to check for status of this method. If any one of the commands completes with an error, the SQLData Script Library issues a rollback action to guarantee that the data source does not see any of the changes. When the transaction object runs, all aaDBCommand objects that are added to the aaDBTransaction are run in the order that they were added. The following outcomes can occur as the result of processing a transaction:
Success: All commands succeeded. Each command shows an ExecutionState of Completed. Any dataset for that command is associated with it. Cancellation: Each command in the transaction shows an ExecutionState of Canceled. Any data associated with the command is removed. Failure: When one command in a transaction fails, that command object has an ExecutionState of Failed. All command objects preceding it show an ExecutionState of Completed and retain any datasets that were part of their successful processing.
After ExecuteSync() is processed, you can still obtain a reference to the command objects that were added and analyze their ExecutionState and LastExecutionError properties.
Properties
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To free all resources allocated for the aaDBTransaction object and the aaDBCommand objects you must call Dispose().
GetID()
Use the GetID() method if you want to retrieve the ID of an aaDBTransaction object instance to get a reference to this object at a later time in a different script or scan. The SQLData Script Library generates a unique transaction ID and persists the transaction object in memory.
Syntax
string GetID()
Return Value
Properties
Use the following properties with the aaDBTransaction object.
Disposed
This read-only property indicates whether Disposed() has been called for a transaction object. If the property returns True, no other method or property can be called on this instance.
Syntax
Bool Disposed
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ExecutionState
Use this read-only property to return the state of this transaction object. Because the processing of the transaction is asynchronous, you must determine if it has finished processing before you request the results.
Syntax
aaDBTransactionState ExecutionState
FailedCommandID
Use this property to return the ID of the first failed command object during transaction processing. If the processing action succeeds, FailedCommandID = 0.
Syntax
string FailedCommandID
LastExecutionError
During processing, this property is set to the last error, if any. The error string is the error string generated by the provider. Use this property in conjunction with the ExecutionState property.
LastExecutionError indicates the error generated by the
provider for the first command object in the transaction that failed. To find the command object that failed to process, check the FailedCommandID property.
LastExecutionError is blank when the transaction runs
successfully.
Syntax
string LastExecutionError
Public Enumeration
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Public Enumeration
The following public enumeration applies to the aaDBTransaction object.
aaDBTransactionState
This public enumeration indicates the state of an aaDBTransaction.
Created
This value indicates that a transaction has been created. The transaction has not yet run. You can add commands to the transaction.
Queued
This value indicates that the transaction has been queued to run. This state occurs immediately after an aaDBTRansaction.ExecutedAsync() or aaDBTRansaction.ExecutedSync() call. Queued is a transitional state that changes to either Failed or Completed.
Failed
This value indicates that the transaction has failed.
Completed
This value indicates that the transaction completed successfully.
Canceled
This value indicates that the transaction was canceled before it could complete.
Disposed
This value indicates that the Dispose() method has been called for the command object. Disposed is automatically set when aaDBAccess.RemoveTransaction() is called or when the connection object that owns the transaction is disposed.
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Chapter 7
Error Codes
Various API scripting methods return an error code as a numeric value. Methods with syntax descriptions that begin with result return these numeric values. This table shows the numeric value, its corresponding error, and meaning of each error code.
Numeric Value
-1
Unknown Failure This value indicates an exception whose reason could not be determined at run time.
0 100
Success This value indicates a good result; no error occurred. SoftwareError This indicates that the internal code returned an unexpected result, but the case was handled.
1000
StatementNotReady This error is returned when an aaDBCommand object is run, but it is not properly prepared for processing.
1001
StatementFailed This error is returned when an aaDBCommand object runs and fails to complete properly. This result occurs when the SQL query is malformed.
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Numeric Value
1002
DatasetIsNull This error is returned when the results of an aaDBCommand object are being examined or manipulated, but no dataset is associated with the object. This message can mean that the command has not yet run, the SQL query was malformed, or the object was not of a type to return data.
1003
DatasetIsEmpty This error occurs when the currently selected row or table number is beyond the end of the data in the dataset that is associated with the aaDBCommand object.
1004
InvalidConnection This error is returned when an aaDBCommand attempts to run and the connection object it is attached to has not established a good connection to the database.
1005
InvalidRowNum This error is returned by aaDBCommand.SelectRow() when the row number specified is negative or larger than the number of rows in the dataset that is associated with the aaDBCommand object.
1006
InvalidColValue This error is returned when a column is examined or manipulated by the index and the index does not represent a valid column number.
1007
InvalidTableNum This error is returned by aaDBCommandSelectTable() when the table number does not represent a table that is currently stored in the dataset that is associated with the aaDBCommand object.
1008
MissingParameter This error is returned when an OLEDB style aaDBCommand object is run and not all parameter indexes were supplied.
1009
NamedParametersNotSupported This error is returned when an attempt is made to call SetXXXParameterByName() for a non-OLEBB style aaDBCommand object.
1010
ParameterNameIsRequired This error is returned when an attempt is made to call SetXXXParameterByIndex() for a non-OLEBB style aaDBCommand object.
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Numeric Value
1011
InvalidRequestOperationInProgress This error is returned when an attempt is made to run an aaDBCommand object that is currently processing. If a command or transaction is currently in progress through ExecuteAsync(), that same object cannot be executed again with ExecuteAsync() or ExecuteSync() until the previous process is complete. Only a single object can be in the processing queue at any time.
1012
SaveChangesNotSupportedForStoredProcedure This error is returned when either SaveChangesSync() or SaveChangesAsync() is called after manipulating the dataset associated with an aaDBCommand object whose query was originally against a stored procedure.
1013
InvalidRequestNotSupportedInCurrentState This error is returned when the aaDBCommand object is not in a state where the requested run or cancel can be honored.
1014
InvalidRequestPartOfTransaction This error indicates that you attempted to run or save changes to an aaDBCommand object that was created to be part of an aaDBTransaction. This activity is not permitted.
1015
DCMObjectInvalid This error indicates that the DCM cannot provide an object to support aaDBConnection, aaDBCommand, aaDBTransaction.
1016
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93
Index
A
aaDBAccess object 27, 31 CreateConnection() 28, 30 GetCommand() 31 GetConnection() 28 GetDiagnostics() 33 GetTransaction() 34 LogDiagnostics() 34 RemoveCommand() 34 RemoveTransaction() 35 ResetDiagnostics() 35 Shutdown() 35 aaDBCommand object 37 AddRow() 38 DeleteCurrentRow() 39 Dispose() 39 ExecuteAsync() 40 ExecuteAsyncCancel() 40 ExecuteSync() 40 GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() 41 GetCurrentRowColumnByName() 41 GetDataSet() 41 GetId() 42 GetParameterByIndex() 42 GetParameterByName() 43 GetRow() 43 properties 64 CommandTimeout 64
CurrentRowNumber 64 CurrentTableNumber 64 Disposed 65 ExecutionState 65 LastExecutionError 65 RowCount 65 SaveChangesAsync() 44 SaveChangesSync() 44 SelectRow() 45 SelectTable() 45 SetBitParameterByName() 50 SetCharParameterByName() 51 SetCurrentRow() 46 SetCurrentRowByIndex() 47 SetCurrentRowColumnByName() 48 SetDateTimeParameterByName() 53 SetDecimalParameterByName() 52 SetDoubleParameterByName() 53 SetFloatParameterByName() 54 SetIntParameterByName() 55 SetLongParameterByName() 55 aaDBCommandState public enumeration Canceled 66 Completed 66 Created 66 Disposed 66 Failed 66 Queued 66
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Index
aaDBCommandType public enumeration sqlStatement 67 storedProcedure 67 aaDBConnection object 69 CreateCommand() 70 CreateTransaction() 72 Dispose() 72 GetDiagnostics() 73 LogDiagnostics() 73 properties ConnectionName 73 ConnectionState 74 Disposed 74 LastError 74 ResetDiagnostics() 73 aaDBConnection public enumeration Connected 75 Connecting 75 Created 75 Disconnected 75 Disposed 75 aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75 aaDBConnectionType public enumeration OleDb 76 Oracle 76 Sql 76 aaDBParameterDirection public enumeration Input 67 InputOutput 67 Output 67 ReturnValue 67 aaDBRow object 77 GetColumnName() 79 GetColumnValue() 79 properties ColumnCount 79 ColumnNames 79 ColumnValues 80 public constructor 78 aaDBTransaction object 81 CreateCommand() 82 Dispose() 82 ExecuteAsync() 83 ExecuteAsyncCancel() 84 ExecuteSync() 84
GetID() 85 properties Disposed 85 ExecutionState 86 FailedCommandID 86 LastExecutionError 86 aaDBTransactionState public enumeration Canceled 87 Completed 87 Created 87 Disposed 87 Failed 87 Queued 87 Access, example connection string 17 accessing the SQLData Script Library 12 AddRow on aaDBCommand 38 architecture, script library 13 asynchronous script example overview 19 process script code 22 process script configuration 20 query script code 21 query script configuration 19 authentication modes SQL Server 30 Windows account 29 Windows integrated security 29
C
Canceled value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87 ColumnCount property for aaDBRow 79 ColumnNames property for aaDBRow 79 ColumnValues property for aaDBRow 80 command objects, creating 15 commands, creating new 69 CommandTimeout property 64 Completed value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87 Connected value for aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75
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Connecting value for aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75 connection objects creating 28 creating with command 15 creating with transaction 15 reusable 27 unique 28 connection pooling 11, 28 diagram 13 ConnectionName property for aaDBConnection 73 connections pooling 11, 28 working with 28 ConnectionState property for aaDBConnection 74 conventions, documentation 9 CreateCommand() aaDBConnection 70 aaDBTransaction 82 CreateConnection() on aaDBAccess objects 30 Created value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87 CreateTransaction() aaDBConnection 72 CurrentRowNumber property 64 CurrentTableNumber property 64
Disposed property 65 aaDBConnection 74 aaDBTransaction 85 Disposed value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87 Documentation 9 documentation conventions 9
E
example scripts asynchronous overview 19 process script code 22 process script configuration 20 query script code 21 query script configuration 19 connecting to Microsoft Access data 17 connecting to Microsoft Excel data 17 connecting to Oracle data source 16 connecting to SQL Server data source 16 detailed description 18 overview 17 synchronous code 24 configuration 23 overview 23 Excel example connection string 17 transaction support 17 ExecuteAsync() aaDBCommand 40 aaDBTransaction 83 ExecuteAsyncCancel() aaDBCommand 40 aaDBTransaction 84 ExecuteSync() aaDBCommand 40 aaDBTransaction 84 ExecutionState property aaDBCommand 65 aaDBTransaction 86
D
DeleteCurrentRow() on aaDBCommand 39 differences between CreateConnection() and GetConnection 28 Disconnected value for aaDBConnectionState public enumeration 75 Dispose() aaDBCommand 39 aaDBConnection 72 aaDBTransaction 82
96
Index
F
Failed value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87 FailedCommandID property for aaDBTransaction 86 functions of SQLData Script Library 12
M
multiple commands, processing as single unit 81
G
GetColumnName() for aaDBRow 79 GetColumnValue() for aaDBRow 79 GetCommand() on aaDBAccess objects 31 GetConnection() 31 on aaDBAccess objects 31 GetCurrentRowColumnByIndex() on aaDBCommand0. 41 GetCurrentRowColumnByName() on aaDBCommand 41 GetDataSet() on aaDBCommand 41 GetDiagnostics() aaDBAccess objects 33 aaDBConnection 73 GetID() aaDBCommand 42 aaDBTransaction 85 GetParameterByIndex() on aaDBCommand 42 GetParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 43 GetRow() on aaDBCommand 43 getting rows, setting rows 77 GetTransaction() on aaDBAccess 34
N
new command, creating 69 new transaction object, creating 69
O
OLEDB SetParam type methods 55 OLEDB databases connecting to 31, 33 connecting to Microsoft Access 17 connecting to Microsoft Excel 17 SetParam type methods 56 OleDb value for aaDBConnectionType public enumeration 76 Oracle databases connecting to 16, 31, 33 SetParam type methods 49 Oracle value for aaDBConnectionType public enumeration 76 Output parameters for SQL Server and Oracle 50 Output value for aaDBParameterDirection public enumeration 67
I
importing the SQLData Script Library file 12 Input value for aaDBParameterDirection public enumeration 67 Input/Output value for aaDBParameterDirection public enumeration 67
P
processing 37 processing multiple commands as a single unit 81 public constructor for aaDBRow object 78 public enumerations aaDBCommandState 66 aaDBCommandType 67 aaDBConnectionState 75 aaDBConnectionType 76 aaDBParameterDirection 67 aaDBTransactionState 87
L
LastError property on aaDBConnection 74
97
Q
Queued value aaDBCommandState public enumeration 66 aaDBTransaction public enumeration 87
R
RemoveCommand() on aaDBAccess objects 34 RemoveTransaction() on aaDBAccess objects 35 ResetDiagnostics() 35 ResetDiagnostics() on aaDBConnection 73 ReturnValue value for aaDBParameterDirection public enumeration 67 reusable connection objects, creating 27 Row Count aaDBCommand object property 65 rows, getting or setting from memory dataset 77
S
sample scripts asynchronous overview 19 process script code 22 process script configuration 20 query script code 21 query script configuration 19 detailed description 18 overview 17 synchronous code 24 configuration 23 overview 23 SaveChangesAsync() on aaDBCommand 44 SaveChangesSync() on aaDBCommand 44 script examples connecting to Microsoft Access data source 17 connecting to Oracle data source 16 connecting to SQL Server 16 script library architectural overview 13 asynchronous script example
overview 19 process script code 22 process script configuration 20 query script code 21 query script configuration 19 description of sample scripts 18 diagram of relationships 14 Microsoft Access connection string example 17 Microsoft Excel connection string example 17 Oracle connection string example 16 SQL Server connection string example 16 synchronous script example code 24 configuration 23 overview 23 work flow 15 script library examples overview 17 SelectRow() on aaDBCommand 45 SelectTable() on aaDBCommand 45 SetBitParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 50 SetCharParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 51 SetCurrentRow() on aaDBCommand 46 SetCurrentRowByIndex() on aaDBCommand 47 SetCurrentRowColumnByName() on aaDBCommand 48 SetDateTimeParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 53 SetDecimalParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 52 SetDoubleParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 53 SetFloatParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 54 SetIntParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 55 SetLongParameterByName() on aaDBCommand 55 SetParam type methods OLEDB 56 Oracle and SQL Server 49 SetParam type methods for OLEDB 55 Shutdown() 35 SQL Server authentication mode 30
98
Index
SQL statements, processing 37 Sql value for aaDBConnectionType public enumeration 76 SQLData Script Library accessing 12 functions 12 importing file 12 sqlStatement value for aaDBCommandType public enumeration 67 stored procedures 37 storedProcedure value for aaDBCommandType public enumeration 67 synchronous script example code 24 configuration 23 overview 23
T
tables, accessing 37 technical support, contacting 10 transaction object, creating 15, 69
U
unique connection objects, creating 28
V
views, accessing 37
W
Windows account authentication mode 29 Windows integrated security authentication mode 29 work flow for scripting 15