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Almost everything here is incorrect. You do not loose positioned updates
when using RLA, everything is positioned. You loose set based operations.
No, it has nothing to do with RLA, it has everything to do with the high
cost of disk space when most RLA applications were first written, and
momentum. Back in the early days, it was far too expensive to journal
everything, so commitment control was not common. Even in applications
that used SQL back then. Had nothing to do with capability.
And transaction handling is no
different between SQL and RLA.
If you are using level checks properly, then this is a non-issue.
Mark.
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