|
Hi Craig, if your decision about update or not doesn't relay on the full
call stack but only on write/update program 's name consider using journal
analysis.
I found it very usefull especially if updates are really async or on a
remote DB.
HTH
--
Marco Facchinetti
Mr S.r.l.
Tel. 035 962885
Cel. 393 9620498
Skype: facchinettimarco
2018-06-07 10:26 GMT+02:00 Craig Richards <craig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
Hi Dieter (I hope this is the correct name - it seems better than callingI
you D*B )
Thanks again for taking time to post. I do appreciate it.
I will consider your words, if nothing more than for my own education as
haven't looked at commit exit program.in
However I will most likely take my previously suggested approach and
exclude certain programs from the trigger processing, putting that code
the application programs.because
Here are my reasons for this:
1) I prefer to keep trigger programs as light as possibly. This is
they have to perform as part of the database update and therefore berules
efficient, and the other reason is that, to me at least, it's kind of
"under the covers" processing. So any heavy transactions or business
I tend to port into something like an asynchronous server where the codeis
more visible and it's not holding up critical I/O. This is just myopinion
and preference, I don't expect everyone to agree.trigger
2) When there is a possibility that the database can be updated via
DDRA/DDM (QRWTSRVR Jobs) or Database Host Server (QZDASOINIT Jobs) which
hang around for a while and get re-used via different connections, you
cannot leave the trigger program resident or you are just asking for
trouble. Therefore every database access would need to start up the
program each time, then the trigger program would have to find andregistering
dynamically bind in the service program each time, then this is
the exit program each time. I'm sure many, maybe most people would arguetriggers
that this is all find and dandy and just a walk in the park for an IBMi,
but I'd personally just rather not have all of that going on in my
plus the overhead and logic of storing up all of the data ready for whena
COMMIT is issued. I can see how this approach could work though.the
But I'm grateful you took the time to send me your thoughts and some
information I didn't know about before.
best regards,
Craig
On 7 June 2018 at 08:55, D*B <dieter.bender@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
<Craig>
1) If the database manager held back on the trigger processing until
(RPG400-L)commit. Life would be simple. There would be nothing to undo. I'm usingcalled,
commit control, that's a declaration that I don't want to declare the
transaction over until I commit. Why let processing bleed over into the
trigger's domain until I've confirmed the transaction with a commit?
</Craig>
... this wouldn't be too hard to implement:
- create a SRVPGM, providing exported procedures:
-- triggerFired, taking the complete Trigger Buffer, just putting the
contents to a global variable to store it (if you would have multiple
records in one transaction, dim would help.
-- commitIssued, taking the info of the commit exit program CCEXIT, and
does all needed work of your trigger, if commit was issued and
reinitializes the global buffer variable. In case of rollback, only
initialisation is done.
-- at activation time (first call of one of the exported procedures)
register the commit exit by call of the API.
- your trigger programm, only calls triggerFired, doing nothing
- create a commit exit programm (you'll find QRPGLESRC.CCEXIT and the
needed headerfiles on sourceforge too, as an example). If CCEXIT is
simply call commitIssued of your SRVPGM.
Let it all run in *caller.
that's it!
D*B
--
This is the RPG programming on the IBM i (AS/400 and iSeries)
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