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=========================================================== ORACLE PROVIDER FOR OLE DB (OraOLEDB) 11.2.0.1.0 Production =========================================================== Copyright (c) 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved. This document provides information that supplements the Oracle Provider for OLE DB documentation. IMPORTANT INSTALLATION INFORMATION ================================== The Oracle Provider for OLE DB (OraOLEDB) provider, being a COM component, can have Only one version active on a machine at a time. Oracle Technology Network ========================= For sample code, the latest patches, and other technical information on the Oracle Provider for OLE DB, go to http://otn.oracle.com/tech/windows/ole_db/ TIPS, LIMITATIONS AND KNOWN ISSUES ================================== Performance ----------- * To improve performance, do not use ADO method AppendChunk on LONG/LONG RAW columns. Instead, insert or update the entire LONG/LONG RAW column using the ADO AddNew or Update method. * Use /*+ ... */ as the optimizer hint syntax with the OraOLEDB driver. The hint syntax, --+ ... is currently not supported. Unsupported Parameter Types with OLE DB .NET Data Provider ---------------------------------------------------------- * The Provider does not support LongVarChar, LongVarWChar, LongVarBinary, and BSTR IN/OUT and OUT parameter types with OLE DB .NET Data Provider because of a Microsoft's OLE DB .NET Data Provider known limitation. Unsupported Datatypes --------------------- * The Trusted Oracle datatype MLSLABEL is not supported by the OraOLEDB driver. * The provider does not currently support Object datatypes. LOB Data Types -------------- * The Command object currently errors out when updating LOBs on more than one row at a time. For example: UPDATE SomeTable SET LobCol = ? WHERE ... will error out if the UPDATE statement affects more than one row in the table. This restriction is limited to LOBs (BLOB/CLOB) and not LONGs (LONG/LONG RAW). * As most LOB write (INSERT and UPDATE) operations involve multiple write operations within the provider, it is recommended that the transaction be enabled for such operations. Enabling transactions will allow consumers to rollback the entire write operation in the event of some failure. This is recommended when writing LOBs from the Command or the Recordset object. DBLINK ------ To enable creating rowsets using queries containing Oracle Database Links, the connection string attribute, DistribTx, should be disabled. Such rowsets are currently limited to being read-only. Transaction ----------- * During a Local or Global Transaction, do not execute SQLs COMMIT, ROLLBACK or SAVEPOINT using the Command interface as they may affect the data consistency in the Rowsets. The same holds for executing DDLs (CREATE TABLE, ALTER VIEW, etc.) in this explicit transaction mode, as DDLs in Oracle perform an implicit Commit to the database. Execute DDLs only in the Auto-Commit mode. * To enable Autonomous Transaction support, the connection string attribute, DistribTx, should be disabled. Using this feature, consumers can execute Stored Procedures having COMMITs and/or ROLLBACKs. Note that Commit/Rollback in a stored procedure should be performed with caution. As OraOLEDB provides transactional capability on rowsets, whose data is cached locally on the client-side, performing an explicit commit/rollback in a stored procedure, with an open rowset, could cause the rowset to be out of sync with the database. In these cases, all commits and rollbacks (aborts) should be performed from the client-side (con.Commit or con.Abort). The exception is if the user is making use of Autonomous Transactions in the stored procedure. By using this, the transaction in the stored procedure is isolated from the main one; thus allowing for localized commits/aborts. For more information on Autonomous Transactions, refer to Oracle Database 11g Release 2 documentation: "Advanced Application Developer's Guide" and "PL/SQL Language Reference". (http://www.oracle.com/pls/db112/homepage) Stored Procedures ----------------- For overloaded PL/SQL stored procedures and functions, the PROCEDURE_PARAMETERS Schema Rowset returns the parameter information for only the first overloaded stored procedure/function. This is because the OLE DB specification currently does not have any provision for overloaded procedures/functions. Case Sensibility ---------------- OraOLEDB currently expects the case of the objects specified in the Schema Rowset Restriction to be exactly the same as in the database. That is, it does not support passing "emp" to access the table "EMP". For example: Dim restrictions As Variant ... ' Schemarowset contains table EMP owned by SCOTT restrictions = Array(Empty, "SCOTT", "EMP", Empty) Set objRst = objCon.OpenSchema(adSchemaTables, restrictions) ... ' Schemarowset created with no rows restrictions = Array(Empty, "scott", "emp", Empty) Set objRst = objCon.OpenSchema(adSchemaTables, restrictions) ... Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 Notes -------------------------------- The Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects and Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects Recordset libraries must be included as Project References. Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 Notes ------------------------------ OraOLEDB.h must be included in the relevant .cpp files in the VC++ project. Also, #define DBINITCONSTANTS needs to be added to one of the .cpp files in the project.
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