Microsoft KB Archive/140210

= INF: Microsoft Jet 3.0 Questions and Answers =

Article ID: 140210

Article Last Modified on 1/13/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Access 95 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Excel 95 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Visual C++ 4.0 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q140210





SUMMARY
Novice: Requires knowledge of the user interface on single-user computers.  Q. What is the Microsoft Jet database engine?

A. The Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 is the new database engine that ships with Microsoft Access for Windows 95 version 7.0, Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0, Microsoft Excel for Windows 95, and the upcoming version of Microsoft Visual C++. It cannot be purchased as a stand-alone product. Q. What is a database engine?

A. Database management systems (DBMS) are programs used to store and retrieve data. A DBMS program has a number of important components. The user interface is the component that handles interaction between the user and the program. It also controls the way a user views data through forms and reports. The database engine is the component that actually handles the data. The user typically does not interact directly with the database engine. Q. So why should I care which database engine my products use?

A. Think of the database engine as the engine in your car. You don't see the engine while you're driving. You manipulate the user interface: the steering wheel, the pedals, and the other dashboard gadgets. Even though you don't deal directly with the engine, you'll appreciate the difference in engines when a high performance car roars past you.

The speed, performance, and reliability of a DBMS (or lack thereof) come from the engine. The Jet database engine is an advanced database engine that combines speed and performance with many other advanced features not found in competing desktop DBMS products. The Microsoft Jet database engine is also a reliable engine that offers certain transaction processing capabilities; for example, it can wrap bulk operations into transactions and even nest those transactions. Q. How does the Jet database engine store my data?

A. The Jet database engine stores data in a Microsoft Access database (.mdb) file. All tables and indexes are stored in this file, as are any forms, reports, macros, and modules used by Microsoft Access. According to user feedback, having everything in one file makes it easy to manage data and applications. Q. Can the Jet database engine read and write data in other formats?

A. Yes, the Jet database engine supports dBASE, Paradox, and the Microsoft FoxPro database file formats as well as many popular spreadsheet and text formats. In addition, the Jet database engine can use open database connectivity (ODBC) to connect to external client/server database sources that have ODBC drivers. The ODBC driver for Microsoft SQL Server ships with the Jet database engine, and other drivers are readily available for databases from Sybase, Oracle, and other vendors. Q. How do I use the Jet database engine in my applications?

A. The Jet database engine itself ships with Microsoft Access, Microsoft Visual Basic, Microsoft Visual C++, and Microsoft Excel. However these are not the only applications that can access the Jet database engine features. The following scenarios show how a user or developer can tap into the Jet database engine features:

 The Microsoft Access user interface calls upon the Jet database engine to provide data retrieval and other services because all objects created in Microsoft Access are stored in the Jet database engine's native .mdb file.</li> Any program that is an OLE Automation controller, such as Microsoft Project, can access the Jet database engine programmatically because the Jet database engine's objects are fully exposed through DAO.</li> Any program that ships with the Microsoft Jet database engine, such as Microsoft Visual Basic, Microsoft Visual C++, or Microsoft Excel, can control the Jet database engine programmatically.</li></ul>

Microsoft is working to implement a standard development environment called Visual Basic for Applications across the entire Microsoft Office suite. Visual Basic for Applications is shipped as part of Microsoft Access for Windows 95, Microsoft Excel for Windows 95, and Microsoft Project for Windows 95. In the future, it will be incorporated into Microsoft Word and Microsoft PowerPoint. Using Visual Basic for Applications, a developer can directly manipulate all of the Jet database engine's objects to read and write data stored in the Jet database engine tables, perform queries, or manage the Jet database engine's security features. This means, for example, that a Microsoft Excel developer can tap into the full power of the Jet database engine without having to go through Microsoft Access.</li> Q. Why is the Microsoft Jet database engine better than other database engines?

A. Besides the basic features that users have come to expect from any database engine, the Microsoft Jet database engine adds advanced capabilities that were previously unavailable on desktop databases. These include:

<ul> Access to heterogeneous data sources. The Jet database engine provides transparent access, through industry-standard ODBC drivers, to over 170 different data formats, including dBASE, Paradox, ORACLE, Microsoft SQL Server, and IBM DB2. Developers can build applications in which users read and update data simultaneously in virtually any data format and can replace a back-end data store with minimal programming should application requirements change.</li> Engine-level referential integrity and data validation. The Jet database engine has built-in support for primary and foreign keys, database-specific rules, and cascading updates and deletes. This means that a developer is freed from having to create rules using procedural code to implement data integrity. Also, these rules are consistently enforced by the Jet database engine itself, so that they are available to all application programs.</li> Advanced workgroup security features. The Jet database engine stores User and Group accounts in a separate database, typically located on the network. Object permissions for database objects (such as tables and queries) are stored in each database. By separating account information from permission information, the Jet database engine makes it much easier for system administrators to manage one set of accounts for all databases on a network.</li> Updateable recordsets. As opposed to most database engines which return query results in temporary views or snapshots, the Jet database engine returns a recordset that automatically propagates any changes users make back to the original tables. This means that the results of a query, even those based on multiple tables, can be treated as tables themselves. Users can even base queries on other queries.</li> Query optimization using Rushmore technology. The Jet database engine has incorporated this innovative technology from Microsoft FoxPro to enhance query performance.</li> Multiuser features. The Jet database engine supports multiple users in all products. You don't have to do anything to enable multiuser access. The Jet database engine supports both optimistic and pessimistic locking. It also supports transaction processing, with implicit transactions as a new feature in the Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0.</li></ul> </li> Q. What's new in version 3.0 of the Jet database engine?

A. The Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 is a 32-bit, multithreaded program. Microsoft's primary goal in developing this latest version was to boost the Jet database engine's performance and improve its multiuser capabilities. This means that most changes to the Jet database engine have been made behind the scenes. However, some new, important features for developers are worth noting:

<ul> Replication support (explained below)</li> Enhancements to DAO including new properties and methods to support replication and a new Errors collection. Also, new extensions have been added to existing functionality, such as the GetRows method (which retrieves multiple rows into an array), the PercentPosition property (which returns the approximate location of the current record), and the AllPermissions property (which returns all permissions on an object).</li></ul> </li> Q. What is replication and how does the Jet database engine support it?

A. Data replication is the ability of a system to automatically synchronize copies of its data between local and remote connections. Replication is often used to improve data availability.

Microsoft Access and Microsoft Visual Basic ship with new DLLs that implement replication. The Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 introduces new DAO methods and properties to support this functionality. Once those DLLs have been installed on a system, replication is fully programmable through DAO. This means that other applications, including Microsoft Excel and Microsoft Visual C++, can benefit from this technology. In addition, the Microsoft Access Developer's Toolkit contains the Microsoft Access Replication Manager, which supplies enhancements to the basic functionality, including a graphical user interface for administering and scheduling replication services.</li> Q. How many users can the Jet database engine support?

A. Theoretically, the Jet database engine can support 255 simultaneous connections to one database. The practical limit to the number of users it can handle in multiuser applications depends on many factors. Applications whose primary task is to perform queries can handle more users than applications whose primary task is to update data. The network and file server also play an important role in calculating this limit. In a properly configured network setting, the Jet database engine can easily support 25-50 users in a transaction-oriented environment. Some multiuser applications function well with 80 users.

If your application grows out of the Jet database engine's range, you can upsize the data portion of your application to Microsoft SQL Server while maintaining your investment in the Microsoft Access front end. The Microsoft Access Upsizing Tools, available separately, make it easy for you to migrate your data.</li> Q. How do I distribute my applications that use the Jet database engine?

A. If your users already have Microsoft Office installed, then they already have the Jet database engine DLLs installed. Installing Microsoft Office is the easiest way to distribute the Jet database engine to your users.

If your application is written in Microsoft Access and your users have not installed Microsoft Office, you need the Microsoft Access Developer's Toolkit (ADT). The ADT contains an application Setup Wizard and allows you to distribute run-time versions of your application.

Microsoft Visual Basic and Microsoft Visual C++ users already have the ability to compile distributable applications.

Microsoft Excel solutions require that the users have copies of Microsoft Excel, which they already have if they have installed Microsoft Office.</li> <li>Q. Does the Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 support record locking?

A. The Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 continues to use page locking because of its performance advantage in most scenarios. However, many of the locking conflicts present in earlier versions of the Jet database engine have been eliminated in version 3.0. Developers can choose between optimistic and pessimistic locking.</li> <li>Q. Has performance in multiuser environments improved?

A. Yes, version 3.0 of the Jet database engine has improved its locking during multiuser sessions. Here are the most important improvements:

<ul> <li>Fewer read locks on index pages. This removes many locking conflict issues and removes the need for applications to call DBEngine.Idle DBFreeLocks.</li> <li>New mechanism for page reuse. The Microsoft Jet database engine version 3.0 no longer recycles pages until the last user closes the database. This reduces concurrency conflicts and processing time.</li> <li>New mechanism for page allocation. In previous versions of the Jet database engine, pages from different tables were often mixed together on disk. In version 3.0, pages are typically allocated so that pages from the same table are more contiguous. This scenario greatly enhances the Jet database engine's read- ahead capabilities, and improves many search and select operations.</li> <li>Faster delete operations. In version 2.x, pages were doubly linked, causing a delete operation to visit every page when all rows were being deleted. If there is no predicate attached to the delete statement and no foreign keys referencing the table, this operation can now take advantage of new storage techniques and remove the table almost instantaneously.</li> <li>Improved multi-user performance. In version 2.0, multiple insert operations frequently blocked other users. Version 3.0 incorporates new locking algorithms that can significantly reduce these conflicts.</li></ul> </li></ol>

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