Microsoft KB Archive/216925

= PRB: Single-User Concurrency Problems With ADO and Jet =

Article ID: 216925

Article Last Modified on 1/11/2001

-

APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 6.0 Enterprise Edition
 * Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.0
 * Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.01
 * Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.1

-



This article was previously published under Q216925



SYMPTOMS
When using ADO against a Microsoft Jet database, you may notice that saving information via the ADO Data control or an ADO Recordset is not immediately visible to other ADO Data controls or Recordsets. The data is visible after a few seconds delay.



CAUSE
Each object is opened on a different connection.



RESOLUTION
Make all ADO Recordset objects and ADO Data controls use the same connection.



STATUS
This behavior is by design.



MORE INFORMATION
Microsoft Jet maintains a separate cache for each connection to the engine. By default, the cache times out after five seconds, which means that changes made to an MDB file on one connection may not be visible on another connection for up to five seconds.

This is different behavior than DAO, where all Connection or Database objects default to share the same read cache.

This article outlines some strategies that allow you to share connections between Recordset objects and the ADO Data control.

When opening an ADO Recordset object, it is easy to share a connection. You can open a global connection object and reference it in the rs.Open method. This method can provide application or form-wide connection sharing:

rs1.Open "Employees", cn rs2.Open "Employees", cn

Another more limited method of connection sharing is to reference the ActiveConnection property of an already open Recordset:

rs1.Open "Employees", "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.3.51;Data Source=NWIND.MDB" rs2.Open "Employees", rs1.ActiveConnection

You can open a Recordset on the same connection as an ADO Data control by referencing the ActiveConnection property of the Recordset property:

rs.Open "Employees", ADODC1.Recordset.ActiveConnection

If the ADO Data control (ADODC2, ADODC3, and ADODC4 in the example below) is using client-side cursors, then you can make it share an existing connection:

Set ADODC2.Recordset.ActiveConnection = cn Set ADODC3.Recordset.ActiveConnection = rs.ActiveConnection Set ADODC4.Recordset.ActiveConnection = ADODC1.Recordset.ActiveConnection

The next technique allows ADO Data controls to share connections and use server-side cursors. It involves setting the ADO Data control's Recordset property to an existing Recordset that you create using a shared Connection object.

NOTE: You cannot substitute the connection if using server-side cursors (the default):

rs.Open "Employees", cn Set ADODC1.Recordset = rs

Steps to Reproduce Behavior
 Open a new Project in Visual Basic 6.0 with a form (Form1). Add a reference to Microsoft ActiveX Data Objects 2.0 Library. Add the ADO Data Control (6.0) to the project. Add the ADO Data control to the form and set the following properties:

 Add four textboxes to the form and set the following properties:

</li> Add a CommandButton (Command1) to the form.</li>  Add the following code to the form:

Option Explicit

Private Sub Command1_Click Dim rs As ADODB.Recordset Set rs = New ADODB.Recordset

' Save the data if necessary If ADODC1.Recordset.EditMode <> adEditNone Then ADODC1.Recordset.Update End If

' Open Recordset on same connection as the data control rs.Open "Employees", ADODC1.Recordset.ActiveConnection,, , adCmdTable SameConnection.Text = rs!LastName rs.Close

' Open recordset on a new connection rs.Open "Employees", ADODC1.ConnectionString,, , adCmdTable NewConnection.Text = rs!LastName rs.Close End Sub </li> Run the project and edit the Employee's last name.</li> Click on the CommandButton to save the data, and then read it. You should see the edited value displayed in the SameConnection textbox and the original value displayed in the NewConnection textbox.</li>  Wait a few seconds and click the CommandButton again. The edited value should now also show in the NewConnection text box. This is due to the cache timing out.

NOTE: When using the ADO Data control in the manner described above, avoid using the Refresh method:

ADODC1.Refresh because this will result in a new connection. Use the Requery method of the Recordset property instead: ADODC1.Recordset.Requery </li></ol>

Keywords: kbjet kbprb KB216925

-

[mailto:TECHNET@MICROSOFT.COM Send feedback to Microsoft]

© Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.