Microsoft KB Archive/137039

= New Features in Microsoft Jet Version 3.0 =

Article ID: 137039

Article Last Modified on 12/9/2003

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 Standard Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 16-bit Enterprise Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 4.0 32-Bit Enterprise Edition

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This article was previously published under Q137039



SUMMARY
The Microsoft Jet 3.0 database engine used by Microsoft Visual Basic version 4.0 has many functional improvements over previous versions. This article briefly describes some of these improvements and summarizes their effect in contrast with previous versions.



MORE INFORMATION
Improvements in Microsoft Jet 3.0 database engine:


 * New index structure. This results in substantial reduction in storage size and significant reduction in time to create indices that are highly duplicated.
 * No more read locks on index pages. This will remove many locking conflict issues and remove the need for users to call FreeLocks in Visual Basic.
 * New mechanism for page reuse. In Microsoft Jet 2.x, if a user deleted a lot of data, the last user out would pay a substantial time penalty while the recycled page identifiers were being processed into available page identifiers. In Microsoft Jet 3.0, this process is significantly faster.
 * New compacting method. Compacting the database now results in the indices being stored in a clustered-index format. While the clustered index isn't maintained until the next compact, performance is still improved. This differs from Microsoft Jet 2.x where rows of data were stored the way they were entered. The new clustered-key compact method is based on the primary key of the table. New data entered will be in time order.
 * New mechanism for page allocation. In Microsoft Jet 2.X each page could contain data from a different table, thus causing more disk activity. In Microsoft Jet 3.0, each table typically maintains clusters of grouped together pages (eight pages), thus eliminating the scenario of every other page having data from different tables. This scenario also greatly enhances Microsoft Jet's read-ahead capabilities because data pages are more contiguous.
 * Faster delete operations. In Microsoft Jet 2.x, pages were doubly linked, thus causing a delete operation to visit every page when all rows were being deleted. This operation can now be done by simply visiting the Space Map object for that table and removing the bits that reference that table and returning them to the recycle area.
 * Multithreading. By default, Microsoft Jet uses three threads to perform read ahead, write behind, and cache maintenance.
 * Implicit transactions. Users are no longer forced to explicitly use BEGINTRANS and COMMITTRANS to gain performance improvements. For example, when walking through a recordset to do operations, Microsoft Jet groups a series of commands into an internal transaction. Then as appropriate (that is, in a specified time period or when the cache fills up) it starts asynchronously flushing the transaction to disk. Still, if a user wants to force a particular behavior in their application, then they should explicitly use transactions. For users that don't explicitly use transactions and have the database opened shared, they should encounter little if any behavioral differences from Microsoft Jet 2.x. If a user opens the database exclusively, then they could see some behavior differences relating to some types of error trapping if they are not using explicit transactions.
 * New sort engine. Many of the sort algorithms that are in FoxPro are now used in Microsoft Jet.
 * Long Values (such as memos or binary data types) are stored in separate tables in Microsoft Jet 3.0. In Microsoft Jet 2.x, all long value columns were stored in one hidden table, which resulted in a lot of contention issues for users using Microsoft Jet in shared mode. Placing these values in separate tables resolved manu contention issues. Also each Long Value table is now indexed, whereas in Microsoft Jet 2.x, Long Value data was forward linked only, thus making random positioning time-consuming.
 * Dynamic buffering. Microsoft Jet 2.x supported a maximum cache size of 4 MB. Microsoft Jet 3.0's cache is dynamically allocated at start up and has no limit. Currently, the cache will be half the available memory upon start up. This allows effective memory usage on computers that have large amounts of RAM without changing registry settings. The buffer has also been redesigned to use common buffering code. In Microsoft Jet 2.x, separate buffering code could result in pages being needlessly flushed from the cache, thus causing Jet to re-read the page. Microsoft Jet 2.x also used a FIFO (first in, first out) buffer replacement policy, which also caused frequently-referenced pages to be flushed from cache. Microsoft Jet 3.0 implements an LRU (least recently used) replacement policy to help eliminate this problem.

Additional query words: 4.00 vb4win vb4all

Keywords: kbref KB137039

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