Microsoft KB Archive/109830

= VB3 Speed Up Data Access by Using BeginTrans & CommitTrans =

Article ID: 109830

Article Last Modified on 10/30/2003

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Visual Basic 3.0 Professional Edition
 * Microsoft Visual Basic 3.0 Professional Edition

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This article was previously published under Q109830



SUMMARY
You can speed up database operations by many times in a Microsoft Access database by using transactions. A transaction starts with a BeginTrans statement and ends with a CommitTrans or Rollback statement.

The sample program below is more than 17 times faster when using BeginTrans/CommitTrans. Performance may vary on different computers.



MORE INFORMATION
You can tune the performance of Visual Basic by using transactions for operations that update data. A transaction is a series of operations that must execute as a whole or not at all. You mark the beginning of a transaction with the BeginTrans statement. You use the Rollback or CommitTrans statement to end a transaction.

You can usually increase the record updates per second (throughput) of an application by placing operations that update data within an Access Basic transaction.

Because Visual Basic locks data pages used in a transaction until the transaction ends, using transactions will prevent access to those data pages by other users while the transaction is pending. If you use transactions in a multi-user environment, try to find a balance between data throughput and data access.

If database operations are not within a transaction, every Update method causes a disk write.

Transactions are very fast because they are written to a buffer in memory instead of to disk. CommitTrans writes the changes in the transaction buffer to disk.

Robust error trapping is important when using transactions to avoid losing writes if the program gets an error in the middle of a transaction.

For more performance tuning tips for data access in Microsoft Visual Basic version 3.0, see the PERFORM.TXT file.

Step-by-Step Example
 Start a new project in Visual Basic. Form1 is created by default.  Add the following to the Form Load event code:

Sub Form_Load Dim Starttime, Endtime Dim db As Database Dim t As Table Dim i As Integer Dim tempName As String Dim temphone As String Set db = OpenDatabase("c:\BIBLIO.MDB") ' Uses a copy of BIBLIO.MDB Set t = db.OpenTable("Publishers") Starttime = Now 'BeginTrans  ' Add this and CommitTrans (below) for greater speed. For i = 1 To 100 tempName = "testname" & Str$(i) 'Make an arbitrary unique string. tempPhone = Str$(i)             'Make arbitrary number. t.AddNew 'AddNew clears copy buffer to prepare for new record. t!PubID = 30 + i ' Set primary key to unique value. t!Name = tempName ' Set Name field to unique value. t!Telephone = tempPhone ' Set Telephone field to unique value. t.Update  ' Write the record to disk or to transaction buffer. Next i     'CommitTrans   ' Add this and BeginTrans (above) for greater speed. Endtime = Now MsgBox "Time required= " & Format(Endtime - Starttime, "hh:mm:ss") t.Close db.Close End End Sub The above code adds 100 new records to the BIBLIO.MDB database file. Add the records to a copy of BIBLIO.MDB instead of to the original.  Start the program (or press the F5 key). A message box reports the time required to add 100 new records. Close the form to end the program.

If you don't use the BeginTrans and CommitTrans statements, this program reports 17 seconds to add 100 records on a 486/66 PC. When you add BeginTrans and CommitTrans as shown in the program comments above, the program takes less than 1 second on that computer. Performance may vary on different computers.

