OTL 4.0, Example 321 (Oracle 10.2, asynchronous commit / commit_nowait)

This example demonstrates a combination of INSERT, SELECT, constant SQL statements, and asynchronous COMMIT for Oracle 10.2

Source Code

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

#include <stdio.h>
#define OTL_ORA10G_R2 // Compile OTL 4.0/OCI10gR2
#include <otlv4.h> // include the OTL 4.0 header file

otl_connect db; // connect object

void insert()
// insert rows into table
{
otl_stream o(50, // buffer size
"insert into test_tab values(:f1<int>,:f2<char[31]>)",
// SQL statement
db // connect object
);
o.set_commit(0); // turn off stream's "auto-commit"

char tmp[32];

for(int i=1;i<=123;++i){
sprintf(tmp,"Name%d",i);
o<<i<<tmp;
}
o.flush(); // flush the stream's dirty buffer:
// execute the INSERT for the rows
// that are still in the stream buffer

db.commit_nowait(); // commit with no wait (new feature of Oracle 10.2)
}

void select()
{
otl_stream i(50, // buffer size
"select * from test_tab where f1>=:f<int> and f1<=:f*2",
// SELECT statement
db // connect object
);
// create select stream

float f1;
char f2[31];

i<<8; // assigning :f = 8
// SELECT automatically executes when all input variables are
// assigned. First portion of output rows is fetched to the buffer

while(!i.eof()){ // while not end-of-data
i>>f1>>f2;
cout<<"f1="<<f1<<", f2="<<f2<<endl;
}

i<<4; // assigning :f = 4
// SELECT automatically executes when all input variables are
// assigned. First portion of output rows is fetched to the buffer

while(!i.eof()){ // while not end-of-data
i>>f1>>f2;
cout<<"f1="<<f1<<", f2="<<f2<<endl;
}

}

int main()
{
otl_connect::otl_initialize(); // initialize OCI environment
try{

db.rlogon("scott/tiger"); // connect to Oracle

otl_cursor::direct_exec
(
db,
"drop table test_tab",
otl_exception::disabled // disable OTL exceptions
); // drop table

otl_cursor::direct_exec
(
db,
"create table test_tab(f1 number, f2 varchar2(30))"
); // create table

insert(); // insert records into table
select(); // select records from table

}

catch(otl_exception& p){ // intercept OTL exceptions
cerr<<p.msg<<endl; // print out error message
cerr<<p.stm_text<<endl; // print out SQL that caused the error
cerr<<p.var_info<<endl; // print out the variable that caused the error
}

db.logoff(); // disconnect from Oracle

return 0;

}

Output

f1=8, f2=Name8
f1=9, f2=Name9
f1=10, f2=Name10
f1=11, f2=Name11
f1=12, f2=Name12
f1=13, f2=Name13
f1=14, f2=Name14
f1=15, f2=Name15
f1=16, f2=Name16
f1=4, f2=Name4
f1=5, f2=Name5
f1=6, f2=Name6
f1=7, f2=Name7
f1=8, f2=Name8





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Copyright © 1996, 2007, Sergei Kuchin, email: skuchin@ispwest.com, skuchin@yahogmail .

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