OleDbConnection.BeginTransaction Method
Definition
Important
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Starts a database transaction.
Overloads
BeginTransaction() |
Starts a database transaction with the current IsolationLevel value. |
BeginTransaction(IsolationLevel) |
Starts a database transaction with the specified isolation level. |
BeginTransaction()
- Source:
- OleDbConnection.cs
- Source:
- OleDbConnection.cs
Starts a database transaction with the current IsolationLevel value.
public:
System::Data::OleDb::OleDbTransaction ^ BeginTransaction();
public System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction BeginTransaction ();
override this.BeginTransaction : unit -> System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction
member this.BeginTransaction : unit -> System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction
Public Function BeginTransaction () As OleDbTransaction
Returns
An object representing the new transaction.
Exceptions
Parallel transactions are not supported.
Examples
The following example creates an OleDbConnection and an OleDbTransaction. It also demonstrates how to use the BeginTransaction, Commit, and Rollback methods.
public void ExecuteTransaction(string connectionString)
{
using (OleDbConnection connection =
new OleDbConnection(connectionString))
{
OleDbCommand command = new OleDbCommand();
OleDbTransaction transaction = null;
// Set the Connection to the new OleDbConnection.
command.Connection = connection;
// Open the connection and execute the transaction.
try
{
connection.Open();
// Start a local transaction with ReadCommitted isolation level.
transaction = connection.BeginTransaction(IsolationLevel.ReadCommitted);
// Assign transaction object for a pending local transaction.
command.Connection = connection;
command.Transaction = transaction;
// Execute the commands.
command.CommandText =
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (100, 'Description')";
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
command.CommandText =
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (101, 'Description')";
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
// Commit the transaction.
transaction.Commit();
Console.WriteLine("Both records are written to database.");
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
try
{
// Attempt to roll back the transaction.
transaction.Rollback();
}
catch
{
// Do nothing here; transaction is not active.
}
}
// The connection is automatically closed when the
// code exits the using block.
}
}
Public Sub ExecuteTransaction(ByVal connectionString As String)
Using connection As New OleDbConnection(connectionString)
Dim command As New OleDbCommand()
Dim transaction As OleDbTransaction
' Set the Connection to the new OleDbConnection.
command.Connection = connection
' Open the connection and execute the transaction.
Try
connection.Open()
' Start a local transaction with ReadCommitted isolation level.
transaction = connection.BeginTransaction(IsolationLevel.ReadCommitted)
' Assign transaction object for a pending local transaction.
command.Connection = connection
command.Transaction = transaction
' Execute the commands.
command.CommandText = _
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (100, 'Description')"
command.ExecuteNonQuery()
command.CommandText = _
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (101, 'Description')"
command.ExecuteNonQuery()
' Commit the transaction.
transaction.Commit()
Console.WriteLine("Both records are written to database.")
Catch ex As Exception
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message)
' Try to rollback the transaction
Try
transaction.Rollback()
Catch
' Do nothing here; transaction is not active.
End Try
End Try
' The connection is automatically closed when the
' code exits the Using block.
End Using
End Sub
Remarks
You must explicitly commit or roll back the transaction using the Commit or Rollback method. To make sure that the .NET Framework Data Provider for OLE DB transaction management model performs correctly, avoid using other transaction management models, such as those provided by the data source.
See also
Applies to
BeginTransaction(IsolationLevel)
- Source:
- OleDbConnection.cs
- Source:
- OleDbConnection.cs
Starts a database transaction with the specified isolation level.
public:
System::Data::OleDb::OleDbTransaction ^ BeginTransaction(System::Data::IsolationLevel isolationLevel);
public System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction BeginTransaction (System.Data.IsolationLevel isolationLevel);
override this.BeginTransaction : System.Data.IsolationLevel -> System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction
member this.BeginTransaction : System.Data.IsolationLevel -> System.Data.OleDb.OleDbTransaction
Public Function BeginTransaction (isolationLevel As IsolationLevel) As OleDbTransaction
Parameters
- isolationLevel
- IsolationLevel
The isolation level under which the transaction should run.
Returns
An object representing the new transaction.
Exceptions
Parallel transactions are not supported.
Examples
The following example creates an OleDbConnection and an OleDbTransaction. It also demonstrates how to use the BeginTransaction, a Commit, and Rollback methods.
public void ExecuteTransaction(string connectionString)
{
using (OleDbConnection connection =
new OleDbConnection(connectionString))
{
OleDbCommand command = new OleDbCommand();
OleDbTransaction transaction = null;
// Set the Connection to the new OleDbConnection.
command.Connection = connection;
// Open the connection and execute the transaction.
try
{
connection.Open();
// Start a local transaction
transaction = connection.BeginTransaction();
// Assign transaction object for a pending local transaction.
command.Connection = connection;
command.Transaction = transaction;
// Execute the commands.
command.CommandText =
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (100, 'Description')";
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
command.CommandText =
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (101, 'Description')";
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
// Commit the transaction.
transaction.Commit();
Console.WriteLine("Both records are written to database.");
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
try
{
// Attempt to roll back the transaction.
transaction.Rollback();
}
catch
{
// Do nothing here; transaction is not active.
}
}
// The connection is automatically closed when the
// code exits the using block.
}
}
Public Sub ExecuteTransaction(ByVal connectionString As String)
Using connection As New OleDbConnection(connectionString)
Dim command As New OleDbCommand()
Dim transaction As OleDbTransaction
' Set the Connection to the new OleDbConnection.
command.Connection = connection
' Open the connection and execute the transaction.
Try
connection.Open()
' Start a local transaction.
transaction = connection.BeginTransaction()
' Assign transaction object for a pending local transaction.
command.Connection = connection
command.Transaction = transaction
' Execute the commands.
command.CommandText = _
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (100, 'Description')"
command.ExecuteNonQuery()
command.CommandText = _
"Insert into Region (RegionID, RegionDescription) VALUES (101, 'Description')"
command.ExecuteNonQuery()
' Commit the transaction.
transaction.Commit()
Console.WriteLine("Both records are written to database.")
Catch ex As Exception
Console.WriteLine(ex.Message)
' Try to rollback the transaction
Try
transaction.Rollback()
Catch
' Do nothing here; transaction is not active.
End Try
End Try
' The connection is automatically closed when the
' code exits the Using block.
End Using
End Sub
Remarks
You must explicitly commit or roll back the transaction using the Commit or Rollback method. To make sure that the .NET Framework Data Provider for OLE DB transaction management model performs correctly, avoid using other transaction management models, such as those provided by the data source.
Note
If you do not specify an isolation level, the default isolation level for the underlying provider is used. To specify an isolation level with the BeginTransaction method, use the overload that takes the isolationLevel
parameter.