DataFactory Object (RDSServer)
Important
Beginning with Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012, RDS server components are no longer included in the Windows operating system (see Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 Compatibility Cookbook for more detail). RDS client components will be removed in a future version of Windows. Avoid using this feature in new development work, and plan to modify applications that currently use this feature. Applications that use RDS should migrate to WCF Data Service.
This default server-side business object implements methods that provide read/write data access to specified data sources for client-side applications.
The RDSServer.DataFactory object is designed as a server-side Automation object that receives client requests. In an Internet implementation, it resides on a Web server and is instantiated by the ADISAPI component. The RDSServer.DataFactory object provides read and write access to specified data sources, but does not contain any validation or business rules logic.
If you use a method that is available in both the RDSServer.DataFactory and RDS.DataControl objects, Remote Data Service uses the RDS.DataControl version by default. The default assumes a basic programming scenario, where the RDSServer.DataFactory serves as a generic server-side business object.
If you want your Web application to handle task-specific server-side processing, you can replace the RDSServer.DataFactory with a custom business object.
You can create server-side business objects that call the RDSServer.DataFactory methods, such as Query and CreateRecordset. This is helpful if you want to add functionality to your business objects, but take advantage of existing Remote Data Service technologies.
The DataFactory object is not safe for scripts that run on the client side.
The class ID for the RDSServer.DataFactory object is 9381D8F5-0288-11D0-9501-00AA00B911A5.
This section contains the following topic.
See Also
DataFactory Object, Query Method, and CreateObject Method Example (VBScript)