DataSpace Object (RDS)
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.
Creates client-side proxies to custom business objects located on the middle tier.
Remote Data Service needs business object proxies so that client-side components can communicate with business objects located on the middle tier. Proxies facilitate the packaging, unpackaging, and transport (marshaling) of the application's Recordset data across process or machine boundaries.
Remote Data Service uses the RDS.DataSpace object's CreateObject method to create business object proxies. The business object proxy is dynamically created whenever an instance of its middle-tier business object counterpart is created. Remote Data Service supports the following protocols: HTTP, HTTPS (HTTP Secure Sockets), DCOM, and in-process (client components and the business object reside on the same computer).
Note
RDS behaves in a "stateless" manner when the RDS.DataSpace object uses the HTTP or HTTPS protocols. That is, any internal information about a client request is discarded after the server returns a response.
Note
Although the business object appears to exist for the lifetime of the business object proxy, the business object actually exists only until a response is sent to a request. When a request is issued (that is, a method is invoked on the business object), the proxy opens a new connection to the server and the server creates a new instance of the business object. After the business object responds to the request, the server destroys the business object and closes the connection.
Note
This behavior means you cannot pass data from one request to another using a business object property or variable. You must employ some other mechanism, such as a file or a method argument, to persist state data.
The class ID for the RDS.DataSpace object is BD96C556-65A3-11D0-983A-00C04FC29E36.
The DataSpace object is safe for scripting.
This section contains the following topic.