Running business objects in component services
Applies to: Access 2013, Office 2013
Business objects can be executable files (.exe) or dynamic-link libraries (.dll). The configuration you use to run the business object depends on whether the object is a .dll or .exe file:
Business objects created as .exe files can be called through DCOM. If these business objects are used through Internet Information Services (IIS), they are subject to additional marshalingof data, which will slow client performance.
Business objects created as .dll files can be used via IIS (and therefore HTTP). They can also be used over DCOM only via Component Services (or Microsoft Transaction Server, if you are using Windows NT). Business object DLLs will need to be registered on the IIS server computer to give you accessibility via IIS. (For steps on how to configure a DLL to run on DCOM, see the section, "Enabling a DLL to Run on DCOM.")
Note
When business objects on the middle tier are implemented as Component Services components (using GetObjectContext, SetComplete, and SetAbort), they can use Component Services (or MTS, if you are using Windows NT) context objects to maintain their state across multiple client calls. This scenario is possible with DCOM, which is typically implemented between trusted clients and servers (an intranet).
In this case, the RDS.DataSpace object and CreateObject method on the client side are replaced by the transaction context object and CreateInstance method (provided by the ITransactionContext interface), implemented by Component Services.