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Block Cursors, Scrollable Cursors, and Backward Compatibility for ODBC 3.x Applications

The existence of both SQLFetchScroll and SQLExtendedFetch represents the first clear split in ODBC between the Application Programming Interface (API), which is the set of functions the application calls, and the Service Provider Interface (SPI), which is the set of functions the driver implements. This split is required to balance the requirement in ODBC 3.x, which uses SQLFetchScroll, to align with the standards and be compatible with ODBC 2.x, which uses SQLExtendedFetch.

The ODBC 3.x API, which is the set of functions the application calls, includes SQLFetchScroll and related statement attributes. The ODBC 3.x SPI, which is the set of functions the driver implements, includes SQLFetchScroll, SQLExtendedFetch, and related statement attributes. Because ODBC does not formally enforce this split between the API and the SPI, it is possible for ODBC 3.x applications to call SQLExtendedFetch and related statement attributes. However, there is no reason for ODBC 3.x applications to do this. For more information about APIs and SPIs, see the introduction to ODBC Architecture.

For information about how the ODBC 3.x Driver Manager maps calls to ODBC 2.x and ODBC 3.x drivers, and what functions and statement attributes an ODBC 3.x driver should implement for block and scrollable cursors, see What the Driver Does in Appendix G: Driver Guidelines for Backward Compatibility.

The following table summarizes what functions and statement attributes an ODBC 3.x application should use with block and scrollable cursors. It also lists changes between ODBC 2.x and ODBC 3.x in this area that ODBC 3.x applications should be aware of to be compatible with ODBC 2.x drivers.

Function or

statement attribute
Comments
SQL_ATTR_FETCH_BOOKMARK_PTR Points to the bookmark to use with SQLFetchScroll.

When an application sets this in an ODBC 2.x driver, this must point to a fixed-length bookmark.
SQL_ATTR_ROW_STATUS_PTR Points to the row status array filled by SQLFetch, SQLFetchScroll, SQLBulkOperations, and SQLSetPos.

If an application sets this in an ODBC 2.x driver and calls SQLBulkOperation with an Operation of SQL_ADD before calling SQLFetchScroll, SQLFetch, or SQLExtendedFetch, SQLSTATE HY011 (Attribute cannot be set now) is returned.

When an application calls SQLFetch in an ODBC 2.x driver, SQLFetch is mapped to SQLExtendedFetch and therefore returns values in this array.
SQL_ATTR_ROWS_FETCHED_PTR Points to the buffer in which SQLFetch and SQLFetchScroll return the number of rows fetched.

When an application calls SQLFetch in an ODBC 2.x driver, SQLFetch is mapped to SQLExtendedFetch and therefore returns a value in this buffer.
SQL_ATTR_ROW_ARRAY_SIZE Sets the rowset size.

If an application calls SQLBulkOperations with an Operation of SQL_ADD in an ODBC 2.x driver, SQL_ROWSET_SIZE will be used for the call, not SQL_ATTR_ROW_ARRAY_SIZE, because the call is mapped to SQLSetPos with an Operation of SQL_ADD, which uses SQL_ROWSET_SIZE.

Calling SQLSetPos with an Operation of SQL_ADD or SQLExtendedFetch in an ODBC 2.x driver uses SQL_ROWSET_SIZE.

Calling SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll in an ODBC 2.x driver uses SQL_ATTR_ROW_ARRAY_SIZE.
SQLBulkOperations Performs insert and bookmark operations. When SQLBulkOperations with an Operation of SQL_ADD is called in an ODBC 2.x driver, it is mapped to SQLSetPos with an Operation of SQL_ADD. The following are implementation details:

- When working with an ODBC 2.x driver, an application must use only the implicitly allocated ARD associated with the StatementHandle; it cannot allocate another ARD for adding rows, because explicit descriptor operations are not supported in an ODBC 2.x driver. An application must use SQLBindCol to bind to the ARD, not SQLSetDescField or SQLSetDescRec.
- When calling an ODBC 3.x driver, an application can call SQLBulkOperations with an Operation of SQL_ADD before calling SQLFetch or SQLFetchScroll. When calling an ODBC 2.x driver, an application must call SQLFetchScroll before calling SQLBulkOperations with an Operation of SQL_ADD.
SQLFetch Returns the next rowset. The following are implementation details:

- When an application calls SQLFetch in an ODBC 2.x driver, it is mapped to SQLExtendedFetch.
- When an application calls SQLFetch in an ODBC 3.x driver, it returns the number of rows specified with the SQL_ATTR_ROW_ARRAY_SIZE statement attribute.
SQLFetchScroll Returns the specified rowset. The following are implementation details:

- When an application calls SQLFetchScroll in an ODBC 2.x driver, it returns SQLSTATE 01S01 (Error in row) before each error that applies to a single row. It does this only because the ODBC 3.x Driver Manager maps this to SQLExtendedFetch and SQLExtendedFetch returns this SQLSTATE. When an application calls SQLFetchScroll in an ODBC 3.x driver, it never returns SQLSTATE 01S01 (Error in row).
- When an application calls SQLFetchScroll in an ODBC 2.x driver with FetchOrientation set to SQL_FETCH_BOOKMARK, the FetchOffset argument must be set to 0. SQLSTATE HYC00 (Optional feature not implemented) is returned if offset-based bookmark fetching is attempted with an ODBC 2.x driver.

Note

ODBC 3.x applications should not use SQLExtendedFetch or the SQL_ROWSET_SIZE statement attribute. Instead, they should use SQLFetchScroll and the SQL_ATTR_ROW_ARRAY_SIZE statement attribute. ODBC 3.x applications should not use SQLSetPos with an Operation of SQL_ADD but should use SQLBulkOperations with an Operation of SQL_ADD.