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NonStop SQL MX (ODBC)
NonStop SQL MX is object relational database management software that supports standard data and multi-media data. It is used in complex query environments such as business intelligence, online analytical processing (OLAP) and operational data store (ODS). The ODBC connector connects to NonStop SQL MX database files.
See Also
Connector-Specific Notes
No known limitations at this time.
Connector Parts
Connector parts are the fields you configure to connect with a data source or target.
The settings that are available depend on the connector you select.
For a list of all parts for target connectors, see Specifying Connector, Parts, and Properties.
Property Options
You can specify the following target properties:
Property
Description
AutoCommit
If set to True, it allows you to automatically commit changes as they are made by each SQL statement, instead of waiting until the end of the transaction.
Also, if this option is set to True, you cannot roll back changes after they are done. It will overwrite the CommitFrequency value, which means that the changes are committed by each SQL statement irrespective of the value set for CommitFrequency.
The default value is False.
BulkOperations
Use bulk operations for faster insert. This property determines if an insert statement is executed for each record or a bulk add is executed for each record. The default is false, the slower setting. To maximize speed and instruct the integration platform to use a bulk add, change this setting to true.
CommitFrequency
Allows you to control how often data is committed to the database when the AutoCommit property is set to False.
The default value is zero that is, the data is committed at the end of the transformation, allowing rollback on error. This is the slowest setting. When performing large transformations, this is not practical as it may produce too many transaction log entries.
Specifying a nonzero value indicates that data is committed to the database after inserting or updating specified number of records.
ConstraintDDL
This is a pass-through mechanism that allows you to specify any additional data definition language (DDL) statements that need to be executed when a new table is created. DDL is used to define keys, indexes, constraints and integrity rules for SQL databases. There is no default.
DriverCompletion
Allows you to control whether or not the driver prompts you for information. The options are Prompt, Complete (default), Complete Required, and No Prompt. The Prompt option prompts the user for every individual bit of information. Complete prompts the user for any information they forgot to enter. The Complete Required option prompts the user only for information that is essential to complete the connection. The No Prompt option does not prompt the user for any information.
DriverOptions
Enter any valid ODBC connect string options here. There is no default.
DSNType
Data sources or drivers to connect to in the Data Source Name (DSN) list. DSNs are listed in Control Panel > Administrative Tools > ODBC Data Source Administrator window. The options are:
User & System: This is the default option.
System: This DSN allows database access for any user of a particular computer. The System DSN are stored in the Windows registry.
User: This DSN allows database access for a single user on a single computer. Like the System DSN, the information is stored in the Windows registry.
Driver: The ODBC driver to connect to. This driver must be installed on your computer.
File: This DSN stores information required to connect to the desired data source in a text file with a .DSN extension (not in the Windows registry) and can be shared by users of different computers who have the same drivers installed.
For more information, see Configuring ODBC Data Source.
IdentifierQuotes
All databases have what are called quoted identifiers. You use quoted identifiers to make the SQL statement parseable and distinguish between columns and character data in SQL statements. For example, Oracle uses double quotes for column and table names in SQL statements and uses single quotes for character data. In a SQL statement, you should enclose identifiers containing special characters or match keywords in identifier quote characters; (also known as delimited identifiers in SQL-92). For example, the Accounts Receivable identifier is quoted in the following SELECT statement:
SELECT * FROM "Accounts Receivable"
If you do not use identifier quotes, the parser assumes there are two tables, Accounts and Receivable and return a syntax error that they are not separated by a comma.
IdentifierQuotes has four options:
Default
None
"
'
MaxDataLength
This is the maximum data length for Long data types. The default is 1 MB. You can reset this number as you choose based on your available memory capabilities and target requirements.
Some ODBC drivers have limitations concerning the maximum data length they can handle. If you choose an Application (ODBC) Source or Target connector and the default setting is not 1 MB, the integration platform presets the default for the capabilities of that particular ODBC driver. It is not recommended that the MaxDataLength property be set any higher under those conditions.
ModifyDriverOptions
Allows you to store the ODBC connection. The default is true. If you set this to false, you are prompted for your connection information each time you run the Transformation.
PrimaryKey
The PrimaryKey property allows the user to specify a list of field names that are used to make the primary key. Field names are delimited by commas. If the PrimaryKey property contains one or more field names, these names are included in the SQL CREATE statement when the connector is in replace mode. No default exists for this property.
There is one additional requirement for using the PrimaryKey property. The ODBC driver must support integrity enhancement facility (IEF). Only the more advanced ODBC drivers support this.
Synonyms
If set to true this property allows you to see synonyms. The alias names appear in the table drop down list along with the tables. Default is false.
SystemTables
The SystemTables property is only applicable if the user is logged onto the database as the database administrator. Only the DBA has access to SystemTables. If set to true, this property allows you to see all the tables created by the DBA. The system table names appear in the table drop down list. The default is false.
TransactionIsolation
The Translation Isolation option allows the user to specify any one of five different isolation levels when reading from or writing to a database table with ODBC. The default for version 2.x is Versioning. The default is Serializable.
The ANSI SQL 2 standard defines three specific ways in which serializability of a transaction may be violated: P1 (Dirty Read), P2 (Nonrepeatable Read) and P3 (Phantoms).
The following lists the five supported isolation levels.
READ_UNCOMMITTED - Permits P1, P2, and P3.
READ_COMMITTED - Permits P2 and P3. Does not permit P1.
REPEATABLE_READ - Permits P3. Does not permit P1 and P2.
SERIALIZABLE - Does not permit any of P1, P2, and P3.
VERSIONING - Provides SERIALIZABLE transactions, but does so without a significant impact on concurrency.
For further details about TransactionIsolation levels, see the Microsoft ODBC SDK documentation.
UseCursors
The UseCursors property allows you to turn cursor support on and off. The default is false. When set to true and the specified ODBC driver does not support cursor inserts, and the integration platform falls back on the SQL INSERT mode of adding records.
For exports, cursor support is supposed to enhance the performance of inserting records. This appears to be the case for desktop databases. For database servers, there is no noticeable change in insert speed. They seem to execute prepared queries about as quickly as they handle cursor inserts
Another complication of cursor inserts is that some drivers require that the target table be indexed, otherwise positioned updates (cursors) are not allowed. Two additional properties in the ODBC export connector address this issue: PrimaryKey and ConstraintDDL.
Views
If set to True, this property allows you to see the view names in the table list along with the table names. Default is True.
Note:  This property supports only Append and DeleteAndAppend output modes and does not support the Replace output mode.
Encoding
Sets the character encoding for NonStop SQL MX (ODBC) source and target files.
Note:  Shift-JIS encoding is used only in Japanese operating systems.
ArraySize
Determines the number of rows to be sent to the server at one time. The default value is 1000, meaning each row is individually sent to the server. Larger values will buffer multiple rows and send them all at once. While this improves the speed, it affects error reporting (a server error won't be detected/reported until the next batch of records is sent to the server).
The maximum value allowed for this property is 100000. While the connector allows the value to be set that high, many drivers have lower limits. The connector will log a message indicating if the driver is forcing a lower value for the array size. In addition, the connector does not support arrays when there is a LOB-type field in the table, or when the (maximum) length of a character-type field is longer than 32767 characters. In these cases, a message will be logged indicating the array size has been reduced to 1.
Due to the way the connector attempts to support older drivers, the array support requires BulkOperations and UseCursors is set to True or both must be set to False. If BulkOperations is False and UseCursors is True, then the array size is ignored and a message is logged indicating this condition.
Last modified date: 02/09/2024