#include <db_cxx.h> int DbEnv::set_tx_max(u_int32_t max);
Configure the Berkeley DB database environment to support at least max active transactions. This value bounds the size of the memory allocated for transactions. Child transactions are counted as active until they either commit or abort.
Transactions that update multiversion databases are not freed until the last page version that the transaction created is flushed from cache. This means that applications using multi-version concurrency control may need a transaction for each page in cache, in the extreme case.
When all of the memory available in the database environment for
transactions is in use, calls to
DbEnv::txn_begin()
will fail
(until some active transactions complete). If
DbEnv::set_tx_max()
is never called,
the database environment is configured to support at least 100
active transactions.
The database environment's number of active transactions may also be configured using the environment's DB_CONFIG file. The syntax of the entry in that file is a single line with the string "set_tx_max", one or more whitespace characters, and the number of transactions. Because the DB_CONFIG file is read when the database environment is opened, it will silently overrule configuration done before that time.
The DbEnv::set_tx_max()
method configures
a database environment, not only operations performed using the
specified DbEnv handle.
The DbEnv::set_tx_max()
method may not be called after the
DbEnv::open()
method is called.
If the database environment already exists when
DbEnv::open()
is called, the
information specified to DbEnv::set_tx_max()
will be ignored.
The DbEnv::set_tx_max()
method either returns a non-zero error value or throws an
exception that encapsulates a non-zero error value on
failure, and returns 0 on success.
The DbEnv::set_tx_max()
method may fail and throw a DbException
exception, encapsulating one of the following non-zero errors, or return one
of the following non-zero errors:
If the method was called after DbEnv::open() was called; or if an invalid flag value or parameter was specified.