DB2 ⭐ Featured
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Q: When should I use COMMIT in DB2?

Answer:

COMMIT saves all changes since the last COMMIT and releases locks.

When to COMMIT:

  • After processing a logical unit of work
  • Periodically in long-running batch (every N records)
  • Before ending the program successfully

Frequency Guidelines:

  • Too frequent: Performance overhead
  • Too rare: Lock contention, large log
  • Typical: Every 100-1000 records in batch

Best Practice:

MOVE 0 TO WS-COMMIT-COUNT.

PERFORM PROCESS-RECORD.

ADD 1 TO WS-COMMIT-COUNT.
IF WS-COMMIT-COUNT >= 500
    EXEC SQL COMMIT END-EXEC
    MOVE 0 TO WS-COMMIT-COUNT
END-IF.

Note: In CICS, syncpoint (COMMIT) happens automatically at task end. Explicit SYNCPOINT is rarely needed.

CICS ⭐ Featured
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Q: How to SYNCPOINT?

Answer:
SYNCPOINT commits changes. EXEC CICS SYNCPOINT. Makes updates permanent. Or SYNCPOINT ROLLBACK undoes since last sync. Implicit syncpoint at task end. Use for transaction consistency.
DB2 ⭐ Featured
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Q: Explain COMMIT and ROLLBACK

Answer:
COMMIT makes changes permanent, releases locks. ROLLBACK undoes changes since last COMMIT. Implicit COMMIT at program end (normal). Implicit ROLLBACK on abend. Frequent COMMIT reduces lock duration and log usage.
DB2
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Q: Explain DB2 logging

Answer:
DB2 logs all changes for recovery. Active log (circular), archive log (offloaded). LOG YES/NO on DDL. COMMIT writes to log. Recovery uses logs. Log full causes issues - monitor usage.
DB2
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Q: What causes -911 SQLCODE?

Answer:
-911 is deadlock or timeout. Two processes waiting for each other's resources. Solutions: consistent lock order, shorter transactions, COMMIT frequently, appropriate isolation level. -913 is similar (deadlock victim). Retry transaction.
DB2
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Q: Explain DB2 isolation levels

Answer:
UR (Uncommitted Read) reads dirty data. CS (Cursor Stability) locks current row. RS (Read Stability) locks all accessed rows. RR (Repeatable Read) locks range, prevents phantom. Higher isolation = more consistency but more locking. CS most common.
DB2
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Q: Explain DECLARE CURSOR syntax

Answer:
DECLARE cursor-name CURSOR FOR SELECT... WITH HOLD keeps open after COMMIT. WITH RETURN returns to caller. FOR UPDATE OF allows positioned update. FOR READ ONLY optimizes read. ORDER BY for sorting. Static or dynamic declaration.