Javier, I am curious why you would say that you "have to do it from the station where the Cursor originated". To the best of my knowledge aren't all cursors in Rbase "GLOBAL" thus any one with owner capabilities should be able to drop the cursor.
--- Javier Valencia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I guess the term abnormal comes from the old days in > mainframes where you > got an "ABEND" (abnormal ending) error. In this > case, it would be any > termination of the loop other that the intended > termination, most of the > time it would be crash, GOTO out of the loop, power > brownout, bad NIC, etc., > in other word it terminates in way that it does not > drop the cursor. Of > course DISC and CONN would drop the cursor, but you > would have to do it from > the station where the Cursor originated. > Javier, > > Javier Valencia, PE > President > Valencia Technology Group, L.L.C. > 14315 S. Twilight Ln, Suite #14 > Olathe, Kansas 66062-4578 > Office (913)829-0888 > Fax (913)649-2904 > Cell (913)915-3137 > ================================================ > Attention: > The information contained in this message and or > attachments is intended > only for the person or entity to which it is > addressed and may contain > confidential and/or privileged material. Any > review, retransmission, > dissemination or other use of, or taking of any > action in reliance upon, > this information by persons or entities other than > the intended recipient > is prohibited. If you received this in error, please > contact the sender and > delete the material from all system and destroy all > copies. > ====================================================== > > -----Original Message----- > From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Behalf Of Lawrence Lustig > Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2005 11:27 AM > To: RBG7-L Mailing List > Subject: [RBG7-L] - RE: Stuck cursor lock. > > > I have found that many times when you exit a > cursor abnormally, it leaves > a > > lock. Do LIST CURSORS and if there is one, then > DROP CURSOR > > your_cursor_name. > > I tried that -- anyway, it was a fresh connection. > But is it possible for a > different session (on another machine) to leave that > lock around? If so, > that's probably what happened. > > Do you know what constitutes an "abnormal" exit from > a cursor? I always > DROP > my cursors, but this table is under development and > something may have > happened. > -- > Larry > > ____________________________________________________ Yahoo! Sports Rekindle the Rivalries. Sign up for Fantasy Football http://football.fantasysports.yahoo.com
