Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-898FF7CE-969C-5FE1-9346-34BCBE637A57.dita
author Dominic Pinkman <Dominic.Pinkman@Nokia.com>
Thu, 11 Mar 2010 18:02:22 +0000
changeset 3 46218c8b8afa
parent 1 25a17d01db0c
child 5 f345bda72bc4
permissions -rw-r--r--
week 10 bug fix submission (SF PDK version): Bug 1892, Bug 1897, Bug 1319. Also 3 or 4 documents were found to contain code blocks with SFL, which has been fixed. Partial fix for broken links, links to Forum Nokia, and the 'Symbian platform' terminology issues.

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!-- Copyright (c) 2007-2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies) All rights reserved. -->
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"Eclipse Public License v1.0" which accompanies this distribution, 
and is available at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html". -->
<!-- Initial Contributors:
    Nokia Corporation - initial contribution.
Contributors: 
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<!DOCTYPE concept
  PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" "concept.dtd">
<concept xml:lang="en" id="GUID-898FF7CE-969C-5FE1-9346-34BCBE637A57"><title>Data safety and recovery</title><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody><p>A robust stream structure is used to manage row data within a database, and relying on the permanent file store's update integrity, it will survive a crash; this excludes the case where the file itself is corrupted. Such an aborted access effects a rollback on the database when it is next opened, all committed data is immediately available, though indexes may have been damaged as for a controlled rollback.</p> <p>The database reports damage if it considers that it may have damaged indexes. When this is the case the database can still be used, but attempting to use any damaged index results in an error. Damaged indexes can be fully restored by recovering the database.</p> <p>Compacting the store which contains the database also guarantees no data loss.</p> <p>The store used by the database <note>must not be committed or reverted while the database is inside a transaction</note>, this can lead to loss of structural integrity within the database. Such damage is not repairable by DBMS. </p> <p>The database streams cannot be corrupted by any action of DBMS itself, but misuse of the store, the file or damage to the file system resulting in such corruption may be detected by the database and reported as an error. DBMS cannot repair such damage to a database.</p> </conbody></concept>