SQL connection states
If an application process successfully executes a CONNECT statement, the SQL connection states of the connections change.
If an application process successfully executes a CONNECT statement:
- The current connection is placed in the dormant and held state.
- The new connection is placed in the current and held state.
- The location name is added to the set of existing connections.
If the location name is already in the set of existing connections, an error is returned.
An SQL connection in the dormant state is placed in the current state using:
- The SET CONNECTION statement, or
- The CONNECT statement, if the SQLRULES(DB2) bind option is in effect.
When an SQL connection is placed in the current state, the previously-current SQL connection, if any, is placed in the dormant state. No more than one SQL connection in the set of existing connections of an application process can be current at any time. Changing the state of an SQL connection from current to dormant or from dormant to current has no effect on its held or release-pending state.
An SQL connection is placed in the release-pending state by the RELEASE statement. When an application process executes a commit operation, every release-pending connection of the process is ended. Changing the state of an SQL connection from held to release-pending has no effect on its current or dormant state. Thus, an SQL connection in the release-pending state can still be used until the next commit operation. No way exists to change the state of a connection from release-pending to held.