You can create MTS objects by:
Note If you are using Visual C++ and running an MTS component in-process, you must:
Creating Objects Using a Context Object
You can create an MTS object by calling the CreateInstance method on the IObjectContext interface of an object's context object. The new MTS object's context inherits the activity, possibly a transaction, and all security identities from the creating object's context.
Creating an object using a context object
Creating Objects Using a Transaction Context Object
If you want your base client to control transaction boundaries, use a transaction context object. You can create an MTS object by calling the CreateInstance method of the ITransactionContext interface. The new MTS object's context inherits the activity, possibly a transaction, and the identity of the initial client from the transaction context object. You can call the Commit method to commit an object's work and the Abort method to abort its work.
Creating an object using a transaction context object
Creating Objects Using CoCreateInstance
You can create MTS objects by using CoCreateInstance or any equivalent method based on CoGetClassObject and IClassFactory::CreateInstance. While this approach should suffice for many base client applications, there are some significant limitations for the client, including the inability to control transaction boundaries. Base clients that need this additional level of control can use a transaction context object.
Instantiating an object with CoCreateInstance
When you use CoGetClassObject with a component that is registered to run under MTS, it returns a reference to an MTS-provided class factory. This allows MTS to participate in the client's calls to IClassFactory::CreateInstance. The MTS class factory creates the context object and then calls the component's real class factory.
For clustered servers, if you are using the CoCreateInstanceEx function, use the name of the virtual server containing the MSDTC resource in the pwszName field of the COSERVERINFO structure. (See the Microsoft Platform SDK documentation for more details about CoCreateInstanceEx.)
Important It is recommended that you do not call CoCreateInstance to create MTS objects from within MTS objects. When you do so, the new object's context cannot inherit any properties from its client's context. In particular, the new object cannot execute within the scope of its client's transaction.
You cannot use an MTS object as part of an aggregate of other objects. CoCreateInstance returns CLASS_E_NOAGGREGATION to indicate an attempt to create an MTS object with another controlling IUnknown.
You can, however, create an MTS object that is implemented as an aggregation of objects.
Creating Objects Using Visual Basic
You can use the following object creation methods in Microsoft Visual Basic to create MTS objects:
Using Visual Basic object creation methods results in the same limitations as using CoCreateInstance. To inherit a transaction from the creating object's context, use CreateInstance.
Important Do not use the New operator, or a variable declared As New, to create an instance of a class that is part of the active project. In this situation, Visual Basic uses an implementation of object creation that does not use COM. To prevent this occurrence, it is recommended that you mark all objects passed out from a Visual Basic componentas Public Creatable, or its equivalent, and created with either the CreateObject function or the CreateInstance method of the ObjectContext object.
MTS Objects, Calling MTS Components, Context Objects, Passing Object References, Deactivating Objects, CreateInstance