Returns the maximum data length of a remote stored procedure call parameter.
int srv_parammaxlen (
SRV_PROC * srvproc,
int n );
where
The maximum length, in bytes, of the parameter data. If there is no nth parameter or if there is no remote stored procedure, returns -1.
Each remote stored procedure parameter has an actual and a maximum data length. For standard fixed-length datatypes that don't allow null values, the actual and maximum lengths are the same. For variable-length datatypes, the lengths can vary. For example, a parameter declared as varchar(30) can have data that is only 10 bytes long. The parameter's actual length is 10 and its maximum length is 30. The srv_parammaxlen function gets the maximum data length of a remote stored procedure. To obtain the actual length of a parameter, use srv_paramlen.
When a remote stored procedure call is made with parameters, the parameters can be passed either by name or by position (unnamed). If the remote stored procedure call is made with some parameters passed by name and some passed by position, an error occurs. The SRV_RPC handler is still called, but it appears as if there were no parameters, and srv_rpcparams returns 0.
This entry | For information about |
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srv_paramdata | Returning the value of a remote stored procedure parameter |
srv_paramlen | Returning the data length of a remote stored procedure parameter |
srv_paramname | Returning the name of a remote stored procedure parameter |
srv_paramnumber | Returning the number of a remote stored procedure parameter |
srv_paramset | Setting the value of a remote stored procedure return parameter |
srv_paramtype | Returning the datatype of a remote stored procedure parameter |
srv_rpcparams | Returning the number of parameters in a remote stored procedure |