To commit or roll back a transaction in manual-commit mode, an application calls SQLEndTran. Drivers for DBMSs that support transactions typically implement this function by executing a COMMIT or ROLLBACK statement. The Driver Manager does not call SQLEndTran when the connection is in auto-commit mode; it simply returns SQL_SUCCESS, even if the application attempts to roll back the transaction. Because drivers for DBMSs that do not support transactions are always in auto-commit mode, they can either implement SQLEndTran to return SQL_SUCCESS without doing anything or not implement it at all.
Note Applications should not commit or roll back transactions by executing COMMIT or ROLLBACK statements with SQLExecute or SQLExecDirect. The effects of doing this are undefined. Possible problems include the driver no longer knowing when a transaction is active and these statements failing against data sources that do not support transactions. These applications should call SQLEndTran instead.
If an application passes the environment handle to SQLEndTran but does not pass a connection handle, the Driver Manager conceptually calls SQLEndTran with the environment handle for each driver that has one or more active connections in the environment. The driver then commits the transactions on each connection in the environment. However, it is important to realize that neither the driver nor the Driver Manager performs a two-phase commit on the connections in the environment; this is merely a programming convenience to simultaneously call SQLEndTran for all connections in the environment.
(A two-phase commit is generally used to commit transactions that are spread across multiple data sources. In its first phase, the data sources are polled as to whether they can commit their part of the transaction. In the second phase, the transaction is actually committed on all data sources. If any data sources reply in the first phase that they cannot commit the transaction, the second phase does not occur.)