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I think there's 2 different peices to this question....

Native Access means, that the calls to the operating system are done,
through memory, and not tcp calls...

Record Level Access, is a set of classes, that are not part of the standard
JDBC implementation class from SUN, that lets us talk to the 400 in a way
were used to...  And if the java program is ran on the 400, it should use
native communication to run the IO, and if it's ran on a PC, it will use a
TCP connection to make the IO call...

i think....

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Nathan M. Andelin [SMTP:nandelin@relational-data.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, May 15, 2002 9:12 AM
> To:   web400@midrange.com
> Subject:      Re: [WEB400] Maybe if I rephrase the question?
>
>
> By "native access" you must be referring to "record-level access", which
> is
> said to be significantly faster than JDBC.  But even RLA is handled via
> TCP/IP connection with a Host Server.  If you have access to Fortress
> Rochester, by Frank Soltis, the reference is on page 309.
>
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