public interface TransactionalWriter extends RowSetWriter
SyncProvider abstract class so that it has finer grained
 transaction control.
 
 If one or more disconnected RowSet objects are participating
 in a global transaction, they may wish to coordinate their synchronization
 commits to preserve data integrity and reduce the number of
 synchronization exceptions. If this is the case, an application should set
 the CachedRowSet constant COMMIT_ON_ACCEPT_CHANGES
 to false and use the commit and rollback
 methods defined in this interface to manage transaction boundaries.
| Modifier and Type | Method | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| void | commit() | Makes permanent all changes that have been performed by the
  acceptChangesmethod since the last call to either thecommitorrollbackmethods. | 
| void | rollback() | Undoes all changes made in the current transaction. | 
| void | rollback(Savepoint s) | Undoes all changes made in the current transaction made prior to the given
  Savepointobject. | 
writeDatavoid commit()
     throws SQLException
acceptChanges method since the last call to either the
 commit or rollback methods.
 This method should be used only when auto-commit mode has been disabled.SQLException - if a database access error occurs or the
         Connection object within this CachedRowSet
         object is in auto-commit modevoid rollback()
       throws SQLException
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or the Connection
         object within this CachedRowSet object is in auto-commit modevoid rollback(Savepoint s) throws SQLException
Savepoint object.  This method should be used only when auto-commit
 mode has been disabled.s - a Savepoint object marking a savepoint in the current
        transaction.  All changes made before s was set will be undone.
        All changes made after s was set will be made permanent.SQLException - if a database access error occurs or the Connection
         object within this CachedRowSet object is in auto-commit mode Submit a bug or feature 
For further API reference and developer documentation, see Java SE Documentation. That documentation contains more detailed, developer-targeted descriptions, with conceptual overviews, definitions of terms, workarounds, and working code examples.
 Copyright © 1993, 2025, Oracle and/or its affiliates.  All rights reserved. Use is subject to license terms. Also see the documentation redistribution policy.