StaticUpdateReply
Reply message in response to the StaticUpdate message. It contains the standard fields that describe the response to a message. By examining the values of the message fields it is possible to determine the outcome of the message.
- Section: Transactions
- Related Message: StaticUpdate
ResultCode - The result of the message. In general, 0 means success and a number other than zero means failure.
ErrorParam - If ResultCode is nonzero, the ErrorParam may be set in order to determine which field the error relates to. If set, it is the KVP number of the field which caused the error. For example, if the ResultCode is
ERROR_PERMISSION_DENIED, the ErrorParam allows the caller to determine which entity in the transaction they do not have permission for.
Metadata
- Message Type: ReplyMessage
- Message Number: 1510
Inherited fields
| Name | Type | Size (bytes) | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| MessageType | Integer (unsigned) | 2 | The unique identifier of this message. |
| ClientId | Integer (unsigned) | 4 | The unique identifier of a session with the server, returned in a successful LoginReply message. |
| RequestId | Integer (unsigned) | 4 | Within each session each message must be uniquely identified by this field. It must be monotonically increasing for the duration of the session. |
| ResultCode | Integer (signed) | 4 | The result of the message. In general, 0 means success and a number other than zero means failure. |
| ErrorParam | Integer (unsigned) | 2 | If ResultCode is nonzero, the ErrorParam may be set in order to determine which field the error relates to. If set, it is the KVP number of the field which caused the error. For example, if the ResultCode is ERROR_PERMISSION_DENIED, the ErrorParam allows the caller to determine which entity in the transaction they do not have permission for. |
Fields
| Name | Type | Size (bytes) | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
| Table | One of Table | 1 | |
| Id | Foreign key to All | 8 | |
| UpdateNumber | Integer (unsigned) | 8 | A number that records every change that happens to a record. It is primarily used to avoid write after read problems when an intermediate write has changed the originally read record. |