I have a program that connects to an Oracle database and performs operations on it. I now want to adapt that program to also support an SQL Server database.
In the O
In SQL Server there are locking hints but they do not span their statements like the Oracle example you provided. The way to do it in SQL Server is to set an isolation level on the transaction that contains the statements that you want to execute. See this MSDN page but the general structure would look something like:
SET TRANSACTION ISOLATION LEVEL SERIALIZABLE;
BEGIN TRANSACTION;
select * from ...
update ...
COMMIT TRANSACTION;
SERIALIZABLE is the highest isolation level. See the link for other options. From MSDN:
SERIALIZABLE Specifies the following:
Statements cannot read data that has been modified but not yet committed by other transactions.
No other transactions can modify data that has been read by the current transaction until the current transaction completes.
Other transactions cannot insert new rows with key values that would fall in the range of keys read by any statements in the current transaction until the current transaction completes.