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Java Database Connectivity (JDBC)

Topics
1. The Vendor Variation Problem 2. SQL and Versions of JDBC 3. Creating an ODBC Data Source 4. Simple Database Access 5. Modifying the Database Contents 6. Transactions 7. Meta Data 8. Using a GUI to Access a Database 9. Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2.0 10. Modifying Databases via Java Methods 11. Using the DataSource Interface.

Introduction to JDBC
JDBC is used for accessing databases from Java applications Information is transferred from relations to objects and vice-versa
- databases optimized for searching/indexing - objects optimized for engineering/flexibility

JDBC Architecture
Oracle

Driver

Oracle

Java Application

JDBC
Network

DB2
Driver

DB2
MySQL Driver

MySQL
4

JDBC Architecture (cont.)


Application JDBC Driver

Java code calls JDBC library

JDBC loads a driver


Driver talks to a particular database An application can work with several databases by using all corresponding drivers Ideal: can change database engines without changing any application code (not always in practice)

What is JDBC?

An API that lets you access virtually any tabular data source from the Java programming language

JDBC Data Access API JDBC Technology Homepage

Whats an API? See J2SE documentation Whats a tabular data source? access virtually any data source, from relational databases to spreadsheets and flat files.

JDBC Documentation

Well focus on accessing Oracle databases


6

General Architecture

What design pattern is implied in this architecture? What does it buy for us? Why is this architecture also multi-tiered?

JDBC

JDBC is a Sun trademark

It is often taken to stand for Java Database Connectivity

Java is very standardized, but there are many versions of SQL JDBC is a means of accessing SQL databases from Java

JDBC is a standardized API for use by Java programs JDBC is also a specification for how third-party vendors should write database drivers to access specific SQL versions

Driver types

There are four types of drivers:

JDBC Type 1 Driver -- JDBC/ODBC Bridge drivers

ODBC (Open DataBase Connectivity) is a standard software API designed to be independent of specific programming languages Sun provides a JDBC/ODBC implementation

JDBC Type 2 Driver -- use platform-specific APIs for data access JDBC Type 3 Driver -- 100% Java, use a net protocol to access a remote listener and map calls into vendor-specific calls JDBC Type 4 Driver -- 100% Java

Most efficient of all driver types

Why JDBC drivers?


To cope with the variation in internal format of databases from vendor to vendor

JDBC drivers are some mediating software that allow JDBC to


communicate with the vendor-specific API for that database. For information about JDBC drivers form specific databases, visit http://servlet.java.sun.com/products/jdbc/drivers.

Suns JDBC-ODBC driver for MS-databases


Microsoft's ODBC drivers were originally available only for

Microsoft (MS) databases


Suns JDBC-ODBC bridge driver is for MS-databases It is in package sun.jdbc.odbc, which is included in the J2SE JDBC-ODBC driver converts the JDBC protocol into the corresponding ODBC one

SQL and Versions of JDBC

Versions of JDBC
JDBC 1.0 with JDK 1.1 JDBC 2.0 with JDK 1.2 (J2SE 1.2) (commonly used)

scrolling forwards and backwards in a result set


making updates to database tables using Java methods

JDBC 2.1 with J2SE 1.2.2 J2SE 1.3. server-side database manipulation

JDBC 3.0 with J2SE 1.4. Access from spreadsheets and flat files or any data source Included java.sql and javax.sql

JDBC 4.0 with JDK6.

java.sql
The package comprising the core JDBC API is called java.sql We use a simple MS Access database, which means that the inbuilt JDBC-ODBC bridge driver can be employed If you wish to experiment with other databases, place the

appropriate JDBC driver within folder java\jre\lib\ext.

Creating an ODBC Data Source

Creating an ODBC Data Source


1. First , it is necessary to register the database as an ODBC Data Source. 2. Once this has been done, the database can be referred to by its Data Source Name (DSN).

steps to set up your own ODBC Data Source(only for ODBC databases!)

Simple Database Access

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

1.Load the Database Driver

class is used to hold methods that operate upon other classes in order to furnish details of their characteristics forName method of class

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

2. Establish a Connection to the Database

declare a Connection reference


call static method getConnection of class DriverManager to return a Connection object Method getConnection takes three String arguments: 1. a URL-style address for the database; 2. a user name; 3. a password.

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

2. Establish a Connection to the Database


Address format: jdbc:<sub-protocol>:<data-source>
<sub-protocol> specifies a database connection service (i.e., a

driver)
<data-source> provides all the information needed by the

service to locate the database

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

2. Establish a Connection to the Database


Assuming that our Finances database is indeed local and that we

did not set a user name or password for this database

If this same database were remote

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

3. Create a Statement Object and Store its Reference


Call createStatement () method of our Connection object Save the address of the object returned in a Statement reference.

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

4. Run a Query/Update and Accept the Result(s)


Class Statement has methods to execute queries: 1. executeQuery () to retrieve data from a database 2. executeUpdate() to change the contents of the database
The former method returns a ResultSet object, latter returns an integer that indicates the number of database rows that have been affected by the updating operation.

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

4. Run a Query/Update and Accept the Result(s)

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

4. Run a Query/Update and Accept the Result(s)

Using JDBC to access a database requires several steps

5. Manipulate/Display/Check Result(s)
The only method of ResultSet that we need to make use of at

present is next, which moves the ResultSet cursor/pointer to


the next row in the set of rows referred to by that object. We can retrieve data via either the field name or the field position using the appropriate method

5. Manipulate/Display/Check Result(s)

5. Manipulate/Display/Check Result(s)

6. Repeat Steps 4 and 5 as Required

7.Close the Connection

Modifying the Database Contents

Modifying the Database Contents


Database Update Statements :
INSERT DELETE UPDATE

Update statements are submitted via the executeUpdate()

method of statement interface

Modifying the Database Contents

Example:

Example:

Example:

Example:

Example:

Example:

Example:

Transactions

Transactions
one or more SQL statements that may be grouped together as a single processing entity We want either all the statements or none of them executed. Java provides the Connection interface methods to be

1. commit

used at the end of a transaction to

commit/finalise the database changes 2. rollback used to restore the database to the state it was in prior to the current transaction

Transactions
By default, JDBC automatically commits each individual SQL statement that is applied to a database. In order to change this default behaviour so that transaction processing may be carried out, we must first execute Connection

method setAutoCommit with an argument of false

We can then use methods commit and rollback to effect transaction processing.

Transactions

Meta Data

Meta Data
'data about data
Two categories of meta data available through the JDBC API:
data about the rows and columns returned by a query (i.e.,

data about ResultSet objects);


data about the database as a whole.

The first of these is provided by interface ResultSetMetaData, an object of which is returned by the ResultSet method getMetaData

Meta Data
data about the rows and columns is provided by interface ResultSetMetaData, an object of which is returned by the

ResultSet method getMetaData

Data about the database as a whole is provided by interface DatabaseMetaData, an object of which is returned by the Connection method getMetaData

Meta Data
Information available from a object includes the following:
the number of fields/columns in a ResultSet object; the name of a specified field; the data type of a field; the maximum width of a field; the table to which a field belongs.

ResultSetMetaData

Meta Data
SQL types is represented in class java.sql.Types

INTEGER and VARCHAR are particularly commonplace, the latter


of these corresponding to string values.

Meta Data
The example coming up makes use of the following ResultSetMetaData methods, which return properties of the database fields held in a ResultSetMetaData object.

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Meta Data

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2


With the emergence of JDBC 2 in Java 2, however, a great deal more flexibility was made available to Java programmers by the

introduction of the following ResultSet methods:

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2 results.relative(-3); //Move back 3 rows.


results.absolute(3); // Move to row 3 (from start of ResultSet).

An overloaded form of the Connection method createStatement is used to create scrollable ResultSets. This method that takes two integer arguments.

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2 There are three possible values that <resultSetType> can take:

TYPE_SCROLL_SENSITIVE causes any changes made to the data

rows to be reflected dynamically in the ResultSet object, while


TYPE_SCROLL_INSENSITIVE does not.

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2 <resultSetConcurrency> can take two possible values

the first means that we cannot make changes to the


ResultSet rows, while the second will allow changes to be

made

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Scrollable ResultSets in JDBC 2

Modifying Databases via Java Methods

Modifying Databases via Java Methods


With of JDBC 2 we can modify ResultSet rows directly via Java methods

Without having to send SQL statements


the changes reflected in the database itself!

To do this: 1. use the second version of createStatement


2. supply ResultSet.CONCUR_UPDATABLE as the second argument.

Modifying Databases via Java Methods

The updateable ResultSet object does not have to be

scrollable

Modifying Databases via Java Methods


A set of updateXXX methods are used to update database. Each of these methods takes two arguments:

a string specifying the name of the field to be

updated;
a value of the appropriate type that is to be assigned to the field

1. Updating
There are three steps involved in the process of updating:

2. Insertion
For an insertion, the new row is initially stored within a special buffer called the 'insertion row' and there are three steps involved in the process:

2. Insertion

3. Delete

Example :

Sample Output

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