public interface Driver
The Java SQL framework allows for multiple database drivers.
Each driver should supply a class that implements the Driver interface.
The DriverManager will try to load as many drivers as it can find and then for any given connection request, it will ask each driver in turn to try to connect to the target URL.
It is strongly recommended that each Driver class should be small and standalone so that the Driver class can be loaded and queried without bringing in vast quantities of supporting code.
When a Driver class is loaded, it should create an instance of itself and register it with the DriverManager. This means that a user can load and register a driver by calling:
Class.forName("foo.bah.Driver")
A JDBC driver may create a DriverAction implementation in order to receive notifications when DriverManager.deregisterDriver(java.sql.Driver) has been called.
DriverManager
,
Connection
,
DriverAction
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
boolean |
acceptsURL(String url)
Retrieves whether the driver thinks that it can open a connection
to the given URL.
|
Connection |
connect(String url,
Properties info)
Attempts to make a database connection to the given URL.
|
int |
getMajorVersion()
Retrieves the driver's major version number.
|
int |
getMinorVersion()
Gets the driver's minor version number.
|
Logger |
getParentLogger()
Return the parent Logger of all the Loggers used by this driver.
|
DriverPropertyInfo[] |
getPropertyInfo(String url,
Properties info)
Gets information about the possible properties for this driver.
|
boolean |
jdbcCompliant()
Reports whether this driver is a genuine JDBC
Compliant™ driver.
|
Connection connect(String url, Properties info) throws SQLException
The driver should throw an SQLException
if it is the right
driver to connect to the given URL but has trouble connecting to
the database.
The Properties
argument can be used to pass
arbitrary string tag/value pairs as connection arguments.
Normally at least "user" and "password" properties should be
included in the Properties
object.
Note: If a property is specified as part of the url
and
is also specified in the Properties
object, it is
implementation-defined as to which value will take precedence. For
maximum portability, an application should only specify a property once.
url
- the URL of the database to which to connectinfo
- a list of arbitrary string tag/value pairs as
connection arguments. Normally at least a "user" and
"password" property should be included.Connection
object that represents a
connection to the URLSQLException
- if a database access error occurs or the url is
null
boolean acceptsURL(String url) throws SQLException
true
if they
understand the sub-protocol specified in the URL and false
if
they do not.url
- the URL of the databasetrue
if this driver understands the given URL;
false
otherwiseSQLException
- if a database access error occurs or the url is
null
DriverPropertyInfo[] getPropertyInfo(String url, Properties info) throws SQLException
The getPropertyInfo
method is intended to allow a generic
GUI tool to discover what properties it should prompt
a human for in order to get
enough information to connect to a database. Note that depending on
the values the human has supplied so far, additional values may become
necessary, so it may be necessary to iterate though several calls
to the getPropertyInfo
method.
url
- the URL of the database to which to connectinfo
- a proposed list of tag/value pairs that will be sent on
connect openDriverPropertyInfo
objects describing
possible properties. This array may be an empty array if
no properties are required.SQLException
- if a database access error occursint getMajorVersion()
int getMinorVersion()
boolean jdbcCompliant()
true
here if it passes the JDBC
compliance tests; otherwise it is required to return false
.
JDBC compliance requires full support for the JDBC API and full support for SQL 92 Entry Level. It is expected that JDBC compliant drivers will be available for all the major commercial databases.
This method is not intended to encourage the development of non-JDBC compliant drivers, but is a recognition of the fact that some vendors are interested in using the JDBC API and framework for lightweight databases that do not support full database functionality, or for special databases such as document information retrieval where a SQL implementation may not be feasible.
true
if this driver is JDBC Compliant; false
otherwiseLogger getParentLogger() throws SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
- if the driver does not use
java.util.logging
. 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.
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