- All Superinterfaces:
CommonDataSource,Wrapper
public interface DataSource extends CommonDataSource, Wrapper
A factory for connections to the physical data source that this
DataSource object represents. An alternative to the
DriverManager facility, a DataSource object
is the preferred means of getting a connection. An object that implements
the DataSource interface will typically be
registered with a naming service based on the
Java™ Naming and Directory (JNDI) API.
The DataSource interface is implemented by a driver vendor.
There are three types of implementations:
- Basic implementation -- produces a standard
Connectionobject - Connection pooling implementation -- produces a
Connectionobject that will automatically participate in connection pooling. This implementation works with a middle-tier connection pooling manager. - Distributed transaction implementation -- produces a
Connectionobject that may be used for distributed transactions and almost always participates in connection pooling. This implementation works with a middle-tier transaction manager and almost always with a connection pooling manager.
A DataSource object has properties that can be modified
when necessary. For example, if the data source is moved to a different
server, the property for the server can be changed. The benefit is that
because the data source's properties can be changed, any code accessing
that data source does not need to be changed.
A driver that is accessed via a DataSource object does not
register itself with the DriverManager. Rather, a
DataSource object is retrieved through a lookup operation
and then used to create a Connection object. With a basic
implementation, the connection obtained through a DataSource
object is identical to a connection obtained through the
DriverManager facility.
An implementation of DataSource must include a public no-arg
constructor.
- Since:
- 1.4
-
Method Summary
Modifier and Type Method Description default ConnectionBuildercreateConnectionBuilder()Create a newConnectionBuilderinstanceConnectiongetConnection()Attempts to establish a connection with the data source that thisDataSourceobject represents.ConnectiongetConnection(String username, String password)Attempts to establish a connection with the data source that thisDataSourceobject represents.intgetLoginTimeout()Gets the maximum time in seconds that this data source can wait while attempting to connect to a database.PrintWritergetLogWriter()Retrieves the log writer for thisDataSourceobject.voidsetLoginTimeout(int seconds)Sets the maximum time in seconds that this data source will wait while attempting to connect to a database.voidsetLogWriter(PrintWriter out)Sets the log writer for thisDataSourceobject to the givenjava.io.PrintWriterobject.
-
Method Details
-
getConnection
Attempts to establish a connection with the data source that this
DataSourceobject represents.- Returns:
- a connection to the data source
- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occursSQLTimeoutException- when the driver has determined that the timeout value specified by thesetLoginTimeoutmethod has been exceeded and has at least tried to cancel the current database connection attempt
-
getConnection
Attempts to establish a connection with the data source that this
DataSourceobject represents.- Parameters:
username- the database user on whose behalf the connection is being madepassword- the user's password- Returns:
- a connection to the data source
- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occursSQLTimeoutException- when the driver has determined that the timeout value specified by thesetLoginTimeoutmethod has been exceeded and has at least tried to cancel the current database connection attempt- Since:
- 1.4
-
getLogWriter
Retrieves the log writer for this
DataSourceobject.The log writer is a character output stream to which all logging and tracing messages for this data source will be printed. This includes messages printed by the methods of this object, messages printed by methods of other objects manufactured by this object, and so on. Messages printed to a data source specific log writer are not printed to the log writer associated with the
java.sql.DriverManagerclass. When aDataSourceobject is created, the log writer is initially null; in other words, the default is for logging to be disabled.- Specified by:
getLogWriterin interfaceCommonDataSource- Returns:
- the log writer for this data source or null if logging is disabled
- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occurs- Since:
- 1.4
- See Also:
CommonDataSource.setLogWriter(java.io.PrintWriter)
-
setLogWriter
Sets the log writer for this
DataSourceobject to the givenjava.io.PrintWriterobject.The log writer is a character output stream to which all logging and tracing messages for this data source will be printed. This includes messages printed by the methods of this object, messages printed by methods of other objects manufactured by this object, and so on. Messages printed to a data source- specific log writer are not printed to the log writer associated with the
java.sql.DriverManagerclass. When aDataSourceobject is created the log writer is initially null; in other words, the default is for logging to be disabled.- Specified by:
setLogWriterin interfaceCommonDataSource- Parameters:
out- the new log writer; to disable logging, set to null- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occurs- Since:
- 1.4
- See Also:
CommonDataSource.getLogWriter()
-
setLoginTimeout
Sets the maximum time in seconds that this data source will wait while attempting to connect to a database. A value of zero specifies that the timeout is the default system timeout if there is one; otherwise, it specifies that there is no timeout. When a
DataSourceobject is created, the login timeout is initially zero.- Specified by:
setLoginTimeoutin interfaceCommonDataSource- Parameters:
seconds- the data source login time limit- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occurs.- Since:
- 1.4
- See Also:
CommonDataSource.getLoginTimeout()
-
getLoginTimeout
Gets the maximum time in seconds that this data source can wait while attempting to connect to a database. A value of zero means that the timeout is the default system timeout if there is one; otherwise, it means that there is no timeout. When aDataSourceobject is created, the login timeout is initially zero.- Specified by:
getLoginTimeoutin interfaceCommonDataSource- Returns:
- the data source login time limit
- Throws:
SQLException- if a database access error occurs.- Since:
- 1.4
- See Also:
CommonDataSource.setLoginTimeout(int)
-
createConnectionBuilder
Create a newConnectionBuilderinstance- Implementation Requirements:
- The default implementation will throw a
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - Returns:
- The ConnectionBuilder instance that was created
- Throws:
SQLException- if an error occurs creating the builderSQLFeatureNotSupportedException- if the driver does not support sharding- Since:
- 9
- See Also:
ConnectionBuilder
-