| Oracle8i JDBC Developer's Guide and Reference Release 8.1.5 A64685-01 |
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This section discusses the Java packages that support the Oracle JDBC extensions and the key classes that are included in these packages. This section has the following subsections:
You can refer to the Javadoc for more information about all of the classes mentioned in this section.
The oracle.jdbc2 package contains the Oracle implementation of the standard JDBC 2.0 interfaces. The JDBC 2.0 interfaces are part of the java.sql package included in the JDK 1.2. However, since the drivers do not currently support JDK 1.2, these interfaces have been made available to the Oracle 1.0.2 and 1.1.x drivers as the oracle.jdbc2 package. This package contains the JDBC 2.0 features of the JDK 1.2 java.sql package that the Oracle drivers support.
The following interfaces are implemented by oracle.sql.* type classes for JDBC 2.0-compliant Oracle type extensions. These interfaces are equivalent to the interfaces published by Sun Microsystems; the oracle.jdbc2 versions add no new features.
oracle.jdbc2.Array is implemented by oracle.sql.ARRAY
oracle.jdbc2.Struct is implemented by oracle.sql.STRUCT
oracle.jdbc2.Ref is implemented by oracle.sql.REF
oracle.jdbc2.Clob is implemented by oracle.sql.CLOB
oracle.jdbc2.Blob is implemented by oracle.sql.BLOB
In addition, Oracle includes the following standard JDBC 2.0 interfaces for users employing the JDBC-standard SQLData interface to create Java classes that map to Oracle objects:
oracle.jdbc2.SQLData implemented by classes that map to Oracle objects; users must provide this implementation
oracle.jdbc2.SQLInput implemented by classes that read object data; Oracle provides a SQLInput class that the JDBC drivers use
oracle.jdbc2.SQLOutput implemented by classes that write object data; Oracle provides a SQLOutput class that the JDBC drivers use
The SQLData interface is one of the two features you can use to support Oracle objects in Java. The other feature is the Oracle CustomDatum interface, contained in the oracle.sql package. See "Understanding the SQLData Interface" for more information about SQLData, SQLInput, and SQLOutput.
The oracle.sql package supports direct access to data in SQL format and consists primarily of classes that map to the Oracle SQL datatypes.
These classes provide Java mappings for the Oracle SQL types and are wrapper classes for the raw SQL data. Because data in an oracle.sql.* object remains in SQL format, no information is lost. For SQL primitive types, these classes simply wrap the SQL data. For SQL structured types (objects and arrays), they provide additional information such as conversion methods and details of structure.
Each of the Oracle datatype classes extends oracle.sql.Datum, a superclass that encapsulates functionality common to all of the datatypes. Some of the classes are for JDBC 2.0-compliant datatypes. These classes, as Table 4-1 indicates, implement standard JDBC 2.0 interfaces in the oracle.jdbc2 package, as well as extending oracle.sql.Datum.
Table 4-1 lists the oracle.sql datatype classes and their corresponding Oracle SQL types.
The following sections describe each class listed in Table 4-1. Additional details about use of the Oracle extended types (STRUCT, REF, ARRAY, BLOB, CLOB, BFILE, and ROWID) are described in "Working with LOBs", "Working with Oracle Object References", "Working with Arrays", and "Additional Type Extensions".
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Notes:
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In addition to the datatype classes, the oracle.sql package includes these support classes and interfaces:
oracle.sql.ArrayDescriptor class: used in constructing oracle.sql.ARRAY objects; describes the SQL type of the array. See "Class oracle.sql.ARRAY" for more information.
oracle.sql.StructDescriptor class: used in constructing oracle.sql.STRUCT objects, which you can use as a default mapping to Oracle objects in the database. See "Class oracle.sql.STRUCT" for more information.
oracle.sql.CharacterSet and oracle.sql.CharacterSetFactory classes: used in constructing character set objects, which in turn are used in constructing oracle.sql.CHAR objects. See "Class oracle.sql.CHAR" for more information.
oracle.sql.CustomDatum and oracle.sql.CustomDatumFactory interfaces: used in Java classes implementing the Oracle CustomDatum scenario of Oracle object support. (The other possible scenario is the JDBC-standard SQLData implementation. See "Understanding the CustomDatum Interface" for more information on CustomDatum.)
Refer to the Javadoc for additional information about these classes. The rest of this section further describes the oracle.sql.* classes.
Each of the Oracle datatype classes provides, among other things, the following:
getBytes() method, which returns the SQL data as a byte array
toJdbc() method that converts the data into an object of a corresponding Java class as defined in the JDBC specification
The JDBC driver does not convert Oracle-specific datatypes that are not part of the JDBC specification, such as ROWID; the driver returns the object in the corresponding oracle.sql.* format. For example, it returns an Oracle ROWID as an oracle.sql.ROWID.
stringValue() or intValue() method, where appropriate, to convert the SQL data to a String or an int
get, and set methods as appropriate for the functionality of the datatype (such as methods in the LOB classes that get the data as a stream, and methods in the REF class that get and set object data through the object reference)
Refer to the Javadoc for additional information about these classes.
For any given Oracle object type, if you do not specify a mapping to a Java class in your connection's type map, data from the object type will be materialized in Java in an instance of the oracle.sql.STRUCT class.
The STRUCT class implements the standard JDBC 2.0 oracle.jdbc2.Struct class and extends oracle.sql.Datum.
In the database, Oracle stores the raw bytes of object data in a linearized form. A STRUCT object is a wrapper for the raw bytes of an Oracle object and contains a "values" array of oracle.sql.Datum objects holding the attribute values in SQL format. The STRUCT object also contains the SQL type name of the Oracle object.
In most cases you will probably want to create a custom Java type definition class to map to your Oracle object, although using the STRUCT class may suffice in some cases (see "Using STRUCT Objects"). The attributes of a STRUCT can be materialized as java.lang.Object[] objects if you use the getAttributes() method, or as oracle.sql.Datum[] objects if you use the getOracleAttributes() method. The oracle.sql.* format gives you the same advantages as using oracle.sql.* datatype classes in general:
STRUCT class completely preserves data, because it maintains the data in SQL format. This is useful if you want to manipulate data but not necessarily display it.
In some cases you might want to manually create a STRUCT object to pass it to a prepared statement or callable statement. To do this, you must also create a StructDescriptor object. For more information on creating a STRUCT object, see "Creating STRUCT Objects and Descriptors".
The STRUCT class includes the following methods:
getAttributes(): retrieves the values from the values array, using the type map (if one has been defined) to determine which Java classes to use in materializing the data. Conceptually, getAttributes() returns a Java array containing the attribute values. The types of the attribute values are those that a call to getObject() on the same underlying types will return. That is, they are the "default" JDBC types for the corresponding underlying types.
For example, assume that you have defined a SQL type PERSON with a name attribute of type CHAR and an age attribute of type NUMBER. If you use getAttributes() to get the object attributes of PERSON, then it will return the name as a Java String type and the age as a Java BigDecimal type.
If you are calling getAttributes() on a nested object, then you can optionally specify a type map (java.util.Map object) if you do not want to use your connection's default type map.
getOracleAttributes(): retrieves the values of the values array as oracle.sql.* objects
getSQLTypeName(): returns the fully qualified type name (schema.sql_type_name) of the Oracle object that this STRUCT represents
getDescriptor(): returns the StructDescriptor object for this STRUCT object (see "Creating STRUCT Objects and Descriptors" for information about the StructDescriptor class)
getConnection(): returns the current connection
getDescriptor(): returns the OracleType that identifies the Oracle object type
getMap(): returns the current type map
isConvertibleTo(Class): determines if a datum object can be converted to a particular class
makeJdbcArray(int): returns a JDBC array representation of the datum
setDatumArray(Datum[]): sets the Datum array.
setDescriptor(StructDescriptor): sets the descriptor
stringValue(): converts to a String representation of the datum object
toBytes(): packs the bytes representing the attributes into the format that is actually used in the database
toClass(Class): applies the normal algorithms for converting a SQL structured type to a specific Java class
toJdbc(): consults the current map to determine what class to convert to, and then uses toClass()
toJdbc(Dictionary): consults the map to determine what class to convert to, and then uses toClass()
toSTRUCT(Object, OracleConnection): returns the corresponding STRUCT object from the input Java object
To create an oracle.sql.STRUCT object, a STRUCT descriptor must first exist for the given Oracle object type. This descriptor is an object of the oracle.sql.StructDescriptor class.
A StructDescriptor describes a type of SQL structured object (Oracle object). Only one StructDescriptor is necessary for each Oracle object type.
The driver caches STRUCT descriptor objects to avoid recreating them if the type has already been encountered. The Oracle JDBC extensions provide a static createDescriptor() method that will either construct a new StructDescriptor object or return an existing one.
To create a StructDescriptor object, pass in a Java string parameter with the SQL type name of the Oracle object type and a connection object to the StructDescriptor.createDescriptor() method:
StructDescriptor structdesc = StructDescriptor.createDescriptor(sql_type_name, connection);
where sql_type_name is a Java string containing the name of the Oracle object type (such as EMPLOYEE) and connection is your connection object.
You can also call the StructDescriptor object if you need to create a new STRUCT object. To construct a new StructDescriptor object, pass in a Java string parameter with the SQL type name of the Oracle object type and your connection object:
StructDescriptor structdesc = new StructDescriptor(sql_type_name, connection);
To construct a STRUCT object, pass in the StructDescriptor, your connection object, and an array of Java objects containing the attributes you want the STRUCT to contain.
STRUCT struct = new STRUCT(structdesc, connection, attributes);
where structdesc is the StructDescriptor created previously, connection is your connection object, and attributes is an array of type java.lang.Object[].
A STRUCT descriptor can be referred to as a "type object." This means that it contains information about the type code and type name of the object type and how to convert to and from the given type. Remember, there should be only one StructDescriptor object for any one Oracle object type. You can then use that descriptor to create as many STRUCT objects as you need for that type.
The StructDescriptor class includes the getName() method to return the fully qualified SQL type name of the Oracle object (that is, in schema.sql_type_name format. For example, CORPORATE.EMPLOYEE)
The JDBC driver seamlessly handles embedded objects (STRUCT objects that are attributes of STRUCT objects) in the same way that it normally handles objects. When the JDBC driver retrieves an attribute that is an object, it follows the same rules of conversion, using the type map if it is available, or else using default mapping.
The oracle.sql.REF class is the generic class that supports Oracle object references. This class, as with all of the oracle.sql.* datatype classes, is a subclass of oracle.sql.Datum. It implements the standard JDBC 2.0 oracle.jdbc2.Ref interface.
Selecting a REF retrieves only a pointer to an object; it does not materialize the object. However, there are methods to accomplish this.
The oracle.sql.REF class includes the following methods:
getValue(): retrieves object attributes (using your type map as necessary)
setValue(): sets object attributes (using your type map as necessary)
getBaseTypeName(): retrieves the fully-qualified SQL structured type name of the referenced item
The setREF() and setRef() methods of the OraclePreparedStatement and OracleCallableStatement classes support passing a REF object as an input parameter to a prepared statement. Similarly, the getREF() and getRef() methods of the OracleCallableStatement and OracleResultSet support passing a REF object as an output parameter.
You cannot create REF objects using JDBC.
For more information on how to use REF objects, see "Working with Oracle Object References".
The oracle.sql.ARRAY class supports Oracle collections, either varrays or nested tables. If you select either a varray or nested table from the database, then the JDBC driver materializes it as an object of the ARRAY class; the structure of the data is equivalent in either case. The oracle.sql.ARRAY class extends oracle.sql.Datum (as do all of the oracle.sql.* classes) and implements oracle.jdbc2.Array, a standard JDBC 2.0 array interface.
You might want to manually create an ARRAY object to pass it to a prepared statement or callable statement, perhaps to insert into the database. This involves the use of ArrayDescriptor objects, which "Creating ARRAY Objects and Descriptors" describes.
The ARRAY class includes the following methods:
getArray(): retrieves the contents of the array in "default" JDBC types. If it retrieves an array of objects, then getArray() uses the type map to determine the types
getOracleArray(): identical to getArray(), but retrieves the elements in oracle.sql.* format
getArrayDescriptor(): returns the ArrayDescriptor object that pertains to this array (see "Creating ARRAY Objects and Descriptors" for information about the ArrayDescriptor class)
getBaseType(): returns the SQL type code for the array elements (see "Class oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleTypes" for information about type codes)
getSQLTypeName(): returns the SQL type name of the array elements
getBaseTypeName(): for named types (such as Oracle objects), returns the particular type name (for example, EMPLOYEE)
getResultSet(): materializes an array as a result set
The setARRAY() method of the OraclePreparedStatement or OracleCallableStatement class supports passing an array as an input parameter to a prepared statement. You must first construct an array descriptor, which is an oracle.sql.ArrayDescriptor object, and then you must construct the oracle.sql.ARRAY object for the array you want to pass.
An ArrayDescriptor object describes the SQL type of an array; however, you need only one array descriptor for any one SQL type. You can reuse the same descriptor object to create multiple instances of an oracle.sql.Array object for the same array type.
Collections are strongly typed. Oracle supports only "named arrays", that is, an array given a SQL type name. For example, when you create an array with the CREATE TYPE statement:
CREATE TYPE num_varray AS varray(22) OF NUMBER(5,2);
the SQL type name for the collection type is num_varray.
To construct an ArrayDescriptor object, pass the SQL type name of the collection type and your Connection object (which JDBC uses to go to the database to gather meta data) to the constructor.
ArrayDescriptor arraydesc = ArrayDescriptor.createDescriptor(sql_type_name, connection);
where sql_type_name is the type name of the array and connection is your Connection object.
To construct an ARRAY object, pass in the array descriptor, your connection object, and a Java object containing the individual elements you want the array to contain.
ARRAY array = new ARRAY(arraydesc, connection, elements);
where arraydesc is the array descriptor created previously, connection is your connection object, and elements is a Java array of objects. The two possibilities for the contents of elements are:
int[].
xxx[] where xxx represents the name of a Java object type.) For example, Integer[].
An array descriptor can be referred to as a type object, meaning it has information about the array's SQL type name, the type code of the array's elements and, if the array is a STRUCT, the type name of the elements. The array descriptor also contains the information on how to convert to and from the given type. You need only one array descriptor object for any one type, then you can use that descriptor to create as many arrays of that type as you want.
The ArrayDescriptor class has the following methods for retrieving an element's type code and type name:
getBaseType(): returns the integer type code associated with this array descriptor (according to integer constants defined in the OracleTypes class, which "Classes of the oracle.jdbc.driver Package" describes)
getBaseName(): returns a string with the type name associated with this array element if it is a STRUCT, REF or collection
BLOBs, CLOBs, and BFILEs, all referred to as LOBs, are for data items that are too large to store directly in the database table. Instead, the database table stores a locator that points to the location of the actual data.
The oracle.sql package supports LOBs in several ways:
BLOBs point to large unstructured binary data items and are supported by the oracle.sql.BLOB class.
CLOBs point to large fixed-width character data items (that is, characters that require a fixed number of bytes per character) and are supported by the oracle.sql.CLOB class.
BFILEs point to the content of external files (operating system files) and are supported by the oracle.sql.BFILE class.
You can select a BLOB, CLOB, or BFILE locator from the database using a standard SELECT statement, but bear in mind that you are receiving only the locator, not the data itself. Additional steps are necessary to retrieve the data. This is described in "Working with LOBs".
The oracle.sql.BLOB class includes the following methods:
getBinaryOutputStream(): returns the BLOB data
getBinaryStream(): returns the BLOB designated by this Blob instance as a stream of bytes
getBytes(): reads from the BLOB data, starting at a specified point, into a supplied buffer
length(): returns the length of the BLOB in bytes
position(): determines the byte position in the BLOB where a given pattern begins
putBytes(): writes BLOB data, starting at a specified point, from a supplied buffer
The oracle.sql.CLOB class includes the following methods:
getAsciiOutputStream(): writes CLOB data from an ASCII stream
getAsciiStream(): returns the CLOB value designated by the Clob object as a stream of Ascii bytes
getCharacterOutputStream(): writes CLOB data from a Unicode stream
getCharacterStream(): returns the CLOB data as a stream of Unicode characters
getChars(): retrieves characters from a specified point in the CLOB data into a character array
length(): returns the length of the CLOB in characters
position(): determines the character position in the CLOB at which a given substring begins
putChars(): writes characters from a character array to a specified point in the CLOB data
getSubString(): retrieves a substring from a specified point in the CLOB data
putString(): writes a string to a specified point in the CLOB data
The oracle.sql.BFILE class includes the following methods:
openFile(): opens the external file
closeFile(): closes the external file
getBinaryStream(): returns the contents of the external file as a stream of bytes
getBytes(): reads from the external file, starting at a specified point, into a supplied buffer
getName(): gets the name of the external file
getDirAlias(): gets the directory alias of the external file
length(): returns the length of the BFILE in bytes
position(): determines the byte position at which the given byte pattern begins
The CHAR class has special functionality for NLS conversion of character data. A key attribute of the CHAR class, and a parameter always passed in when a CHAR object is constructed, is the NLS character set used in presenting the character data. Without the character set being known, the bytes of data in the CHAR object are meaningless.
CHAR objects that the driver constructs and returns can be in the database character set, UTF-8, or ISO-Latin-1 (WE8ISO8859P1). CHAR objects which are Oracle8 objects, are returned in the database character set.
JDBC constructs and populates CHAR objects once character data has been read from the database. Additionally, you might want to construct a CHAR object yourself (to pass in to a prepared statement, for example).
When you construct a CHAR object, you must provide character set information to the CHAR object by way of an instance of the oracle.sql.CharacterSet class. Each instance of the CharacterSet class represents one of the NLS character sets that Oracle supports. A CharacterSet instance encapsulates methods and attributes of the character set, mainly involving functionality to convert to or from other character sets. You can find a complete list of the character sets that Oracle supports in the Oracle8i National Language Support Guide.
If you use a CHAR object based on a character set that Oracle does not support, then the JDBC driver will not be able to perform character set conversions with it. For example, you will not be able to use the CHAR object in an OraclePreparedStatement.setOracleObject() call.
Follow these general steps to construct a CHAR object:
CharacterSet instance by calling the static CharacterSet.make() method. This method is a factory for the character set class. It takes as input an integer OracleId, which corresponds to a character set that Oracle supports. For example:
int oracleId = CharacterSet.JA16SJIS_CHARSET; // this is character set 832 ... CharacterSet mycharset = CharacterSet.make(OracleId);
Each character set that Oracle supports has a unique predefined OracleId. If you enter an invalid OracleId, an exception will not be thrown. Instead, when you try to use the character set, you will receive unpredictable results. For more information on character sets and character set IDs, see the Oracle8i National Language Support Guide.
CHAR object. Pass to the constructor a string (or the bytes that represent the string) and the CharacterSet object that indicates how to interpret the bytes based on the character set. For example:
String mystring = "teststring"; ... CHAR mychar = new CHAR(teststring, mycharset);
The CHAR class has multiple constructors: they can take a string, a byte array, or an object as input along with the CharacterSet object. In the case of a string, the string is converted to the character set indicated by the CharacterSet object before being placed into the CHAR object.
Refer to the CHAR class Javadoc for more information.
The CHAR class provides these methods for translating character data to strings:
getString(): converts the sequence of characters represented by the CHAR object to a string, returning a Java String object. If the character set is not recognized (that is, if you entered an invalid OracleID), then getString() throws a SQLException.
toString(): identical to getString(), but if the character set is not recognized (that is, if you entered an invalid OracleID), then toString() returns a hexadecimal representation of the CHAR data and does not throw a SQLException.
getStringWithReplacement(): identical to getString(), except a default replacement character replaces characters that have no Unicode representation in the character set of this CHAR object. This default character varies from character set to character set, but is often a question mark.
The server (database) and the client (or application running on the client) can use different character sets. When you use the methods of this class to transfer data between the server and the client, the JDBC drivers must convert the data from the server character set to the client character set (or vice versa). To convert the data, the drivers use Oracle's National Language Support (NLS). For more information on how the JDBC drivers convert between character sets, see "Using NLS". For more information on NLS, see the Oracle8i National Language Support Guide.
These classes map to primitive SQL datatypes, which are a part of standard JDBC. These classes provide conversions to and from their corresponding JDBC Java types. For more information, see the Javadoc.
This class supports Oracle ROWIDs, which are unique identifiers for rows in database tables. You can select a ROWID as you would select any column of data from the table. Note, however, that you cannot manually update ROWIDs; the Oracle database updates them automatically as appropriate.
The oracle.sql.ROWID class does not implement any noteworthy functionality beyond what is in the oracle.sql.Datum superclass. However, ROWID does provide a stringValue() method that overrides the stringValue() method in the oracle.sql.Datum class and returns the hexadecimal representation of the ROWID bytes.
For information about accessing ROWID data, see "Additional Oracle Extensions".
The oracle.jdbc.driver package includes classes that add extended features to enable data access in oracle.sql format. In addition, these classes provide Oracle-specific extensions to allow access to raw SQL format data by using oracle.sql.* objects.
Table 4-2 lists key classes for connections, statements, and result sets in this package.
The oracle.jdbc.driver package additionally includes:
The stream classes extend standard Java stream classes and read and write Oracle LOB, LONG, and LONG RAW data.
OracleTypes defines integer constants, which identify SQL types. For standard types, it uses the same values as the standard java.sql.Types. In addition, it adds constants for Oracle extended types.
The remainder of this section describes the classes of the oracle.jdbc.driver package. For more information about using these classes to access Oracle type extensions, see "Data Access and Manipulation: Oracle Types vs. Java Types".
Use this class to register the Oracle JDBC drivers for use by your application. You can input a new instance of this class to the static registerDriver() method of the java.sql.DriverManager class so that your application can access and use the Oracle drivers. The registerDriver() method takes as input a "driver" class; that is, a class that implements the java.sql.Driver interface, as is the case with OracleDriver.
Once you register the Oracle JDBC drivers, you can create your connection using the DriverManager class. For more information on registering drivers and writing a connection string, see "First Steps in JDBC".
This class extends standard JDBC connection functionality to create and return Oracle statement objects, set flags and options for Oracle performance extensions, and support type maps for Oracle objects.
"Performance Extensions" describes the performance extensions, including row prefetching, update batching, and metadata TABLE_REMARKS reporting.
Key methods include:
createStatement(): allocates a new OracleStatement object
prepareStatement(): allocates a new OraclePreparedStatement object
prepareCall(): allocates a new OracleCallableStatement object
getTransactionIsolation(): gets this connection's current isolation mode
setTransactionIsolation(): changes the transaction isolation level using one of the TRANSACTION_* values
These oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleConnection methods are Oracle-defined extensions:
getDefaultExecuteBatch(): retrieves the default update-batching value for this connection
setDefaultExecuteBatch(): sets the default update-batching value for this connection
getDefaultRowPrefetch(): retrieves the default row-prefetch value for this connection
setDefaultRowPrefetch(): sets the default row-prefetch value for this connection
getRemarksReporting(): returns true if TABLE_REMARKS reporting is enabled
setRemarksReporting(): enables or disables TABLE_REMARKS reporting
getTypeMap(): retrieves the type map for this connection (for use in mapping Oracle object types to Java classes)
setTypeMap(): initializes or updates the type map for this connection (for use in mapping Oracle object types to Java classes)
This class extends standard JDBC statement functionality and is the superclass of the OraclePreparedStatement and OracleCallableStatement classes. Extended functionality includes support for setting flags and options for Oracle performance extensions on a statement-by-statement basis, as opposed to the OracleConnection class that sets these on a connection-wide basis.
"Performance Extensions" describes the performance extensions, including row prefetching and column type definitions.
Key methods include:
executeQuery(): executes a database query and returns an OracleResultSet object
getResultSet(): retrieves an OracleResultSet object
close(): closes the current statement
These oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleStatement methods are Oracle-defined extensions:
defineColumnType(): defines the type you will use to retrieve data from a particular database table column
getRowPrefetch(): retrieves the row-prefetch value for this statement
setRowPrefetch(): sets the row-prefetch value for this statement
This class extends standard JDBC prepared statement functionality, is a subclass of the OracleStatement class, and is the superclass of the OracleCallableStatement class. Extended functionality consists of set methods for binding oracle.sql.* types and objects into prepared statements, and methods to support Oracle performance extensions on a statement-by-statement basis.
"Performance Extensions" describes the performance extensions, including database update batching.
Key methods include:
getExecuteBatch(): retrieves the update-batching value for this statement
setExecuteBatch(): sets the update-batching value for this statement
setOracleObject(): a generic set method for binding oracle.sql.* data into a prepared statement as an oracle.sql.Datum object
setXXX(): set methods, such setBLOB(), for binding specific oracle.sql.* types into prepared statements. For more information on all of the setXXX() methods available for oracle.sql.* types, see the Javadoc.
setCustomDatum(): binds a CustomDatum object (for use in mapping Oracle object types to Java) into a prepared statement
setNull(): sets the value of the object specified by its SQL type name to NULL. For setNull(param_index, type_code, sql_type_name), if type_code is REF, ARRAY, or STRUCT, then sql_type_name is the fully qualified name (schema.sql_type_name) of the SQL type.
close(): closes the current statement
This class extends standard JDBC callable statement functionality and is a subclass of the OracleStatement and OraclePreparedStatement classes. Extended functionality includes set methods for binding structured objects and oracle.sql.* objects into prepared statements, and get methods for retrieving data into oracle.sql.* objects.
Key methods include:
getOracleObject(): a generic get method for retrieving data into an oracle.sql.Datum object. It can be cast to the specific oracle.sql.* type as necessary.
getXXX(): get methods, such as getCLOB(), for retrieving data into specific oracle.sql.* objects. For more information on all of the getXXX() methods available for oracle.sql.* types, see the Javadoc.
setOracleObject(): a generic set method for binding oracle.sql.* data into a callable statement as an oracle.sql.Datum object
setXXX(): set methods inherited from OraclePreparedStatement, such as setBLOB(), for binding specific oracle.sql.* objects into callable statements. For more information on all of the setXXX() methods available for oracle.sql.* types, see the Javadoc.
setNull(): sets the value of the object specified by its SQL type name to NULL. For setNull(param_index, type_code, sql_type_name), if type_code is REF, ARRAY, or STRUCT, then sql_type_name is the fully qualified (schema.type) name of the SQL type.
registerOutParameter(): registers the SQL type code of the statement's output parameter. JDBC requires this for any callable statement with an OUT parameter. It takes an integer parameter index (the position of the output variable in the statement, relative to the other parameters) and an integer SQL type (the type constant defined in oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleTypes).
This is an overloaded method. There is a version of this method that you use for named types only; that is, when the SQL type code is OracleTypes.REF, STRUCT, or ARRAY. In this case, in addition to a parameter index and SQL type, the method also takes a String SQL type name (the name of the Oracle object type in the database, such as EMPLOYEE).
close(): closes the current result set, if any, and the current statement
This class extends standard JDBC result set functionality, implementing get methods for retrieving data into oracle.sql.* objects.
Key methods include:
getOracleObject(): a generic get method for retrieving data into an oracle.sql.Datum object. It can be cast to the specific oracle.sql.* type as necessary.
getXXX(): get methods, such as getCLOB(), for retrieving data into oracle.sql.* objects
next(): advances to the next row of the result set
This class extends standard JDBC result set metadata functionality to retrieve information about Oracle result set objects.
Key methods include the following:
getColumnCount(): returns the number of columns in an Oracle result set
getColumnName(): returns the name of a specified column in an Oracle result set
getColumnType(): returns the SQL type of a specified column in an Oracle result set. If the column stores an Oracle object or collection, then this method returns OracleTypes.STRUCT or OracleTypes.ARRAY respectively.
getColumnTypeName(): returns the SQL type name of the data stored in the column. If the column stores an array or collection, then this method returns its SQL type name. If the column stores REF data, then this method returns the SQL type name of the objects to which the REF points.
getTableName(): returns the name of the table from which an Oracle result set column was selected
Oracle uses many stream classes that extend standard Java stream classes to provide special functionality, such as writing directly to an Oracle database. The JDBC drivers use these classes which are in the oracle.jdbc.driver package but does not intend them for use by Java applications programmers. For more information on Java streams, see "Using Java Streams in JDBC".
The OracleTypes class defines constants that JDBC uses to identify SQL types. Each variable in this class has a constant integer value. The oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleTypes class contains a copy of the standard Java java.sql.Types class and contains these additional Oracle type extensions:
OracleTypes.STRUCT
OracleTypes.REF
OracleTypes.ARRAY
OracleTypes.BLOB
OracleTypes.CLOB
OracleTypes.BFILE
OracleTypes.ROWID
As in java.sql.Types, all of the variable names are in all-caps.
JDBC uses the SQL types identified by the elements of the OracleTypes class in two main areas: registering output parameters and in the setNull() method of the PreparedStatement class.
The SQL types in the OracleTypes class identify the SQL type of the output parameters in the registerOutParameter() method of the java.sql.CallableStatement and oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleCallableStatement classes.
These are the forms that registerOutputParameter() can take for CallableStatement and OracleCallableStatement:
CallableStatement.registerOutParameter(int index, int sqlType) CallableStatement.registerOutParameter(int index, int sqlType, int scale) OracleCallableStatement.registerOutParameter(int index, int sqlType, String sql_name)
In these prototypes, index represents the parameter index, sqlType represents the SQL datatype (one of the OracleTypes, in this case), sql_name represents the name given to the datatype (that is, the "named type"), and scale represents the number of digits to the right of the decimal point when sqlType is a NUMERIC or DECIMAL datatype.
Any output parameter datatype except STRUCT, ARRAY, or REF can use the two forms of CallableStatement.registerOutParameter().
The OracleCallableStatement form of registerOutParameter() can be used only when the output parameter is of type STRUCT, ARRAY, or REF and requires you to provide the name of the named type.
The following example uses a CallableStatement to call a procedure named procout, which returns a CHAR datatype. Note the use of the OracleTypes.CHAR SQL name in the registerOutParameter() method.
CallableStatement procout = conn.prepareCall ("BEGIN procout (?); END;"); procout.registerOutParameter (1, OracleTypes.CHAR); procout.execute (); System.out.println ("Out argument is: " + procout.getString (1));
The next example uses a CallableStatement to call procout, which returns a STRUCT datatype. The form of registerOutParameter() requires you to specify the name of the SQL type, OracleTypes.STRUCT, as well as the SQL type name (that is, the name of the named type) EMPLOYEE.
The example assumes that no type mapping has been declared for the EMPLOYEE type, so it is retrieved into a STRUCT datatype. To retrieve the value of EMPLOYEE into the default STRUCT datatype, the statement object procout is cast to an OracleCallableStatement and the getSTRUCT() is applied.
CallableStatement procout = conn.prepareCall ("BEGIN procout (?); END;"); procout.registerOutParameter (1, OracleTypes.STRUCT, "EMPLOYEE"); procout.execute (); // get the value into a STRUCT because it // is assumed that no type map has been defined STRUCT emp = ((OracleCallableStatement)procout).getSTRUCT (1);
The SQL types in the OracleTypes class identify the object, which the setNull() method sets to NULL. The setNull() method can be found in the java.sql.PreparedStatement and oracle.jdbc.driver.OraclePreparedStatement classes.
These are the forms that setNull() can take for PreparedStatement and OraclePreparedStatement classes:
PreparedStatement.setNull(int index, int sqlType) OraclePreparedStatement.setNull(int index, int sqlType, String sql_name)
In these prototypes, index represents the parameter index, sqlType represents the SQL datatype (one of the OracleTypes, in this case), and sql_name represents the name given to the datatype (that is, the name of the "named type"). If you enter an invalid sqlType, a "Parameter Type Conflict" error is thrown.
You can use the PreparedStatement form of setNull() to set to NULL the value of an object of any datatype, except STRUCT, ARRAY, or REF.
You can use the OraclePreparedStatement form of setNull() only when you set to NULL the value of an object of datatype STRUCT, ARRAY, or REF.
The following example uses a PreparedStatement to insert a NULL numeric value into the database. Note the use of OracleTypes.NUMERIC to identify the numeric object that is set to NULL.
PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement ("INSERT INTO num_table VALUES (?)"); pstmt.setNull (1, OracleTypes.NUMERIC); pstmt.execute ();
In this example, the prepared statement inserts a NULL STRUCT object of type EMPLOYEE into the database. Note that an OraclePreparedStatement is required to set a STRUCT object to NULL. Thus, the prepared statement pstmt must be cast to OraclePreparedStatement.
PreparedStatement pstmt = conn.prepareStatement ("INSERT INTO employee_table VALUES (?)"); ((OraclePreparedStatement)pstmt).setNull(1, OracleTypes.STRUCT, "EMPLOYEE"); pstmt.execute ();