Using the Driver
5.2. Using the Driver
5.2.1. Importing JDBC
Any source that uses JDBC needs to import the java.sql package, using:
import java.sql.*;
Important: Do not import the org.postgresql package. If you do, your source will not compile, as javac will get confused.
5.2.2. Loading the Driver
Before you can connect to a database, you need to load the driver. There are two methods available, and it depends on your code which is the best one to use.
In the first method, your code implicitly loads the driver using the
Class.forName()
method.
For PostgreSQL, you would use:
Class.forName("org.postgresql.Driver");
This will load the driver, and while loading, the driver will automatically register itself with JDBC.
Note: The
forName()
method can throw aClassNotFoundException
if the driver is not available.
This is the most common method to use, but restricts your code to use just PostgreSQL. If your code may access another database system in the future, and you do not use any PostgreSQL-specific extensions, then the second method is advisable.
The second method passes the driver as a parameter to the JVM as it starts, using the -D argument. Example:
java -Djdbc.drivers=org.postgresql.Driver example.ImageViewer
In this example, the JVM will attempt to load
the driver as part of its initialization. Once done, the
ImageViewer
is started.
Now, this method is the better one to use because it allows your code to be used with other database packages without recompiling the code. The only thing that would also change is the connection URL, which is covered next.
One last thing: When your code then tries to open a
Connection
, and you get a No
driver available SQLException
being thrown, this is probably caused by the driver not being in
the class path, or the value in the parameter not being correct.
5.2.3. Connecting to the Database
With JDBC, a database is represented by a URL (Uniform Resource Locator). With PostgreSQL, this takes one of the following forms:
jdbc:postgresql:database
jdbc:postgresql://host/database
jdbc:postgresql://host:port/database
where:
- host
The host name of the server. Defaults to localhost.
- port
The port number the server is listening on. Defaults to the PostgreSQL standard port number (5432).
- database
The database name.
To connect, you need to get a Connection
instance from
JDBC. To do this,
you would use the DriverManager.getConnection()
method:
Connection db = DriverManager.getConnection(url, username, password);
5.2.4. Closing the Connection
To close the database connection, simply call the
close()
method to the Connection
:
db.close();