That patch broke the ability to read data from binary cursors.
--Barry Lind
Modified Files:
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/Connection.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/ResultSet.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/core/QueryExecutor.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/Connection.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc1/ResultSet.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/Connection.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/ResultSet.java
pgsql/src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/jdbc2/UpdateableResultSet.java
This patch does the following:
- Adds binary datatype support (bytea)
- Changes getXXXStream()/setXXXStream() methods to be spec compliant
- Adds ability to revert to old behavior
Details:
Adds support for the binary type bytea. The ResultSet.getBytes() and
PreparedStatement.setBytes() methods now work against columns of bytea
type. This is a change in behavior from the previous code which assumed
the column type was OID and thus a LargeObject. The new behavior is
more complient with the JDBC spec as BLOB/CLOB are to be used for
LargeObjects and the getBytes()/setBytes() methods are for the databases
binary datatype (which is bytea in postgres).
Changes the behavior of the getBinaryStream(), getAsciiStream(),
getCharacterStream(), getUnicodeStream() and their setXXXStream()
counterparts. These methos now work against either the bytea type
(BinaryStream) or the text types (AsciiStream, CharacterStream,
UnicodeStream). The previous behavior was that these all assumed the
underlying column was of type OID and thus a LargeObject. The
spec/javadoc for these methods indicate that they are for LONGVARCHAR
and LONGVARBINARY datatypes, which are distinct from the BLOB/CLOB
datatypes. Given that the bytea and text types support upto 1G, they
are the LONGVARBINARY and LONGVARCHAR datatypes in postgres.
Added support for turning off the above new functionality. Given that
the changes above are not backwardly compatible (however they are more
spec complient), I added the ability to revert back to the old behavior.
The Connection now takes an optional parameter named 'compatible'. If
the value of '7.1' is passed, the driver reverts to the 7.1 behavior.
If the parameter is not passed or the value '7.2' is passed the behavior
is the new behavior. The mechanism put in place can be used in the
future when/if similar needs arise to change behavior. This is
patterned after how Oracle does this (i.e. Oracle has a 'compatible'
parameter that behaves in a similar manner).
Misc fixes. Cleaned up a few things I encountered along the way.
Note that in testing the patch I needed to ignore whitespace differences
in order to get it to apply cleanly (i.e. patch -l -i byteapatch.diff).
Also this patch introduces a new file
(src/interfaces/jdbc/org/postgresql/util/PGbytea.java).
Barry Lind
the JDBC driver.
I've done this by extracting it into a new method object called
QueryExecutor (should go into org/postgresql/core/) and then taking it
apart into different methods in that class.
A short summary:
* Extracted ExecSQL() from Connection into a method object called
QueryExecutor.
* Moved ReceiveFields() from Connection to QueryExecutor.
* Extracted parts of the original ExecSQL() method body into smaller
methods on QueryExecutor.
* Bug fix: The instance variable "pid" in Connection was used in two
places with different meaning. Both were probably in dead code, but it's
fixed anyway.
Anders Bengtsson
This patch moves the logic that looks up TypeOid, PGTypeName, and
SQLTypeName from Field to Connection. It is moved to connection since
it needs to differ from the jdbc1 to jdbc2 versions and Connection
already has different subclasses for the two driver versions. It also
made sense to move the logic to Connection as some of the logic was
already there anyway.
Barry Lind
* Merges identical code from org.postgresql.jdbc[1|2].Statement into
org.postgresql.Statement.
* Moves escapeSQL() method from Connection to Statement (the only place
it's used)
* Minor cleanup of the new isolation level stuff.
* Minor cleanup of version string handling.
Anders Bengtsson
Here is a context diff from latest cvs
And I see why you couldn't apply the last diff, the setCatalog diff has
been backed out, that was causing the compile problem in the first
place.
This following one needs to be applied to allow the current cvs to
compile
Dave Cramer
1) improves performance of commit/rollback by reducing number of round
trips to the server
2) uses 7.1 functionality for setting the transaction isolation level
3) backs out a patch from 11 days ago because that code failed to
compile under jdk1.1
Details:
1) The old code was doing the following for each commit:
commit
begin
set transaction isolation level xxx
thus a call to commit was performing three round trips to the database.
The new code does this in one round trip as:
commit; begin; set transaction isolation level xxx
In a simple test program that performs 1000 transactions (where each
transaction does one simple select inside that transaction) has the
following before and after timings:
Client and Server on same machine
old new
--- ---
1.877sec 1.405sec 25.1% improvement
Client and Server on different machines
old new
--- ---
4.184sec 2.927sec 34.3% improvement
(all timings are an average of four different runs)
2) The driver was using 'set transaction isolation level xxx' at the
begining of each transaction, instead of using the new 7.1 syntax of
'set session characteristics as transaction isolation level xxx' which
only needs to be done once instead of for each transaction. This is
done conditionally (i.e. if server is 7.0 or older do the old behaviour,
else do the new behaviour) to not break backward compatibility. This
also required the movement of some code to check/test database version
numbers from the DatabaseMetaData object to the Connection object.
3) Finally while testing, I discovered that the code that was checked in
11 days ago actually didn't compile. The code in the patch for
Connection.setCatalog() used Properties.setProperty() which only exists
in JDK1.2 or higher. Thus compiling the JDBC1 driver failed as this
method doesn't exist. Thus I backed out that patch.
Barry Lind
connection implementations (org.postgresql.jdbc[1|2].Connection) into
their superclass (org.postgresql.Connection).
It also changes the close() methods of Connection and PG_Stream, so that
PG_Stream no longer is responsible for sending the termination packet 'X'
to the backend. I figured that protocol-level stuff like that belonged in
Connection more than in PG_Stream.
Anders Bengtsson
in Connection - note: I've updated setCatalog(String catalog) from my previous
diff so it checks whether it is already connected to the specified catalog.
Jason Davies
Here's a patch against the current CVS. The changes from the previous
patch are mostly related to the changed interface for PG_Stream.
Anders Bengtsson
null terminated strings. The FE/BE protocol sends in some cases null
terminated strings to the client. The docs for the FE/BE protocol state
that there is no limit on the size of a null terminated string sent to
the client and a client should be coded using an expanding buffer to
deal with large strings. The old code did not do this and gave an error
if a null terminated string was greater than either 4 or 8K. It appears
that with the advent of TOAST very long SQL statements are becoming more
common, and apparently some error messages from the backend include the
SQL statement thus easily exceeding the 8K limit in the old code.
In fixing I also cleaned up some calls in the JDBC fastpath code that
were not doing character set conversion under multibyte, and removed
some methods that were no longer needed. I also removed a potential
threading problem with a shared variable that was being used in
Connection.java.
Thanks to Steve Wampler for discovering the problem and sending the
initial diffs that were the basis of this patch.
thanks,
--Barry
non-multibyte database loosing 8bit characters. This patch will cause
the jdbc driver to ignore the encoding reported by the database when
multibyte isn't enabled and use the JVM default in that case.
Barry Lind
jdbc/Connection.java
Andy
P.S. in Connection.java if encoding=="WIN" then dbEncoding is set to
"Cp1252".
What if it's Cyrillic "WIN"? Than it should be "Cp1251". Is there any
way to fix that without making different "WIN" encodings in
PostgreSQL?
Andy Rysin
- Fixed bug where Statement.setMaxRows() was a global setting. Now
limited to just itself.
- Changed LargeObject.read(byte[],int,int) to return the actual number
of bytes read (used to be void).
- LargeObject now supports InputStream's!
- PreparedStatement.setBinaryStream() now works!
- ResultSet.getBinaryStream() now returns an InputStream that doesn't
copy the blob into memory first!
- Connection.isClosed() now tests to see if the connection is still alive
rather than if it thinks it's alive.
- Added new error message into errors.properties "postgresql.notsensitive"
This is used by jdbc2.ResultSet when a method is called that should
fetch the current value of a row from the database refreshRow() for
example.
- These methods no longer throw the not implemented but the new noupdate
error. This is in preparation for the Updateable ResultSet support
which will overide these methods by extending the existing class to
implement that functionality, but needed to show something other than
notimplemented:
moveToCurrentRow()
moveToInsertRow()
rowDeleted()
rowInserted()
all update*() methods, except those that took the column as a String
as they were already implemented to convert the String to an int.
- getFetchDirection() and setFetchDirection() now throws
"postgresql.notimp" as we only support one direction.
The CursorResultSet will overide this when its implemented.
- Created a new class under jdbc2 UpdateableResultSet which extends
ResultSet and overides the relevent update methods.
This allows us to implement them easily at a later date.
- In jdbc2.Connection, the following methods are now implemented:
createStatement(type,concurrency);
getTypeMap();
setTypeMap(Map);
- The JDBC2 type mapping scheme almost complete, just needs SQLInput &
SQLOutput to be implemented.
- Removed some Statement methods that somehow appeared in Connection.
- In jdbc2.Statement()
getResultSetConcurrency()
getResultSetType()
setResultSetConcurrency()
setResultSetType()
- Finally removed the old 6.5.x driver.
- These methods in org.postgresql.jdbc2.ResultSet are now implemented:
getBigDecimal(int) ie: without a scale (why did this get missed?)
getBlob(int)
getCharacterStream(int)
getConcurrency()
getDate(int,Calendar)
getFetchDirection()
getFetchSize()
getTime(int,Calendar)
getTimestamp(int,Calendar)
getType()
NB: Where int represents the column name, the associated version
taking a String were already implemented by calling the int
version.
- These methods no longer throw the not implemented but the new noupdate
error. This is in preparation for the Updateable ResultSet support
which will overide these methods by extending the existing class to
implement that functionality, but needed to show something other than
notimplemented:
cancelRowUpdates()
deleteRow()
- Added new error message into errors.properties "postgresql.noupdate"
This is used by jdbc2.ResultSet when an update method is called and
the ResultSet is not updateable. A new method notUpdateable() has been
added to that class to throw this exception, keeping the binary size
down.
- Added new error message into errors.properties "postgresql.psqlnotimp"
This is used instead of unimplemented when it's a feature in the
backend that is preventing this method from being implemented.
- Removed getKeysetSize() as its not part of the ResultSet API
Thu Jan 18 09:46:00 GMT 2001 peter@retep.org.uk
- Applied modified patch from Richard Bullington-McGuire
<rbulling@microstate.com>. I had to modify it as some of the code
patched now exists in different classes, and some of it actually
patched obsolete code.
Wed Jan 17 10:19:00 GMT 2001 peter@retep.org.uk
- Updated Implementation to include both ANT & JBuilder
- Updated README to reflect the changes since 7.0
- Created jdbc.jpr file which allows JBuilder to be used to edit the
source. JBuilder _CAN_NOT_ be used to compile. You must use ANT for
that. It's only to allow JBuilders syntax checking to improve the
drivers source. Refer to Implementation for more details
added to support character set encodings. However I noticed that the
encoding that is used isn't obtained from the DB. Since Java uses
unicode UCS2 internally the character set encoding is used to translate
strings from/to the DB encoding. So it seems logical that the code
would get the encoding from the DB instead of the current method of
requiring the user pass it as a parameter.
Attached is a patch that gets the DB encoding from the DB in the same
manner as is done in libpq/fe-connect.c. The patch is created off of
the latest CVS sources (Connection.java version 1.10).
Barry Lind
couldn't produce a full patch using cvs diff -c this time since I have
created new files and anonymous cvs usage doesn't allow you to
adds. I'm supplying the modified src/interfaces/jdbc as a tarball at :
http://www.candleweb.no/~gunnar/projects/pgsql/postgres-jdbc-2000-10-05.tgz
The new files that should be added are :
? org/postgresql/PGStatement.java
? org/postgresql/ObjectPool.java
? org/postgresql/ObjectPoolFactory.java
There is now a global static pool of free byte arrays and used byte arrays
connected to a statement object. This is the role of the new PGStatement
class. Access to the global free array is synchronized, while we rely on
the PG_Stream synchronization for the used array.
My measurements show that the perfomance boost on this code is not quite as
big as my last shot, but it is still an improvement. Maybe some of the
difference is due to the new synchronization on the global array. I think I
will look into choosing between on a connection level and global level.
I have also started experimented with improving the performance of the
various conversions. The problem here is ofcourse related handle the
various encodings. One thing I found to speed up ResultSet.getInt() a lot
was to do custom conversion on the byte array into int instead of going
through the getString() to do the conversion. But I'm unsure if this is
portable, can we assume that a digit never can be represented by more than
one byte ? It works fine in my iso-latin-8859-1 environment, but what about
other environments ? Maybe we could provide different ResultSet
implementations depending on the encoding used or delegate some methods of
the result set to an "converter class".
Check the org/postgresql/jdbc2/FastResultSet.java in the tarball above to
see the modified getInt() method.
Regards,
Gunnar
Fixed Statement, so that the update count is valid when an SQL DELETE operation is done.
While fixing the update count, made it easier to get the OID of the last insert as well. Example is in example/basic.java