/*
* Copyright (c) 2005, 2010, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
*
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*/
package javax.sql;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.sql.SQLFeatureNotSupportedException;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
/**
* Interface that defines the methods which are common between DataSource
,
* XADataSource
and ConnectionPoolDataSource
.
*
*/ public interface CommonDataSource { /** *
Retrieves the log writer for this DataSource
* object.
*
*
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.DriverManager
class. When a
* DataSource
object is
* created, the log writer is initially null; in other words, the
* default is for logging to be disabled.
*
* @return the log writer for this data source or null if
* logging is disabled
* @exception java.sql.SQLException if a database access error occurs
* @see #setLogWriter
* @since 1.4
*/
java.io.PrintWriter getLogWriter() throws SQLException;
/**
*
Sets the log writer for this DataSource
* object to the given java.io.PrintWriter
object.
*
*
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.DriverManager
class. When a
* DataSource
object is created the log writer is
* initially null; in other words, the default is for logging to be
* disabled.
*
* @param out the new log writer; to disable logging, set to null
* @exception SQLException if a database access error occurs
* @see #getLogWriter
* @since 1.4
*/
void setLogWriter(java.io.PrintWriter out) throws SQLException;
/**
*
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 DataSource
object is created, the login timeout is
* initially zero.
*
* @param seconds the data source login time limit
* @exception SQLException if a database access error occurs.
* @see #getLoginTimeout
* @since 1.4
*/
void setLoginTimeout(int seconds) throws SQLException;
/**
* 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 a DataSource
object is created, the login timeout is
* initially zero.
*
* @return the data source login time limit
* @exception SQLException if a database access error occurs.
* @see #setLoginTimeout
* @since 1.4
*/
int getLoginTimeout() throws SQLException;
//------------------------- JDBC 4.1 -----------------------------------
/**
* Return the parent Logger of all the Loggers used by this data source. This
* should be the Logger farthest from the root Logger that is
* still an ancestor of all of the Loggers used by this data source. Configuring
* this Logger will affect all of the log messages generated by the data source.
* In the worst case, this may be the root Logger.
*
* @return the parent Logger for this data source
* @throws SQLFeatureNotSupportedException if the data source does not use java.util.logging
.
* @since 1.7
*/
public Logger getParentLogger() throws SQLFeatureNotSupportedException;
}