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* Copyright (c) 2003, 2006, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* ORACLE PROPRIETARY/CONFIDENTIAL. Use is subject to license terms.
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package javax.sql.rowset;
import java.sql.*;
import javax.sql.*;
import javax.naming.*;
import java.io.*;
import java.math.*;
import java.io.*;
/**
* The standard interface that all standard implementations of
* JdbcRowSet
must implement.
*
*
ResultSet
object that makes it possible
* to use the result set as a JavaBeansTM
* component. Thus, a JdbcRowSet
object can be one of the Beans that
* a tool makes available for composing an application. Because
* a JdbcRowSet
is a connected rowset, that is, it continually
* maintains its connection to a database using a JDBC technology-enabled
* driver, it also effectively makes the driver a JavaBeans component.
*
* Because it is always connected to its database, an instance of
* JdbcRowSet
* can simply take calls invoked on it and in turn call them on its
* ResultSet
object. As a consequence, a result set can, for
* example, be a component in a Swing application.
*
* Another advantage of a JdbcRowSet
object is that it can be
* used to make a ResultSet
object scrollable and updatable. All
* RowSet
objects are by default scrollable and updatable. If
* the driver and database being used do not support scrolling and/or updating
* of result sets, an application can populate a JdbcRowSet
object
* with the data of a ResultSet
object and then operate on the
* JdbcRowSet
object as if it were the ResultSet
* object.
*
*
JdbcRowSet
ObjectJdbcRowSet
interface,
* JdbcRowSetImpl
, provides an implementation of
* the default constructor. A new instance is initialized with
* default values, which can be set with new values as needed. A
* new instance is not really functional until its execute
* method is called. In general, this method does the following:
* PreparedStatement
object and sets any of its
* placeholder parameters
* ResultSet
object
* execute
method is successful, it will set the
* appropriate private JdbcRowSet
fields with the following:
* Connection
object -- the connection between the rowset
* and the database
* PreparedStatement
object -- the query that produces
* the result set
* ResultSet
object -- the result set that the rowset's
* command produced and that is being made, in effect, a JavaBeans
* component
* execute
* method has not executed successfully, no methods other than
* execute
and close
may be called on the
* rowset. All other public methods will throw an exception.
*
* Before calling the execute
method, however, the command
* and properties needed for establishing a connection must be set.
* The following code fragment creates a JdbcRowSetImpl
object,
* sets the command and connection properties, sets the placeholder parameter,
* and then invokes the method execute
.
*
* JdbcRowSetImpl jrs = new JdbcRowSetImpl(); * jrs.setCommand("SELECT * FROM TITLES WHERE TYPE = ?"); * jrs.setURL("jdbc:myDriver:myAttribute"); * jrs.setUsername("cervantes"); * jrs.setPassword("sancho"); * jrs.setString(1, "BIOGRAPHY"); * jrs.execute(); ** The variable
jrs
now represents an instance of
* JdbcRowSetImpl
that is a thin wrapper around the
* ResultSet
object containing all the rows in the
* table TITLES
where the type of book is biography.
* At this point, operations called on jrs
will
* affect the rows in the result set, which is effectively a JavaBeans
* component.
*
* The implementation of the RowSet
method execute
in the
* JdbcRowSet
reference implementation differs from that in the
* CachedRowSet
TM
* reference implementation to account for the different
* requirements of connected and disconnected RowSet
objects.
*
*
* @author Jonathan Bruce
*/
public interface JdbcRowSet extends RowSet, Joinable {
/**
* Retrieves a boolean
indicating whether rows marked
* for deletion appear in the set of current rows. If true
is
* returned, deleted rows are visible with the current rows. If
* false
is returned, rows are not visible with the set of
* current rows. The default value is false
.
*
* Standard rowset implementations may choose to restrict this behavior * for security considerations or for certain deployment * scenarios. The visibility of deleted rows is implementation-defined * and does not represent standard behavior. *
* Note: Allowing deleted rows to remain visible complicates the behavior
* of some standard JDBC RowSet
implementations methods.
* However, most rowset users can simply ignore this extra detail because
* only very specialized applications will likely want to take advantage of
* this feature.
*
* @return true
if deleted rows are visible;
* false
otherwise
* @exception SQLException if a rowset implementation is unable to
* to determine whether rows marked for deletion remain visible
* @see #setShowDeleted
*/
public boolean getShowDeleted() throws SQLException;
/**
* Sets the property showDeleted
to the given
* boolean
value. This property determines whether
* rows marked for deletion continue to appear in the set of current rows.
* If the value is set to true
, deleted rows are immediately
* visible with the set of current rows. If the value is set to
* false
, the deleted rows are set as invisible with the
* current set of rows.
*
* Standard rowset implementations may choose to restrict this behavior
* for security considerations or for certain deployment
* scenarios. This is left as implementation-defined and does not
* represent standard behavior.
*
* @param b true
if deleted rows should be shown;
* false
otherwise
* @exception SQLException if a rowset implementation is unable to
* to reset whether deleted rows should be visible
* @see #getShowDeleted
*/
public void setShowDeleted(boolean b) throws SQLException;
/**
* Retrieves the first warning reported by calls on this JdbcRowSet
* object.
* If a second warning was reported on this JdbcRowSet
object,
* it will be chained to the first warning and can be retrieved by
* calling the method RowSetWarning.getNextWarning
on the
* first warning. Subsequent warnings on this JdbcRowSet
* object will be chained to the RowSetWarning
objects
* returned by the method RowSetWarning.getNextWarning
.
*
* The warning chain is automatically cleared each time a new row is read.
* This method may not be called on a RowSet
object
* that has been closed;
* doing so will cause an SQLException
to be thrown.
*
* Because it is always connected to its data source, a JdbcRowSet
* object can rely on the presence of active
* Statement
, Connection
, and ResultSet
* instances. This means that applications can obtain additional
* SQLWarning
* notifications by calling the getNextWarning
methods that
* they provide.
* Disconnected Rowset
objects, such as a
* CachedRowSet
object, do not have access to
* these getNextWarning
methods.
*
* @return the first RowSetWarning
* object reported on this JdbcRowSet
object
* or null
if there are none
* @throws SQLException if this method is called on a closed
* JdbcRowSet
object
* @see RowSetWarning
*/
public RowSetWarning getRowSetWarnings() throws SQLException;
/**
* Each JdbcRowSet
contains a Connection
object from
* the ResultSet
or JDBC properties passed to it's constructors.
* This method wraps the Connection
commit method to allow flexible
* auto commit or non auto commit transactional control support.
*
* Makes all changes made since the previous commit/rollback permanent
* and releases any database locks currently held by this Connection
* object. This method should be used only when auto-commit mode has
* been disabled.
*
* @throws SQLException if a database access error occurs or this
* Connection object within this JdbcRowSet
is in auto-commit mode
* @see java.sql.Connection#setAutoCommit
*/
public void commit() throws SQLException;
/**
* Each JdbcRowSet
contains a Connection
object from
* the original ResultSet
or JDBC properties passed to it. This
* method wraps the Connection
's getAutoCommit
method
* to allow an application to determine the JdbcRowSet
transaction
* behavior.
*
* Sets this connection's auto-commit mode to the given state. If a
* connection is in auto-commit mode, then all its SQL statements will
* be executed and committed as individual transactions. Otherwise, its
* SQL statements are grouped into transactions that are terminated by a
* call to either the method commit or the method rollback. By default,
* new connections are in auto-commit mode.
*
* @throws SQLException if a database access error occurs
* @see java.sql.Connection#getAutoCommit()
*/
public boolean getAutoCommit() throws SQLException;
/**
* Each JdbcRowSet
contains a Connection
object from
* the original ResultSet
or JDBC properties passed to it. This
* method wraps the Connection
's getAutoCommit
method
* to allow an application to set the JdbcRowSet
transaction behavior.
*
* Sets the current auto-commit mode for this Connection
object.
*
* @throws SQLException if a database access error occurs
* @see java.sql.Connection#setAutoCommit(boolean)
*/
public void setAutoCommit(boolean autoCommit) throws SQLException;
/**
* Each JdbcRowSet
contains a Connection
object from
* the original ResultSet
or JDBC properties passed to it.
* Undoes all changes made in the current transaction and releases any
* database locks currently held by this Connection
object. This method
* should be used only when auto-commit mode has been disabled.
*
* @throws SQLException if a database access error occurs or this Connection
* object within this JdbcRowSet
is in auto-commit mode.
* @see #rollback(Savepoint)
*/
public void rollback() throws SQLException;
/**
* Each JdbcRowSet
contains a Connection
object from
* the original ResultSet
or JDBC properties passed to it.
* Undoes all changes made in the current transaction to the last set savepoint
* and releases any database locks currently held by this Connection
* object. This method should be used only when auto-commit mode has been disabled.
*
* @throws SQLException if a database access error occurs or this Connection
* object within this JdbcRowSet
is in auto-commit mode.
* @see #rollback
*/
public void rollback(Savepoint s) throws SQLException;
}