Contents | Prev | Next JDBCTM Guide: Getting Started


3 - DriverManager

This overview is excerpted from JDBCTM Database Access from JavaTM: A Tutorial and Annotated Reference, currently in progress at JavaSoft. This book, both a tutorial and the definitive reference manual for JDBC, will be published in the spring of 1997 by Addison-Wesley Publishing Company as part of the Java series.

3.1    Overview

The DriverManager class is the management layer of JDBC, working between the user and the drivers. It keeps track of the drivers that are available and handles establishing a connection between a database and the appropriate driver. In addition, the DriverManager class attends to things like driver login time limits and the printing of log and tracing messages.

For simple applications, the only method in this class that a general programmer needs to use directly is DriverManager.getConnection. As its name implies, this method establishes a connection to a database. JDBC allows the user to call the DriverManager methods getDriver, getDrivers, and registerDriver as well as the Driver method connect, but in most cases it is better to let the DriverManager class manage the details of establishing a connection.

3.1.1     Keeping Track of Available Drivers

The DriverManager class maintains a list of Driver classes that have registered themselves by calling the method DriverManager.registerDriver. All Driver classes should be written with a static section that creates an instance of the class and then registers it with the DriverManager class when it is loaded. Thus, a user would not normally call DriverManager.registerDriver directly; it should be called automatically by a driver when it is loaded. A Driver class is loaded, and therefore automatically registered with the DriverManager, in two ways:

  1. By calling the method Class.forName. This explicitly loads the driver class. Since it does not depend on any external setup, this way of loading a driver is recommended. The following code loads the class acme.db.Driver:
        Class.forName("acme.db.Driver");
    
    If acme.db.Driver has been written so that loading it causes an instance to be created and also calls DriverManager.registerDriver with that instance as the parameter (as it should do), then it is in the DriverManager's list of drivers and available for creating a connection.

  2. By adding the driver to the java.lang.System property jdbc.drivers. This is a list of driver classnames, separated by colons, that the DriverManager class loads. When the DriverManager class is intialized, it looks for the system property jdbc.drivers, and if the user has entered one or more drivers, the DriverManager class attempts to load them. The following code illustrates how a programmer might enter three driver classes in ~/.hotjava/properties (HotJava loads these into the system properties list on startup):
    jdbc.drivers=foo.bah.Driver:wombat.sql.Driver:bad.test.ourDriver;
The first call to a DriverManager method will automatically cause these driver classes to be loaded.

Note that this second way of loading drivers requires a preset environment that is persistent. If there is any doubt about that being the case, it is safer to call the method Class.forName to explicitly load each driver. This is also the method to use to bring in a particular driver since once the DriverManager class has been initialized, it will never recheck the jdbc.drivers property list.

In both of the cases listed above, it is the responsibility of the newly-loaded Driver class to register itself by calling DriverManager.registerDriver. As mentioned above, this should be done automatically when the class is loaded.

For security reasons, the JDBC management layer will keep track of which class loader provided which driver. Then when the DriverManager class is opening a connection, it will use only drivers that come from the local file system or from the same class loader as the code issuing the request for a connection.

3.1.2     Establishing a Connection

Once the Driver classes have been loaded and registered with the DriverManager class, they are available for establishing a connection with a database. When a request for a connection is made with a call to the DriverManager.getConnection method, the DriverManager tests each driver in turn to see if it can establish a connection.

It may sometimes be the case that more than one JDBC driver is capable of connecting to a given URL. For example, when connecting to a given remote database, it might be possible to use a JDBC-ODBC bridge driver, a JDBC-to- generic-network-protocol driver, or a driver supplied by the database vendor. In such cases, the order in which the drivers are tested is significant because the DriverManager will use the first driver it finds that can successfully connect to the given URL.

First the DriverManager tries to use each of the drivers in the order they were registered. (The drivers listed in jdbc.drivers are always registered first.) It will skip any drivers which are untrusted code, unless they have been loaded from the same source as the code that is trying to open the connection.

It tests the drivers by calling the method Driver.connect on each one in turn, passing them the URL that the user originally passed to the method DriverManager.getConnection. The first driver that recognizes the URL makes the connection.

At first glance this may seem inefficient, but it requires only a few procedure calls and string comparisons per connection since it is unlikely that dozens of drivers will be loaded concurrently.

The following code is an example of all that is normally needed to set up a connection with a driver such as a JDBC-ODBC bridge driver:

    Class.forName("sun.jdbc.odbc.JdbcOdbcDriver");  //loads the driver
    String url = "jdbc:odbc:fred";
    DriverManager.getConnection(url, "userID", "passwd");
    


Contents | Prev | Next
jdbc@wombat.eng.sun.com or jdbc-odbc@wombat.eng.sun.com
Copyright © 1996, 1997 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.