PolyJDBC is a polyglot, lightweight wrapper around standard JDBC drivers with schema inspection/creation capabilities.
When developing SmartParam JDBC repository i realized that i was writing polyglot JDBC wrapper instead of focusing on core JDBC repository responsibilities. PolyJDBC came to life by extracting low-level wrapping code to separate project.
Before starting work on SmartParam JDBC repo i was looking for a good JDBC wrapper that would do more than suppress SQLExceptions. Specifically i was looking for transaction-aware wrapper that would also make it easy to perform DDL operations.
PolyJDBC primary target are libraries that need light and cross-platform JDBC persistence. Hibernate is great, but it leaves little place for end-user customization, which is important when offering a library. It is also quite heavy. PolyJDBC size is only 75kB, no dependencies except for slf4j logging API.
- polyglot (or better poly-dialect? multiple DB dialect support, including id generation strategies)
- transaction-oriented
- resources (Statements, ResultSets) are managed inside transaction scope
- intiutive transaction commit/rollback support
- option to leave transaction management to external framework (i.e. Spring)
- DDL operation DSL (CREATE TABLE/INDEX/SEQUENCE with constraints, DROP *)
- SQL query DSL (INSERT, SELECT, UPDATE, DELETE)
- lightweight
- schema inspection (table/sequence exists?)
- schema alteration
- H2
- PostgreSQL
- MySQL
- Oracle
- Microsoft SQL Server
Thanks to testng magic PolyJDBC runs integration tests on each database. This way i can be sure that all features all supported across all engines.
repositories {
mavenCentral()
}
dependencies {
compile group: 'org.polyjdbc', name: 'polyjdbc', version: '0.5.0'
}
By default, PolyJDBC takes care of transaction management on it's own:
Dialect dialect = DialectRegistry.H2.getDialect();
PolyJDBC polyjdbc = PolyJDBCBuilder.polyJDBC(dialect).connectingToDataSource(dataSource).build();
But it is possible to leave connection management to any external framework:
Dialect dialect = DialectRegistry.H2.getDialect();
PolyJDBC polyjdbc = PolyJDBCBuilder.polyJDBC(dialect).usingManagedConnections(() -> frameworkManager::getConnection).build();
To ask simple questions, use simple tool. SimpleQueryRunner
performs each query in new transaction:
SelectQuery query = polyJdbc.query().selectAll().from("test").where("name = :name")
.withArgument("name", "test");
Test test = polyJdbc.simpleQueryRunner().queryUnique(query, new TestMapper());
You might want to span your transaction across multiple statements, if so use TransactionRunner
:
TransactionRunner transactionRunner = polyjdbc.transactionRunner();
Test test = transactionRunner.run(new TransactionWrapper<Test>() {
@Override
public Test perform(QueryRunner queryRunner) {
SelectQuery query = polyJdbc.query().selectAll().from("test").where("name = :name")
.withArgument("name", "test");
return queryRunner.queryUnique(query, new TestMapper());
}
});
transactionRunner.run(new VoidTransactionWrapper() {
@Override
public void performVoid(QueryRunner queryRunner) {
DeleteQuery query = polyJdbc.query().delete().from("test").where("year < :year")
.withArgument("year", 2012);
queryRunner.delete(query);
}
});
Or if you need to get your hands dirty, see QueryRunner
, but remember to free the resources:
QueryRunner queryRunner = null;
try {
queryRunner = polyjdbc.queryRunner();
SelectQuery query = polyJdbc.query().selectAll().from("test").where("year = :year")
.withArgument("year", 2013).limit(10);
List<Test> tests = queryRunner.selectList(query, new TestMapper());
queryRunner.commit()
}
catch(Exception exception) {
polyjdbc.rollback(queryRunner);
throw exception;
}
finally {
polyjdbc.close(queryRunner);
}
PolyJDBC comes with tools for schema creating and deletion. More options for schema inspection are planned, although there is no concrete release date.
To check if relation exists:
SchemaInspector schemaInspector = null;
try {
schemaInspector = polyjdbc.schemaInspector();
boolean relationExists = schemaInspector.relationExists("testRelation");
} finally {
polyjdbc.close(schemaManager);
}
To create new schema (group of relations):
SchemaManager schemaManager = null;
try {
schemaManager = polyjdbc.schemaManager();
Schema schema = new Schema(configuration.getDialect());
schema.addRelation("test_one")
.withAttribute().longAttr("id").withAdditionalModifiers("AUTO_INCREMENT").notNull().and()
.withAttribute().string("name").withMaxLength(200).notNull().unique().and()
.withAttribute().integer("age").notNull().and()
.primaryKey("pk_test_one").using("id").and()
.build();
schema.addSequence("seq_test_one").build();
schema.addRelation("test_two")
.withAttribute().longAttr("id").withAdditionalModifiers("AUTO_INCREMENT").notNull().and()
.withAttribute().longAttr("fk_test_one").notNull().and()
.foreignKey("fk_test_one_id").references("test_one", "id").on("fk_test_one").and()
.build();
schema.addSequence("seq_test_two").build();
schemaManager.create(schema);
} finally {
polyjdbc.close(schemaManager);
}
You don't need to define Schema
object. Single Relation
, Sequence
or Index
can be
created using SchemaManager
as well.
PolyJDBC is published under Apache License 2.0.
- 0.6.3 (05.10.2016)
- added the possibility to create relations in given schema (pr by @ianagius)
- 0.5.0
- added possibility to plug in external framework for transaction management
- [API change] PolyJDBC is build using PolyJDBCBuilder
- 0.4.0 (24.08.2014)
- fixed bug with closing transaction on exception in query runners
- [API change] QueryRunner.close() does not commit, use QueryRunner.commit() explicitly
- [API change] some queries from QueryFactory.* now need Dialect (better Oracle support in future), use dialect-aware PolyJDBC.query()
- previous versions
- support for PostgreSQL, MySQL, H2 and partial support for Oracle