About MariaDB Connector/J
The most recent Stable (GA) release of MariaDB Connector/J is:
MariaDB Connector/J 3.5.1
Date | Release | Status | Release Notes | Changelog |
---|---|---|---|---|
17 Jul 2015 | MariaDB Connector/J 1.2.0 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
18 Jun 2015 | MariaDB Connector/J 1.1.9 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
16 Jan 2015 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.8 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
2 Apr 2014 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.7 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
18 Feb 2014 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.6 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
18 Sep 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.5 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
10 Sep 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.4 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
1 Jul 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.3 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
2 May 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.2 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
1 Mar 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.1 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
15 Jan 2013 | MariaDB Java Client 1.1.0 | Stable (GA) | Release Notes | Changelog |
29 Nov 2012 | MariaDB Java Client 1.0.0 | Stable (GA) |
Contents
- Introduction
- Obtaining the driver
- Installing the driver
- Requirements
- Source code
- License
- Building and testing the driver
MariaDB Connector/J is used to connect applications developed in Java to MariaDB and MySQL databases using the standard JDBC API. The library is LGPL licensed.
Introduction
MariaDB Connector/J is a Type 4 JDBC driver. It was developed specifically as a lightweight JDBC connector for use with MySQL and MariaDB database servers. It's originally based on the Drizzle JDBC code, and with a lot of additions and bug fixes.
Obtaining the driver
The driver source code can be downloaded from: https://downloads.mariadb.org/connector-java/
Pre-built .jar files can be downloaded from: https://code.mariadb.com/connectors/java/
Installing the driver
Installation of the client library is very simple, the jar file should be saved in an appropriate place for your application and the classpath of your application altered to include MariaDB Connector/J rather than your current connector.
Using maven :
<dependency> <groupId>org.mariadb.jdbc</groupId> <artifactId>mariadb-java-client</artifactId> <version>xxx</version> </dependency>
Requirements
- Java 7 (until April 2015) or 8
- com.sun.JNA is used by some library functions and a jar is available at
https://github.com/twall/jna
- only needed when connecting to the server with unix sockets or windows shared memory
- A MariaDB or MySQL Server
- maven (only if you want build from source)
Source code
The source code is available on GitHub: https://github.com/MariaDB/mariadb-connector-j and the most recent development version can be obtained using the following command:
git clone https://github.com/MariaDB/mariadb-connector-j.git
License
GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
Building and testing the driver
The section deals with building the connector from source and testing it. If you have downloaded a ready built connector, in a jar file, then this section may be skipped.
MariaDB Client Library for Java Applications uses maven for build. You first need to ensure you have both java and maven installed on your server before you can build the driver.
To run the unit test, you'll need a MariaDB or MySQL server running on localhost (on default TCP port 3306) and a database called 'test', and user 'root' with empty password
git clone https://github.com/MariaDB/mariadb-connector-j.git # Or, unpack the source distribution tarball cd mariadb-connector-j # For the unit test run, start local mysqld mysqld, # ensure that user root with empty password can login mvn package # If you want to build without running unit tests, use # mvn -Dmaven.test.skip=true package
After that, you should have JDBC jar mariadb-java-client-x.y.z.jar in the 'target' subdirectory
Using the driver
The following subsections show the formatting of JDBC connection strings for MariaDB, MySQL database servers. Additionally, sample code is provided that demonstrates how to connect to one of these servers and create a table.
Driver Manager
Applications designed to use the driver manager to locate the entry point need no further configuration, MariaDB Connector/J will automatically be loaded and used in the way any previous MySQL driver would have been.
Driver Class
Please note that the driver class provided by MariaDB Connector/J is not
com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
but org.mariadb.jdbc.Driver
!
Connection strings
Format of the JDBC connection string is
jdbc:(mysql|mariadb):[replication:|failover:]//<hostDescription>[,<hostDescription>...]/[database][?<key1>=<value1>[&<key2>=<value2>]]
HostDescription:
<host>[:<portnumber>] or address=(host=<host>)[(port=<portnumber>)][(type=(master|slave))]
Host must be a DNS name or IP address. In case of ipv6 and simple host
description, the IP address must be written inside brackets. The default port
is 3306
. The default type is master
. If replication
failover is
set, by default the first host is master, and the others are slaves.
Examples :
localhost:3306
[2001:0660:7401:0200:0000:0000:0edf:bdd7]:3306
somehost.com:3306
address=(host=localhost)(port=3306)(type=master)
Failover parameters
Failover was introduced in Connector/J 1.2.0.
failover | High availability (random picking connection initialisation) with failover support for master replication cluster (exemple Galera). since 1.2.0 |
---|---|
replication | High availability (random picking connection initialisation) with failover support for master/slaves replication cluster (one or multiple master) since 1.2.0 |
aurora | High availability (random picking connection initialisation) with failover support for Amazon Aurora replication cluster since 1.2.0 |
See failover description for more information.
Optional URL parameters
General remark: Unknown options accepted and are silently ignored.
Following options are currently supported.
user | Database user name. since 1.0.0 |
---|---|
password | Password of database user. since 1.0.0 |
useFractionalSeconds | Correctly handle subsecond precision in timestamps (feature available with MariaDB 5.3 and later). May confuse 3rd party components (Hibernated). Default: true. since 1.0.0 |
allowMultiQueries | Allows multiple statements in single executeQuery. example: insert into ab (i) values (1); insert into ab (i) values (2); will be rewritten insert into ab (i) values (1), (2); Default: false. since 1.0.0 |
dumpQueriesOnException | If set to 'true', exception thrown during query execution contain query string. Default: false. since 1.1.0 |
useCompression | allow compression in MySQL Protocol. Default: false. since 1.0.0 |
useSSL | Force SSL on connection. Default: false. since 1.1.0 |
trustServerCertificate | When using SSL, do not check server's certificate. Default: false. since 1.1.1 |
serverSslCert | Server's certificatem in DER form, or server's CA certificate. Can be used in one of 3 forms : * sslServerCert=/path/to/cert.pem (full path to certificate) * sslServerCert=classpath:relative/cert.pem (relative to current classpath) * or as verbatim DER-encoded certificate string "------BEGING CERTIFICATE-----" . since 1.1.3 |
socketFactory | to use custom socket factory, set it to full name of the class that implements javax.net.SocketFactory. since 1.0.0 |
tcpNoDelay | Sets corresponding option on the connection socket. since 1.0.0 |
tcpKeepAlive | Sets corresponding option on the connection socket. since 1.0.0 |
tcpAbortiveClose | Sets corresponding option on the connection socket. since 1.1.1 |
tcpRcvBuf | set buffer size for TCP buffer (SO_RCVBUF). since 1.0.0 |
tcpSndBuf | set buffer size for TCP buffer (SO_SNDBUF). since 1.0.0 |
pipe | On Windows, specify named pipe name to connect to mysqld.exe. since 1.1.3 |
tinyInt1isBit | Datatype mapping flag, handle MySQL Tiny as BIT(boolean). Default: true. since 1.0.0 |
yearIsDateType | Year is date type, rather than numerical. Default: true. since 1.0.0 |
sessionVariables | <var>=<value> pairs separated by comma, mysql session variables, set upon establishing successfull connection. since 1.1.0 |
localSocket | Allows to connect to database via Unix domain socket, if server allows it. The value is the path of Unix domain socket (i.e "socket" database parameter : select @@socket) . since 1.1.4 |
sharedMemory | Allowed to connect database via shared memory, if server allows it. The value is base name of the shared memory. since 1.1.4 |
localSocketAddress | Hostname or IP address to bind the connection socket to a local (UNIX domain) socket. since 1.1.7 |
socketTimeout | Defined the network socket timeout (SO_TIMEOUT) in milliseconds. Default: 0 milliseconds(0 disable this timeout). since 1.1.7 |
interactiveClient | Session timeout is defined by the wait_timeout server variable. Setting interactiveClient to true will tell server to use the interactive_timeout server variable. Default: false. since 1.1.7 |
useOldAliasMetadataBehavior | Metadata ResultSetMetaData.getTableName() return the physical table name. "useOldAliasMetadataBehavior" permit to activate the legacy code that send the table alias if set. Default: false. since 1.1.9 |
createDatabaseIfNotExist | the specified database in url will be created if nonexistent. Default: false. since 1.1.7 |
serverTimezone | Defined the server time zone. to use only if jre server as a different time implementation of the server. (best to have the same server time zone when possible). since 1.1.7 |
rewriteBatchedStatements | rewrite batchedStatement to have only one server call. Default: false. since 1.1.8 |
Failover/High availability URL parameters
autoReconnect | With basic failover: if true, will attempt to recreate connection after a failover. With standard failover: if true, will attempt to recreate connection even if there is a temporary solution (like using a master connection temporary until reconnect to a slave connection) Default is false. since 1.1.7 |
---|---|
retriesAllDown | When searching a valid host, maximum number of connection attempts before throwing an exception. Default: 120 seconds. since 1.2.0 |
failoverLoopRetries | When searching silently for a valid host, maximum number of connection attempts. This differ from "retriesAllDown" parameter, because this silent search is for example used after a disconnection of a slave connection when using the master connection Default: 120. since 1.2.0 |
validConnectionTimeout | With multiple hosts, after this time in seconds has elapsed it’s verified that the connections haven’t been lost. When 0, no verification will be done. Default:120 seconds since 1.2.0 |
loadBalanceBlacklistTimeout | When a connection fails, this host will be blacklisted during the "loadBalanceBlacklistTimeout" amount of time. When connecting to a host, the driver will try to connect to a host in the list of not blacklisted hosts and after that only on blacklisted ones if none has been found before that. This blacklist is shared inside the classloader. Default: 50 seconds. since 1.2.0 |
JDBC API Implementation Notes
Streaming result sets
By default, Statement.executeQuery()
will read full result set
from server before returning. With large result sets, this will require large
amounts of memory. Better behavior in this case would be reading row-by-row,
with ResultSet.next()
, so called "streaming" feature. It is
activated using Statement.setFetchSize(Integer.MIN_VALUE)
Prepared statements
The driver only uses text protocol to communicate with the database. Prepared statements (parameter substitution) is handled by the driver, on the client side.
CallableStatement
Callable statement implementation won't need to access stored procedure metadata (mysql.proc) table if both of following are true
- CallableStatement.getMetadata() is not used
- Parameters are accessed by index, not by name
When possible, following the two rules above provides both better speed and eliminates concerns about SELECT privileges on the mysql.proc table.
Optional JDBC classes
Following optional interfaces are implemented by the org.mariadb.jdbc.MySQLDataSource class : javax.sql.DataSource, javax.sql.ConnectionPoolDataSource, javax.sql.XADataSource
Usage examples
The following code provides a basic example of how to connect to a MariaDB or MySQL server and create a table.
Creating a table on a MariaDB or MySQL Server
Connection connection = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/test", "username", "password"); Statement stmt = connection.createStatement(); stmt.executeUpdate("CREATE TABLE a (id int not null primary key, value varchar(20))"); stmt.close(); connection.close();