JDBC 2 introduced standard connection pooling features in an
add-on API known as the JDBC 2.0 Optional
Package (also known as the JDBC 2.0
Standard Extension). These features have since been included in
the core JDBC 3 API. The PostgreSQL
JDBC drivers support these features with
JDK 1.3.x in combination with the
JDBC 2.0 Optional Package
(JDBC 2), or with JDK 1.4+
(JDBC 3). Most application servers include
the JDBC 2.0 Optional Package, but it is
also available separately from the Sun
JDBC download site.
The JDBC API provides a client
and a server interface for connection pooling. The client
interface is javax.sql.DataSource,
which is what application code will typically use to
acquire a pooled database connection. The server interface
is javax.sql.ConnectionPoolDataSource,
which is how most application servers will interface with
the PostgreSQL JDBC
driver.
In an application server environment, the
application server configuration will typically refer to
the PostgreSQL
ConnectionPoolDataSource implementation,
while the application component code will typically acquire a
DataSource implementation provided by
the application server (not by
PostgreSQL).
In an environment without an application server,
PostgreSQL provides two implementations
of DataSource which an application can use
directly. One implementation performs connection pooling,
while the other simply provides access to database connections
through the DataSource interface without
any pooling. Again, these implementations should not be used
in an application server environment unless the application
server does not support the
ConnectionPoolDataSource interface.
PostgreSQL includes one
implementation of ConnectionPoolDataSource
for JDBC 2, and one for
JDBC 3:
Table 5-1. ConnectionPoolDataSource Implementations
JDBC | Implementation Class |
---|
2 | org.postgresql.jdbc2.optional.ConnectionPool |
3 | org.postgresql.jdbc3.Jdbc3ConnectionPool |
Both implementations use the same configuration scheme.
JDBC requires that a
ConnectionPoolDataSource be configured via
JavaBean properties, so there are get and set methods for each of
these properties:
Table 5-2. ConnectionPoolDataSource Configuration Properties
Property | Type | Description |
---|
serverName | String | PostgreSQL database server
hostname |
databaseName | String | PostgreSQL database name |
portNumber | int | TCP/IP port which the
PostgreSQL database server is
listening on (or 0 to use the default port) |
user | String | User used to make database connections |
password | String | Password used to make database connections |
defaultAutoCommit | boolean | Whether connections should have autoCommit
enabled or disabled when they are supplied to the
caller. The default is false, to
disable autoCommit. |
Many application servers use a properties-style syntax to
configure these properties, so it would not be unusual to
enter properties as a block of text.
Example 5-5. ConnectionPoolDataSource Configuration Example
If the application server provides a single area to enter all
the properties, they might be listed like this:
serverName=localhost
databaseName=test
user=testuser
password=testpassword
Or, separated by semicolons instead of newlines, like this:
serverName=localhost;databaseName=test;user=testuser;password=testpassword
PostgreSQL includes two
implementations of DataSource
for JDBC 2, and two for JDBC
3. The pooling implementations do not actually close connections
when the client calls the close method, but
instead return the connections to a pool of available connections
for other clients to use. This avoids any overhead of repeatedly
opening and closing connections, and allows a large number of
clients to share a small number of database connections.
The pooling datasource implementation provided here is not
the most feature-rich in the world. Among other things,
connections are never closed until the pool itself is closed;
there is no way to shrink the pool. As well, connections
requested for users other than the default configured user are
not pooled. Many application servers
provide more advanced pooling features, and use the
ConnectionPoolDataSource implementation
instead.
Table 5-3. DataSource Implementations
JDBC | Pooling | Implementation Class |
---|
2 | No | org.postgresql.jdbc2.optional.SimpleDataSource |
2 | Yes | org.postgresql.jdbc2.optional.PoolingDataSource |
3 | No | org.postgresql.jdbc3.Jdbc3SimpleDataSource |
3 | Yes | org.postgresql.jdbc3.Jdbc3PoolingDataSource |
All the implementations use the same configuration scheme.
JDBC requires that a
DataSource be configured via
JavaBean properties, so there are get and set methods for each of
these properties.
Table 5-4. DataSource Configuration Properties
Property | Type | Description |
---|
serverName | String | PostgreSQL database server
hostname |
databaseName | String | PostgreSQL database name |
portNumber | int | TCP/IP port which the
PostgreSQL database server is
listening on (or 0 to use the default port) |
user | String | User used to make database connections |
password | String | Password used to make database connections |
The pooling implementations require some additional
configuration properties:
Table 5-5. Additional Pooling DataSource Configuration Properties
Property | Type | Description |
---|
dataSourceName | String | Every pooling DataSource must have a
unique name |
initialConnections | int | The number of database connections to be created
when the pool is initialized. |
maxConnections | int | The maximum number of open database connections to
allow. When more connections are requested, the caller
will hang until a connection is returned to the pool. |
Here's an example of typical application code using a
pooling DataSource:
Example 5-6. DataSource Code Example
Code to initialize a pooling DataSource might look like this:
Jdbc3PoolingDataSource source = new Jdbc3PoolingDataSource();
source.setDataSourceName("A Data Source");
source.setServerName("localhost");
source.setDatabaseName("test");
source.setUser("testuser");
source.setPassword("testpassword");
source.setMaxConnections(10);
Then code to use a connection from the pool might look
like this. Note that it is critical that the connections
are closed, or else the pool will "leak" connections, and
eventually lock all the clients out.
Connection con = null;
try {
con = source.getConnection();
// use connection
} catch(SQLException e) {
// log error
} finally {
if(con != null) {
try {con.close();}catch(SQLException e) {}
}
}
All the ConnectionPoolDataSource and
DataSource implementations can be stored
in JNDI. In the case of the non-pooling
implementations, a new instance will be created every time the
object is retrieved from JNDI, with the
same settings as the instance which was stored. For the
pooling implementations, the same instance will be retrieved
as long as it is available (e.g. not a different
JVM retrieving the pool from
JNDI), or a new instance with the same
settings created otherwise.
In the application server environment, typically the
application server's DataSource instance
will be stored in JNDI, instead of the
PostgreSQL
ConnectionPoolDataSource implementation.
In an application environment, the application may store
the DataSource in JNDI
so that it doesn't have to make a reference to the
DataSource available to all application
components that may need to use it:
Example 5-7. DataSource JNDI Code Example
Application code to initialize a pooling DataSource and add
it to JNDI might look like this:
Jdbc3PoolingDataSource source = new Jdbc3PoolingDataSource();
source.setDataSourceName("A Data Source");
source.setServerName("localhost");
source.setDatabaseName("test");
source.setUser("testuser");
source.setPassword("testpassword");
source.setMaxConnections(10);
new InitialContext().rebind("DataSource", source);
Then code to use a connection from the pool might look
like this:
Connection con = null;
try {
DataSource source = (DataSource)new InitialContext().lookup("DataSource");
con = source.getConnection();
// use connection
} catch(SQLException e) {
// log error
} catch(NamingException e) {
// DataSource wasn't found in JNDI
} finally {
if(con != null) {
try {con.close();}catch(SQLException e) {}
}
}
Configuration examples for specific application servers
will be included here.