The following example uses org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDataSource to access the Network Server:
org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDataSource ds = new org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDataSource(); ds.setDatabaseName("mydb"); ds.setCreateDatabase("create"); ds.setUser("user"); ds.setPassword("mypass"); // The host on which Network Server is running ds.setServerName("localhost"); // The port on which Network Server is listening ds.setPortNumber(1527); Connection conn = ds.getConnection();
The following example uses org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientConnectionPoolDataSource to access the Network Server and use JDBC statement caching:
org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientConnectionPoolDataSource cpds = new ClientConnectionPoolDataSource(); // Set the number of statements the cache is allowed to cache. // Any number greater than zero will enable the cache. cpds.setMaxStatements(20); // Set other DataSource properties cpds.setDatabaseName("mydb"); cpds.setCreateDatabase("create"); cpds.setUser("user"); cpds.setPassword("mypass"); cpds.setServerName("localhost"); cpds.setPortNumber(1527); // This physical connection will have JDBC statement caching enabled. javax.sql.PooledConnection pc = cpds.getPooledConnection(); // Create a logical connection. java.sql.Connection con = pc.getConnection(); // Interact with the database. java.sql.PreparedStatement ps = con.prepareStatement( "select * from myTable where id = ?"); ... ps.close(); // Inserts or returns statement to the cache ... con.close(); // The next logical connection can gain from using the cache. con = pc.getConnection(); // This prepare causes a statement to be fetched from the local cache. PreparedStatement ps = con.prepareStatement( "select * from myTable where id = ?"); ... // To dispose of the cache, close the connection. pc.close();