6

I have a groovy application which is using an Oracle DB as DataSource.

In DataSource.groovy I've set:

dataSource {
pooled = true
driverClassName = "oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver"
username = "scott"
password = "tiger
//loggingSql = true
}

For some performance reasons at some points I am accesing the DB using sql in the following way:

def sql = Sql.newInstance("jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:XE", "scott", "tiger", "oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver") 

That is, username and password are hardwired twice in the application. My question is if it possible to address in my application to the attributes username and password already set in the DataSource.groovy.

Thanks in advance,

Luis

1
  • 1
    try def myDataSource = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource ? Sep 23, 2009 at 4:06

3 Answers 3

10

The solution is to add some imports

import javax.sql.DataSource
import groovy.sql.Sql
import org.codehaus.groovy.grails.commons.ConfigurationHolder

and the following code:

def _url      = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource.url
def _username = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource.username
def _password = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource.password
def _driver   = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource.driverClassName
def sql = Sql.newInstance(_url, _username, _password, _driver)

def query = "<your SQL query>"
sql.eachRow(query){
    println "ID: " + it.id // Whatever you need
}
4
  • 1
    Sorry for my annoing :) but what about def sql = new Sql(ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource as DataSource) If it works it's better then newInstance because you get connection through DataSource class which is usually pooled and better configured. Sep 23, 2009 at 14:42
  • 2
    def sql = new Sql(ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource as DataSource) don't work. We get a MAP with all dataSource informations, arguments not matching with new Sql. Solution add by Luixv works, thanks ! Feb 25, 2010 at 22:37
  • As of Grails 2.0, ConfigurationHolder is deprecated. Instead, inject grailsApplication object and then use grailsApplication.config.dataSource.*
    – andysh
    Feb 2, 2015 at 14:56
  • Isn't this answer specific to Grails, rather than Groovy?
    – beldaz
    Aug 5, 2015 at 19:45
1

You may create Sql class by datasource, for example

def sql = new Sql(myDataSource)

where myDataSource - object of class DataSource (you can get your DS declared in DataSource.groovy)

3
  • Thanks for your answer. Could you please tell me how to define "myDataSource". In fact a DataSource.groovy I have already defined a dataSource. My question is how to access to this variable. Thanks in advance! Luis
    – Luixv
    Sep 22, 2009 at 8:27
  • I'm don't try myself. try def myDataSource = ConfigurationHolder.config.dataSource, give me back if it ok, them i'm correct the answer Sep 22, 2009 at 16:40
  • Unfortunately your proposal throws an exception: org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.metaclass.MethodSelectionException: Could not find which method <init>() to invoke from this list: public groovy.sql.Sql#<init>(javax.sql.DataSource) public groovy.sql.Sql#<init>(groovy.sql.Sql) public groovy.sql.Sql#<init>(java.sql.Connection) Anyway don't worry. I got a solution based in your proposal. Thanks!
    – Luixv
    Sep 23, 2009 at 8:31
0

Can't you just do the following? (assuming that dataSource is a variable in scope)

def sql = Sql.newInstance("jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:XE", dataSource.username, dataSource.password, dataSource.driverClassName)
1
  • dataSource is not a variable in the scope of this page.
    – Luixv
    Sep 22, 2009 at 8:25

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