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Which is the difference from forName method vs registerDriver to load and register a JDBC driver?

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  • registerDriver requires the driver to be available at compile time. Failing so (availability) on runtime would result in NoClassDefFoundError (which you usually would not like to deal with). Class.forName implies late binding and doesn't require the driver to be available on compile time.
    – bestsss
    Mar 30, 2011 at 9:04

3 Answers 3

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Class.forName() is not directly related to JDBC at all. It simply loads a class.

Most JDBC Driver classes register themselves in their static initializers by calling registerDriver().

registerDriver() is the real call that you hardly ever need to call yourself (unless you write your own JDBC driver).

Note that in JDBC 4 you should not need either of those if your JDBC driver is up-to-date, as drivers can be found using the service location mechanisms instead (i.e. simply leave out that call and open your connection as usual). See the documentaton of DriverManager for details:

The DriverManager methods getConnection and getDrivers have been enhanced to support the Java Standard Edition Service Provider mechanism. JDBC 4.0 Drivers must include the file META-INF/services/java.sql.Driver. This file contains the name of the JDBC drivers implementation of java.sql.Driver. For example, to load the my.sql.Driver class, the META-INF/services/java.sql.Driver file would contain the entry:

my.sql.Driver

Applications no longer need to explictly load JDBC drivers using Class.forName(). Existing programs which currently load JDBC drivers using Class.forName() will continue to work without modification.

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    As an example take a look at MySQL JDBC Driver source code. It calls registerDriver in its static initializer.
    – Piotr
    Mar 30, 2011 at 9:08
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    @xdevel: I don't understand what you're trying to do. If all you want to do is to connect to a database and you've got a sufficiently modern JDBC driver, then you don't need any of Class.forName(), registerDriver or getDriver(). You'd simply call DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:mysql://localhost") without any other preparation. If you want to do something else, then please tell us what that is. Mar 30, 2011 at 11:57
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    Ok, be patient :) my question is only for better understand the JDBC driver registration mechanism.
    – xdevel2000
    Mar 30, 2011 at 12:21
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    @Pacerier: Yes, I would expect that to happen, and I don't know how the JDBC framework would react to that (I expect it to either ignore the second call or throw an exception on the second call, either way, the driver will be registered). As I wrote in the answer: there is really no reason to call registerDriver yourself unless you are writing your own JDBC driver. Aug 24, 2014 at 23:02
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    @Pacerier, I don't actually see that claim there. It needs to be public, because drivers aren't magical beasts, they have to follow the same access rules as any other code. If it weren't public they also couldn't call it. Not all rules in an API specification can be encoded using access restrictions (that's true for almost all languages, not just Java). Aug 25, 2014 at 22:12
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Never call DriverManager.registerDriver() method manually. The JDBC spec requires a driver to register itself when the class is loaded, and the class is loaded via Class.forName(). In JDBC 4 the drivers are able to be loaded automatically just by being on the class path.

DriverManager.registerDriver() manually is potentially dangerous since it actually causes the Driver to be registered twice. If your code requires you to deregister a Driver to prevent a memory leak then you would only end up deregistering it once and leave a second instance registered.

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    if you call register, you will need to call deregister (that only normal I guess). Class.forName() has side effects that doesn't deregister the driver. I recall tomcat attempt to deregisters drivers loaded by the webapp on redeploy of the latter.
    – bestsss
    Mar 30, 2011 at 9:38
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    No, the Driver is required to call DriverManager.register itself. If you look at the source for DriverManager, calling register will add another Driver regardless of whether it is already registered. Likewise deregister will only remove one instance regardless of how many times it was registered. Short answer: don't do that. Mar 30, 2011 at 10:18
  • @DavidO'Meara, If DriverManager.registerDriver() should never be called directly, why is it a public method?
    – Pacerier
    Aug 24, 2014 at 21:56
  • @Pacerier It is public because driver implementations need to be able to call it to register themselves. Sep 18, 2014 at 7:24
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In additaion to what Joachim Sauer already mentioned about JDBC 4 drivers, note that in practice you usually want to inject either an EntityManager (JPA) or a pooled DataSource (and use JdbcTemplate of Spring).

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