I think I need to understand the concept of connection pool a bit better. I'm working in java with ConnectorJ and I deploy my servlet on a Apache Tomcat server. I've been following the doc so my Tomcat context.xml looks like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<Context antiJARLocking="true" path="">
<Resource auth="Container" driverClassName="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"
maxActive="-1" maxIdle="30"
maxWait="10000" minEvictableIdleTimeMillis="1200000" name="jdbc/MySQLDB"
removeAbandoned="true" removeAbandonedTimeout="1200" timeBetweenEvictionRunsMillis="60000"
type="javax.sql.DataSource" url="jdbc:mysql://my_host"
username="my_username" password="my_password"
factory="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSourceFactory" />
</Context>
And I get a connection from a datasource using the recommanded way:
InitialContext ctx = new InitialContext();
DataSource ds = (DataSource)ctx.lookup("java:comp/env/jdbc/MySQLDB");
Connection conn = null;
try {
conn = ds.getConnection();
// Do query etc.
// Close connection, statement and result set if applicable
}
catch (SQLException){
// Handle exception here
}
My question is: why do I have to specify a user and password for my datasource in context.xml. Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought the point of a connection pool was to reuse the connections that possesses the same connection string ?
I want to be able deal with multiple different login (let's say the servlet receive the DB credentials to use via HTTP), but if I have to define a different datasource for each of the possible connection, doesn't it go against the point of connection pooling ?