-1

I am trying to connect to mysql from java web application in eclipse.

 Connection con = null; 

  try {
    //DriverManager.registerDriver(new com.mysql.jdbc.Driver());
    Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
    con = DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:mysql://localhost/db_name","root" ,"");

    if(!con.isClosed())
      System.out.println("Successfully connected to " +
        "MySQL server using TCP/IP...");

  } catch(Exception e) {
    System.err.println("Exception: " + e.getMessage());
  } finally {
    try {
      if(con != null)
        con.close();
    } catch(SQLException e) {
     System.out.println(e.toString());
    }
  }

I am always getting the Exception: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver

I have downloaded this jar http://forums.mysql.com/read.php?39,218287,220327

import it to the "java build path/lib"

the mysql version is 5.1.3 under.

running:

mysql 5.1.3 (db is up and running queries form PHP)

windows XP

Java EE

1
  • 1
    A lesson: please don't plain sysout the exception. Use e.printStackTrace() instead. You'll get much more detail.
    – BalusC
    May 10, 2010 at 0:56

4 Answers 4

3

you say you placed the JAR on the build path, is it in the runtime class path? you said "java EE", so i assume you are deploying this as a web app? in that case you need to put the JDBC JAR file into WEB-INF/lib of your web app.

1
  • in case of a web application the jar should be sitting in the WEB-INF and not in the build path? can you explain more? Thanks
    – fatnjazzy
    May 10, 2010 at 4:42
0

You have to download the mysql jdbc connector und use it as lib. You can get it here:

http://www.mysql.com/downloads/connector/j/

0
0

Have u added it in your build configuration also, if the location is not in classpath then it wont work by mere keeping it in lib folder. check your .classpath file

0

You can find a full documentation (Chapter 14) on how to connect to MySQL database through any web application (JBOSS, Glassfish etc...), if you download the MySQL JDBC driver. After doing your configuration, you have to get the connection from your server by getting your server connection ressource. Here is a sample code of how to get a connection ressource from a Glassfish server :

import java.sql.Connection;
import java.sql.SQLException;
import java.util.logging.Level;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import javax.ejb.Stateless;
import javax.naming.InitialContext;
import javax.naming.NamingException;
import javax.sql.DataSource;


@Stateless
public class AppConnection {
    private InitialContext context;
    private DataSource source;
    private Connection connection;   

    public AppConnection() {
        this.initConnection();
    }

    private void initConnection() {
        try {
            context = new InitialContext();            
            source = (DataSource)context.lookup("jdbc/MySQLDataSource");
            connection = source.getConnection();
        } catch (SQLException ex) {
            Logger.getLogger(AppConnection.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
        } catch (NamingException ex) {
            Logger.getLogger(AppConnection.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
        }
    }        

    public Connection getContextConnection() {
        return connection;
    }

    public void closeContextConnection() throws SQLException {
        if(connection != null) {
            connection.close();
        }
    }
} 

Note that this class is an EJB and "jdbc/MySQLDataSource" is the name of the connection configured on your server. It can be inject in other EJB to get your current connection and create other needed objects as Statements or Resultsets.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.