vote up 4 vote down star
2

Hi,

I have a sql script file which contains 40-50 sql statements. I am wondering whether it is possible to run this script file using JDBC.

Thanks Shafi

flag

5 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

Just read it and then use the preparedstatement with the full sql-file in it.

(If I remember good)

ADD: You can also read and split on ";" and than execute them all in a loop. Do not forget the comments and add again the ";"

link|flag
It did not work. Error thrown for ";" which presents at the end of each sql statement. – shafi Sep 30 at 11:41
then remove the semi-colon - prepared statements probably doesnt take delimiters. – Chii Sep 30 at 12:35
vote up 2 vote down

you can read the script line per line with a BufferedReader and append every line to a StringBuilder so that the script becomes one large string. Then you can create a Statement object using JDBC and call statement.execute(stringBuilder.toString())

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

This link might help you out

http://pastebin.com/f10584951

pasted below for prosperity:

/*
 * Slightly modified version of the com.ibatis.common.jdbc.ScriptRunner class
 * from the iBATIS Apache project. Only removed dependency on Resource class
 * and a constructor 
 */
/*
 *  Copyright 2004 Clinton Begin
 *
 *  Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 *  you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 *  You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *      http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 *  Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 *  distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 *  WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 *  See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 *  limitations under the License.
 */

import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.LineNumberReader;
import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.io.Reader;
import java.sql.*;

/**
 * Tool to run database scripts
 */
public class ScriptRunner {

    private static final String DEFAULT_DELIMITER = ";";

    private Connection connection;

    private boolean stopOnError;
    private boolean autoCommit;

    private PrintWriter logWriter = new PrintWriter(System.out);
    private PrintWriter errorLogWriter = new PrintWriter(System.err);

    private String delimiter = DEFAULT_DELIMITER;
    private boolean fullLineDelimiter = false;

    /**
     * Default constructor
     */
    public ScriptRunner(Connection connection, boolean autoCommit,
    		boolean stopOnError) {
    	this.connection = connection;
    	this.autoCommit = autoCommit;
    	this.stopOnError = stopOnError;
    }

    public void setDelimiter(String delimiter, boolean fullLineDelimiter) {
    	this.delimiter = delimiter;
    	this.fullLineDelimiter = fullLineDelimiter;
    }

    /**
     * Setter for logWriter property
     * 
     * @param logWriter
     *            - the new value of the logWriter property
     */
    public void setLogWriter(PrintWriter logWriter) {
    	this.logWriter = logWriter;
    }

    /**
     * Setter for errorLogWriter property
     * 
     * @param errorLogWriter
     *            - the new value of the errorLogWriter property
     */
    public void setErrorLogWriter(PrintWriter errorLogWriter) {
    	this.errorLogWriter = errorLogWriter;
    }

    /**
     * Runs an SQL script (read in using the Reader parameter)
     * 
     * @param reader
     *            - the source of the script
     */
    public void runScript(Reader reader) throws IOException, SQLException {
    	try {
    		boolean originalAutoCommit = connection.getAutoCommit();
    		try {
    			if (originalAutoCommit != this.autoCommit) {
    				connection.setAutoCommit(this.autoCommit);
    			}
    			runScript(connection, reader);
    		} finally {
    			connection.setAutoCommit(originalAutoCommit);
    		}
    	} catch (IOException e) {
    		throw e;
    	} catch (SQLException e) {
    		throw e;
    	} catch (Exception e) {
    		throw new RuntimeException("Error running script.  Cause: " + e, e);
    	}
    }

    /**
     * Runs an SQL script (read in using the Reader parameter) using the
     * connection passed in
     * 
     * @param conn
     *            - the connection to use for the script
     * @param reader
     *            - the source of the script
     * @throws SQLException
     *             if any SQL errors occur
     * @throws IOException
     *             if there is an error reading from the Reader
     */
    private void runScript(Connection conn, Reader reader) throws IOException,
    		SQLException {
    	StringBuffer command = null;
    	try {
    		LineNumberReader lineReader = new LineNumberReader(reader);
    		String line = null;
    		while ((line = lineReader.readLine()) != null) {
    			if (command == null) {
    				command = new StringBuffer();
    			}
    			String trimmedLine = line.trim();
    			if (trimmedLine.startsWith("--")) {
    				println(trimmedLine);
    			} else if (trimmedLine.length() < 1
    					|| trimmedLine.startsWith("//")) {
    				// Do nothing
    			} else if (trimmedLine.length() < 1
    					|| trimmedLine.startsWith("--")) {
    				// Do nothing
    			} else if (!fullLineDelimiter
    					&& trimmedLine.endsWith(getDelimiter())
    					|| fullLineDelimiter
    					&& trimmedLine.equals(getDelimiter())) {
    				command.append(line.substring(0, line
    						.lastIndexOf(getDelimiter())));
    				command.append(" ");
    				Statement statement = conn.createStatement();

    				println(command);

    				boolean hasResults = false;
    				if (stopOnError) {
    					hasResults = statement.execute(command.toString());
    				} else {
    					try {
    						statement.execute(command.toString());
    					} catch (SQLException e) {
    						e.fillInStackTrace();
    						printlnError("Error executing: " + command);
    						printlnError(e);
    					}
    				}

    				if (autoCommit && !conn.getAutoCommit()) {
    					conn.commit();
    				}

    				ResultSet rs = statement.getResultSet();
    				if (hasResults && rs != null) {
    					ResultSetMetaData md = rs.getMetaData();
    					int cols = md.getColumnCount();
    					for (int i = 0; i < cols; i++) {
    						String name = md.getColumnLabel(i);
    						print(name + "\t");
    					}
    					println("");
    					while (rs.next()) {
    						for (int i = 0; i < cols; i++) {
    							String value = rs.getString(i);
    							print(value + "\t");
    						}
    						println("");
    					}
    				}

    				command = null;
    				try {
    					statement.close();
    				} catch (Exception e) {
    					// Ignore to workaround a bug in Jakarta DBCP
    				}
    				Thread.yield();
    			} else {
    				command.append(line);
    				command.append(" ");
    			}
    		}
    		if (!autoCommit) {
    			conn.commit();
    		}
    	} catch (SQLException e) {
    		e.fillInStackTrace();
    		printlnError("Error executing: " + command);
    		printlnError(e);
    		throw e;
    	} catch (IOException e) {
    		e.fillInStackTrace();
    		printlnError("Error executing: " + command);
    		printlnError(e);
    		throw e;
    	} finally {
    		conn.rollback();
    		flush();
    	}
    }

    private String getDelimiter() {
    	return delimiter;
    }

    private void print(Object o) {
    	if (logWriter != null) {
    		System.out.print(o);
    	}
    }

    private void println(Object o) {
    	if (logWriter != null) {
    		logWriter.println(o);
    	}
    }

    private void printlnError(Object o) {
    	if (errorLogWriter != null) {
    		errorLogWriter.println(o);
    	}
    }

    private void flush() {
    	if (logWriter != null) {
    		logWriter.flush();
    	}
    	if (errorLogWriter != null) {
    		errorLogWriter.flush();
    	}
    }
}
link|flag
This solution is usefull for basic things only. For example if you're having a simple set of select/update/insert statements only etc. But if you'll try to create a stored procedure in such way... It'll fail. – Andrew Dashin Sep 30 at 13:02
According to Shafi, he is having '40-50 sql statements' that means he is not having SP in his SQL script. :) – Rakesh Juyal Sep 30 at 13:21
vote up 1 vote down

You should be able to parse SQL file into statments. And run a single statment a time. If you know that your file consists of simple insert/update/delete statements you can use a semicolon as statement delimiter. In common case you have a task to create your specific SQL-dialect parser.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I use this bit of code to import sql statements created by mysqldump:

public static void importSQL(Connection conn, InputStream in) throws SQLException
{
	Scanner s = new Scanner(in);
	s.useDelimiter("(;(\r)?\n)|(--\n)");
	Statement st = null;
	try
	{
		st = conn.createStatement();
		while (s.hasNext())
		{
			String line = s.next();
			if (line.startsWith("/*!") && line.endsWith("*/"))
			{
				int i = line.indexOf(' ');
				line = line.substring(i + 1, line.length() - " */".length());
			}

			if (line.trim().length() > 0)
			{
				st.execute(line);
			}
		}
	}
	finally
	{
		if (st != null) st.close();
	}
}
link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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