I am using Java (JDBC) to create a command line utility for SQL statement execution. A script is defined as a text file, having many queries. Each query is separated by a query separator (";"). The output is routed to stdout.
SELECT * FROM table1;
UPDATE table1 SET field1='' WHERE field2='';
SELECT * FROM table1;
INSERT INTO table1 VALUES(...)
SELECT * FROM table1;
Since JDBC can execute statements batchwise, only if they don't return a ResultSet, I need another approach.
As of now, I would read the script file with the queries, split them by the separator, and analyze each query, whether it's a "SELECT" query, or an "INSERT", "UPDATE", "DELETE" query. After that, I would execute each query in it's own statement. The ones that return something are written to stdout, the queries that manipulate the database are executed. And, of course I would keep the order of the queries from the file.
My problem is: If one of the queries in the file is wrong, I can't rollback, because each query is executed separately. How could I handle this issue?