27

I am trying to create a simple app with a SQLite database. I chose to use the SQLiteJDBC driver.

The code below is taken from the above website. My question is about the line after public static void main...

It reads: Class.forName("org.sqlite.JDBC");

My question is, what does this line mean? And what does it do? It doesn't seem to be connected to the rest of the code. Class.forName() should return a class, but the line seems to stand alone inside the body. Whatever it returns isn't used by another part of the code, that I can see.

Please help clarify this. Thanks in advance.

public class Test {
 public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
    Class.forName("org.sqlite.JDBC");
    Connection conn =
      DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:sqlite:test.db");
    Statement stat = conn.createStatement();
    stat.executeUpdate("drop table if exists people;");
    stat.executeUpdate("create table people (name, occupation);");
    PreparedStatement prep = conn.prepareStatement(
      "insert into people values (?, ?);");

prep.setString(1, "Gandhi");
prep.setString(2, "politics");
prep.addBatch();
prep.setString(1, "Turing");
prep.setString(2, "computers");
prep.addBatch();

conn.setAutoCommit(false);
prep.executeBatch();
conn.setAutoCommit(true);

ResultSet rs = stat.executeQuery("select * from people;");
while (rs.next()) {
  System.out.println("name = " + rs.getString("name"));
  System.out.println("job = " + rs.getString("occupation"));
}
rs.close();
conn.close();
}
  }
1

2 Answers 2

31

It loads a class dynamically. What does Class.forname method do? is a good article about it and it also explains why database drivers needs it:

Let's see why you need Class.forName() to load a driver into memory. All JDBC Drivers have a static block that registers itself with DriverManager and DriverManager has static an initializer only.

The MySQL JDBC Driver has a static initializer looks like this:

static {
    try {
        java.sql.DriverManager.registerDriver(new Driver());
    } catch (SQLException E) {
        throw new RuntimeException("Can't register driver!");
    }
}

JVM executes the static block and the Driver registers itself with the DriverManager.

You need a database connection to manipulate the database. In order to create the connection to the database, the DriverManager class has to know which database driver you want to use. It does that by iterating over the array (internally a Vector) of drivers that have registered with it and calls the acceptsURL(url) method on each driver in the array, effectively asking the driver to tell it whether or not it can handle the JDBC URL.

2
  • 6
    Good answer. It's also worth noting that the Class.forName(...) mechanism is no longer the preferred one. "Modernized" JDBC drivers have a file at "META-INF/java.sql.Driver" in the jar that DriverManager looks for to auto-discover driver implementations. Unfortunately, SQLLite doesn't have this file. Jul 19, 2011 at 1:29
  • 1
    I recall seeing some discussion on the mailing list for the Xerial SQLite driver about adding a META-INF/services/java.sql.Driver file, but I still don't see the file checked into the source tree for the project. xerial.org/trac/Xerial/wiki/SQLiteJDBC
    – seh
    Jul 19, 2011 at 2:45
2

The Class.forName statement is making sure that the class that implements the JDBC driver for sqlite3 is loaded and registered with the JDBC factory mechanism.

When you call DriverManager.getConnection(), it looks for classes that are registered and claim to be able to handle the connection string. If no such class is found, it can't create the connection.

Your Answer

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