I am trying to retrieve different kind of metadata of my Oracle DB from Java code (using basic JDBC). For example, if I want to retrieve the list of tables with _FOO
suffix, I can do something like:
Connection c开发者_如何学Goonnection = dataSource.getConnection();
DatabaseMetaData meta = connection.getMetaData();
ResultSet tables = meta.getTables(connection.getCatalog(), null, "%_FOO", new String[] { "TABLE" });
// Iterate on the ResultSet to get information on tables...
Now, I want to retrieve all the sequences from my database (for example all sequence named S_xxx_FOO
).
How would I do that, as I don't see anything in DatabaseMetaData
related to sequences?
Do I have to run a query like select * from user_sequences
?
Had the same question. It's fairly easy. Just pass in "SEQUENCE" into the getMetaData().getTables() types param.
In your specific case it would be something like:
meta.getTables(connection.getCatalog(), null, "%_FOO", new String[] { "SEQUENCE" });
You can't do this through the JDBC API, because some databases (still) do not support sequences.
The only way to get them is to query the system catalog of your DBMS (I guess it's Oracle in your case as you mention user_sequences
)
You can use the hibernate dialect api for retrieving sequence Name. see : http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/3.2/api/org/hibernate/dialect/Dialect.html
From below example, you can see how to use dialect to get sequence names
public static void main(String[] args) {
Connection jdbcConnection = null;
try {
jdbcConnection = DriverManager.getConnection("", "", "");
printAllSequenceName(jdbcConnection);
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
if(jdbcConnection != null) {
try {
jdbcConnection.close();
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
}
public static void printAllSequenceName(Connection conn) throws JDBCConnectionException, SQLException {
DialectResolver dialectResolver = new StandardDialectResolver();
Dialect dialect = dialectResolver.resolveDialect(conn.getMetaData());
if ( dialect.supportsSequences() ) {
String sql = dialect.getQuerySequencesString();
if (sql!=null) {
Statement statement = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
try {
statement = conn.createStatement();
rs = statement.executeQuery(sql);
while ( rs.next() ) {
System.out.println("Sequence Name : " + rs.getString(1));
}
}
finally {
if (rs!=null) rs.close();
if (statement!=null) statement.close();
}
}
}
}
If you don't desire to use hibernate, then you have to crate custom sequential specific implementation.
Sample code for custom implementation
interface SequenceQueryGenerator {
String getSelectSequenceNextValString(String sequenceName);
String getCreateSequenceString(String sequenceName, int initialValue, int incrementSize);
String getDropSequenceStrings(String sequenceName);
String getQuerySequencesString();
}
class OracleSequenceQueryGenerator implements SequenceQueryGenerator {
@Override
public String getSelectSequenceNextValString(String sequenceName) {
return "select " + getSelectSequenceNextValString( sequenceName ) + " from dual";
}
@Override
public String getCreateSequenceString(String sequenceName,
int initialValue, int incrementSize) {
return "create sequence " + sequenceName + " start with " + initialValue + " increment by " + incrementSize;
}
@Override
public String getDropSequenceStrings(String sequenceName) {
return "drop sequence " + sequenceName;
}
@Override
public String getQuerySequencesString() {
return "select sequence_name from user_sequences";
}
}
class PostgresSequenceQueryGenerator implements SequenceQueryGenerator {
@Override
public String getSelectSequenceNextValString(String sequenceName) {
return "select " + getSelectSequenceNextValString( sequenceName );
}
@Override
public String getCreateSequenceString(String sequenceName,
int initialValue, int incrementSize) {
return "create sequence " + sequenceName + " start " + initialValue + " increment " + incrementSize;
}
@Override
public String getDropSequenceStrings(String sequenceName) {
return "drop sequence " + sequenceName;
}
@Override
public String getQuerySequencesString() {
return "select relname from pg_class where relkind='S'";
}
}
public void printSequenceName (SequenceQueryGenerator queryGenerator, Connection conn) throws SQLException {
String sql = queryGenerator.getQuerySequencesString();
if (sql!=null) {
Statement statement = null;
ResultSet rs = null;
try {
statement = conn.createStatement();
rs = statement.executeQuery(sql);
while ( rs.next() ) {
System.out.println("Sequence Name : " + rs.getString(1));
}
}
finally {
if (rs!=null) rs.close();
if (statement!=null) statement.close();
}
}
}
public static void main(String[] args) {
Connection jdbcConnection = null;
try {
jdbcConnection = DriverManager.getConnection("", "", "");
printAllSequenceName(new OracleSequenceQueryGenerator(), jdbcConnection);
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}finally {
if(jdbcConnection != null) {
try {
jdbcConnection.close();
} catch (SQLException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
}
Given that recent versions of the Oracle JDBC drivers (e.g. 12.1.0.2) don't return sequence information when you call DatabaseMetaData#getTables
with types
set to ["SEQUENCE"]
, your best bet is to run the necessary query yourself, e.g.:
SELECT o.owner AS sequence_owner,
o.object_name AS sequence_name
FROM all_objects o
WHERE o.owner LIKE 'someOwnerPattern' ESCAPE '/'
AND o.object_name LIKE 'someNamePattern' ESCAPE '/'
AND o.object_type = 'SEQUENCE'
ORDER BY 1, 2
... where someOwnerPattern
and someNamePattern
are SQL patterns like the ones you'd use with the LIKE
operator (e.g. %
matches anything).
This is basically the same as the query run by the driver itself, except that it queries for objects of type SEQUENCE
.
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