Author: Originally written by Peter T. Mount (
<[email protected]>
), the original author of the JDBC driver.
JDBC is a core API of Java 1.1 and later. It provides a standard set of interfaces to SQL-compliant databases.
PostgreSQL provides a type 4 JDBC Driver. Type 4 indicates that the driver is written in Pure Java, and communicates in the database system's own network protocol. Because of this, the driver is platform independent; once compiled, the driver can be used on any system.
This chapter is not intended as a complete guide to JDBC programming, but should help to get you started. For more information refer to the standard JDBC API documentation. Also, take a look at the examples included with the source. The basic example is used here.
Precompiled versions of the driver can be downloaded from the PostgreSQL JDBC web site.
Alternatively you can build the driver from source, but you should only need to do this if you are making changes to the source code. For details, refer to the PostgreSQL installation instructions. After installation, the driver should be found in PREFIX/share/java/postgresql.jar. The resulting driver will be built for the version of Java you are running. If you build with a 1.1 JDK you will build a version that supports the JDBC 1 specification, if you build with a Java 2 JDK (e.g., JDK 1.2 or JDK 1.3) you will build a version that supports the JDBC 2 specification.
To use the driver, the JAR archive (named postgresql.jar if you built from source, otherwise it will likely be named jdbc7.2-1.1.jar or jdbc7.2-1.2.jar for the JDBC 1 and JDBC 2 versions respectively) needs to be included in the class path, either by putting it in the CLASSPATH environment variable, or by using flags on the java command line.
For instance, I have an application that uses the JDBC driver to access a large database containing astronomical objects. I have the application and the JDBC driver installed in the /usr/local/lib directory, and the Java JDK installed in /usr/local/jdk1.3.1. To run the application, I would use:
export CLASSPATH=/usr/local/lib/finder.jar(1):/usr/local/pgsql/share/java/postgresql.jar:. java Finder
Loading the driver from within the application is covered in Section 5.2.
Because Java only uses TCP/IP connections, the
PostgreSQL server must be
configured to accept TCP/IP connections. This can be done by
setting tcpip_socket = true in the
postgresql.conf file or by
supplying the -i
option flag when
starting postmaster.
Also, the client authentication setup in the pg_hba.conf file may need to be configured. Refer to the Administrator's Guide for details. The JDBC Driver supports the trust, ident, password, md5, and crypt authentication methods.