SQL support is built as part of the default build on Windows. For information on the build instructions, see Building Berkeley DB for Windows .
The SQL library is built as libdb_sql53.dll
in the Release mode or libdb_sql53d.dll
in
the Debug mode. An SQL command line interpreter called
dbsql.exe
is also built.
libdb_sql53.dll
is compatible with
sqlite3.dll
. You can copy
libdb_sql53.dll
to
sqlite3.dll
and
dbsql.exe
to
sqlite3.exe
, and use these applications
as a replacement for the standard SQLite binaries with the same
names. However, if you want to do this, then any legacy data in use by
those tools must be migrated from the standard SQLite database
to a Berkeley DB SQL database before you
replace the standard SQLite dll and executable with the
Berkeley DB equivalent. For information on migrating data from
standard SQLite databases to a Berkeley DB SQL database, see
the Berkeley DB Getting Started with the SQL APIs guide.
Rename your dlls and executables to the standard SQLite names with extreme care. Doing this will cause all existing tools to break that currently have data stored in a standard SQLite database.
For best results, rename your dlls and command line tool to use the standard SQLite names only if you know there are no other tools on your production platform that rely on standard SQLite.
By default, Berkeley DB SQL generates each table as a subdatabase in
a single file. To generate each table in a separate file, specify
BDBSQL_FILE_PER_TABLE in
Preprocessor Definitions of the db_sql
project.
When this option is enabled, the SQL database name is used as a
directory name. This directory contains one file for the metadata
and one file each for every table created by the SQL API. Do not add
or delete files from the database directory. Adding or deleting
files may corrupt the database. To backup just the metadata
(schema), make a copy of the metadata
and
table00001
files from the database directory.
Make a new copy whenever the schema is changed.
The Berkeley DB SQL API provides extensions such as full text search and R-Tree index. To enable these extensions, do the following:
db_sql
project.
db_sql
project.
See the SQLite Documentation for more information on full text search and R-Tree.
You can disable checksums in log records so as to provide a boost to database performance. However, this comes at the risk of having undetectable log file corruption that could prevent data recovery in the event of database corruption.
Note that disabling log record checksums is meant to only be used with the SQL interface. However, disabling checksums for the SQL interface also disables checksums for the non-SQL interfaces.
To disable log checksums, before you build the library edit the
build_windows/db_config.h
file, and delete
the following line:
#define HAVE_LOG_CHECKSUM 1
This section describes the steps to build the JDBC driver.
Configure your build environment. For information on how to configure to build Java applications, see Building the Java API.
Build the SQL project in Debug mode.
Open Berkeley_DB.sln or Berkeley_DB_vs2010.sln in Visual Studio. If you are using Java 1.6, do the following:
In the Solution Explorer, right-click the
db_sql_jdbc
project and select
properties.
In the Configuration Properties -> Build
Events -> Pre-Build Event section,
alter the command to refer to JDBC2z
instead of JDBC2x
.
If you are using Java 1.7, do the following:
In the Solution Explorer, right-click the
db_sql_jdbc
project and select
properties.
In the Configuration Properties -> Build
Events -> Pre-Build Event section,
alter the command to refer to
JDBC2z1
instead of
JDBC2x
. Also, remove the option of
"-target 1.5".
Go to db\lang\sql\jdbc\SQLite
, and
replace JDBCDriver.java
with
JDBCDriver.java17
, and replace
JDBCDataSource.java
with
JDBCDataSource.java17
.
db_sql_jdbc
project in Visual Studio.
You can test the build by entering the following commands from the
db\build_windows\Win32\Debug
directory:
javac -cp ".;jdbc.jar" -d . ..\..\..\sql\jdbc\test3.java |
java -cp ".;jdbc.jar" test3 |
This section describes the steps to download, build, and run sample programs using the built JDBC driver.
The download link for JDBC sample code is available on the Oracle Technology Network (OTN) . You can identify the link by the "JDBC programming examples from all three editions (ZIP format)" text beside it.
Before running the sample code, do the following:
jdbc:sqlite:/<db-file-name>
for the generic JDBC URL that appears in the code. That is, put jdbc:sqlite:/<db-file-name>
between the quotation marks in the line:
String url = "jdbc:mySubprotocol:myDataSource";
Note: The <db-file-name> can either be an absolute path name like "D:\\jdbc_ex_db\\myDataSource"
, or a relative path-file-name like "..\\jdbc_ex_db\myDataSource"
, or a file name, like "myDataSource"
, in which the database file will be stored at the current directory.
SQLite.JDBCDriver
for myDriver.ClassName
in the line: Class.forName("myDriver.ClassName");
"myLogin", "myPassword"
. This is optional.
enum
in OutputApplet.java
to some other variable name because, as of JDK release 5 enum
is a keyword and can not be used as an identifier.See Building the JDBC Driver for instructions about building JDBC driver.
To build and run the JDBC examples do the following:
db\build_windows\Win32\Debug
directory, run following commands:
$ javac -classpath ".;jdbc.jar" -d . \path\to\jdbc_ex\*.java $ java -classpath ".;jdbc.jar" <ClassName, eg. CreateCoffees>
dbsql
executable to open the myDataSource
database file and check if the table COFFEES
has been successfully created in the database.
$ dbsql myDataSourcedbsql> .tables COFFEES dbsql> .dump PRAGMA foreign_keys=OFF; BEGIN TRANSACTION; CREATE TABLE COFFEES (COF_NAME varchar(32),/ SUP_ID int, PRICE float, SALES int, TOTAL int); COMMIT; dbsql>
Note: Some examples like AutoGenKeys are not yet supported by BDB JDBC driver. The SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
is displayed for those unsupported examples.
This section describes the steps required to build the ODBC driver.
To configure your system prior to building the ODBC driver, do the following:
build_windows
.VS8
or VS10
.
db_sql_odbc.vcproj
and add it to the Berkeley_DB solution.
This adds the db_sql_odbc
Visual Studio project to the Berkeley_DB solution file.
db_sql_odbc
project. This can be done by right-clicking the db_sql_odbc
project in the project explorer panel, and selecting build
.The sqlite3odbc.dll
, libdb_sql53.dll
and libdb53.dll
files are now built.
Copy the dll files built in the Building the Library section to the Windows system folder.
The Windows system folder is different on different systems, but is often C:\WINDOWS\System32
.
The steps to verify that the installed driver works are as follows:
SQLite3 Datasource
and click OK
.CREATE TABLE t1(x);
in the Statement
text box and click OK
.Go to the Oracle Berkeley DB download page, and download the ADO.NET package. Build the package by following the instructions included in the package.