public interface Statement extends Wrapper, AutoCloseable
The object used for executing a static SQL statement and returning the results it produces.
By default, only one ResultSet object per Statement object can be open at the same time. Therefore, if the reading of one ResultSet object is interleaved with the reading of another, each must have been generated by different Statement objects. All execution methods in the Statement interface implicitly close a current ResultSet object of the statement if an open one exists.
Connection.createStatement(), ResultSet
static final int CLOSE_CURRENT_RESULT
The constant indicating that the current ResultSet object should be closed when calling getMoreResults.
static final int KEEP_CURRENT_RESULT
The constant indicating that the current ResultSet object should not be closed when calling getMoreResults.
static final int CLOSE_ALL_RESULTS
The constant indicating that all ResultSet objects that have previously been kept open should be closed when calling getMoreResults.
static final int SUCCESS_NO_INFO
The constant indicating that a batch statement executed successfully but that no count of the number of rows it affected is available.
static final int EXECUTE_FAILED
The constant indicating that an error occurred while executing a batch statement.
static final int RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS
The constant indicating that generated keys should be made available for retrieval.
static final int NO_GENERATED_KEYS
The constant indicating that generated keys should not be made available for retrieval.
ResultSet executeQuery(String sql)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which returns a single ResultSet object.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - an SQL statement to be sent to the database, typically a static SQL SELECT statementResultSet object that contains the data produced by the given query; never null
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the given SQL statement produces anything other than a single ResultSet object, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
int executeUpdate(String sql)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may be an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as an SQL DDL statement.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the given SQL statement produces a ResultSet object, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
void close()
throws SQLException Releases this Statement object's database and JDBC resources immediately instead of waiting for this to happen when it is automatically closed. It is generally good practice to release resources as soon as you are finished with them to avoid tying up database resources.
Calling the method close on a Statement object that is already closed has no effect.
Note:When a Statement object is closed, its current ResultSet object, if one exists, is also closed.
close in interface AutoCloseable
SQLException - if a database access error occursint getMaxFieldSize()
throws SQLException Retrieves the maximum number of bytes that can be returned for character and binary column values in a ResultSet object produced by this Statement object. This limit applies only to BINARY, VARBINARY, LONGVARBINARY, CHAR, VARCHAR, NCHAR, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR and LONGVARCHAR columns. If the limit is exceeded, the excess data is silently discarded.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setMaxFieldSize(int)void setMaxFieldSize(int max)
throws SQLException Sets the limit for the maximum number of bytes that can be returned for character and binary column values in a ResultSet object produced by this Statement object. This limit applies only to BINARY, VARBINARY, LONGVARBINARY, CHAR, VARCHAR, NCHAR, NVARCHAR, LONGNVARCHAR and LONGVARCHAR fields. If the limit is exceeded, the excess data is silently discarded. For maximum portability, use values greater than 256.
max - the new column size limit in bytes; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the condition max >= 0 is not satisfiedgetMaxFieldSize()int getMaxRows()
throws SQLException Retrieves the maximum number of rows that a ResultSet object produced by this Statement object can contain. If this limit is exceeded, the excess rows are silently dropped.
ResultSet object produced by this Statement object; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setMaxRows(int)void setMaxRows(int max)
throws SQLException Sets the limit for the maximum number of rows that any ResultSet object generated by this Statement object can contain to the given number. If the limit is exceeded, the excess rows are silently dropped.
max - the new max rows limit; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the condition max >= 0 is not satisfiedgetMaxRows()void setEscapeProcessing(boolean enable)
throws SQLException Sets escape processing on or off. If escape scanning is on (the default), the driver will do escape substitution before sending the SQL statement to the database.
The Connection and DataSource property escapeProcessing may be used to change the default escape processing behavior. A value of true (the default) enables escape Processing for all Statement objects. A value of false disables escape processing for all Statement objects. The setEscapeProcessing method may be used to specify the escape processing behavior for an individual Statement object.
Note: Since prepared statements have usually been parsed prior to making this call, disabling escape processing for PreparedStatements objects will have no effect.
enable - true to enable escape processing; false to disable itSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
int getQueryTimeout()
throws SQLException Retrieves the number of seconds the driver will wait for a Statement object to execute. If the limit is exceeded, a SQLException is thrown.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setQueryTimeout(int)void setQueryTimeout(int seconds)
throws SQLException Sets the number of seconds the driver will wait for a Statement object to execute to the given number of seconds. By default there is no limit on the amount of time allowed for a running statement to complete. If the limit is exceeded, an SQLTimeoutException is thrown. A JDBC driver must apply this limit to the execute, executeQuery and executeUpdate methods.
Note: JDBC driver implementations may also apply this limit to ResultSet methods (consult your driver vendor documentation for details).
Note: In the case of Statement batching, it is implementation defined as to whether the time-out is applied to individual SQL commands added via the addBatch method or to the entire batch of SQL commands invoked by the executeBatch method (consult your driver vendor documentation for details).
seconds - the new query timeout limit in seconds; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the condition seconds >= 0 is not satisfiedgetQueryTimeout()void cancel()
throws SQLException Cancels this Statement object if both the DBMS and driver support aborting an SQL statement. This method can be used by one thread to cancel a statement that is being executed by another thread.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLWarning getWarnings()
throws SQLException Retrieves the first warning reported by calls on this Statement object. Subsequent Statement object warnings will be chained to this SQLWarning object.
The warning chain is automatically cleared each time a statement is (re)executed. This method may not be called on a closed Statement object; doing so will cause an SQLException to be thrown.
Note: If you are processing a ResultSet object, any warnings associated with reads on that ResultSet object will be chained on it rather than on the Statement object that produced it.
SQLWarning object or null if there are no warningsSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
void clearWarnings()
throws SQLException Clears all the warnings reported on this Statement object. After a call to this method, the method getWarnings will return null until a new warning is reported for this Statement object.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
void setCursorName(String name)
throws SQLException Sets the SQL cursor name to the given String, which will be used by subsequent Statement object execute methods. This name can then be used in SQL positioned update or delete statements to identify the current row in the ResultSet object generated by this statement. If the database does not support positioned update/delete, this method is a noop. To insure that a cursor has the proper isolation level to support updates, the cursor's SELECT statement should have the form SELECT FOR UPDATE. If FOR UPDATE is not present, positioned updates may fail.
Note: By definition, the execution of positioned updates and deletes must be done by a different Statement object than the one that generated the ResultSet object being used for positioning. Also, cursor names must be unique within a connection.
name - the new cursor name, which must be unique within a connectionSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodboolean execute(String sql)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may return multiple results. In some (uncommon) situations, a single SQL statement may return multiple result sets and/or update counts. Normally you can ignore this unless you are (1) executing a stored procedure that you know may return multiple results or (2) you are dynamically executing an unknown SQL string.
The execute method executes an SQL statement and indicates the form of the first result. You must then use the methods getResultSet or getUpdateCount to retrieve the result, and getMoreResults to move to any subsequent result(s).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - any SQL statementtrue if the first result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
getResultSet(), getUpdateCount(), getMoreResults()
ResultSet getResultSet()
throws SQLException Retrieves the current result as a ResultSet object. This method should be called only once per result.
ResultSet object or null if the result is an update count or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
execute(java.lang.String)int getUpdateCount()
throws SQLException Retrieves the current result as an update count; if the result is a ResultSet object or there are no more results, -1 is returned. This method should be called only once per result.
ResultSet object or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
execute(java.lang.String)boolean getMoreResults()
throws SQLException Moves to this Statement object's next result, returns true if it is a ResultSet object, and implicitly closes any current ResultSet object(s) obtained with the method getResultSet.
There are no more results when the following is true:
// stmt is a Statement object
((stmt.getMoreResults() == false) && (stmt.getUpdateCount() == -1))
true if the next result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
execute(java.lang.String)void setFetchDirection(int direction)
throws SQLException Gives the driver a hint as to the direction in which rows will be processed in ResultSet objects created using this Statement object. The default value is ResultSet.FETCH_FORWARD.
Note that this method sets the default fetch direction for result sets generated by this Statement object. Each result set has its own methods for getting and setting its own fetch direction.
direction - the initial direction for processing rowsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the given direction is not one of ResultSet.FETCH_FORWARD, ResultSet.FETCH_REVERSE, or ResultSet.FETCH_UNKNOWN
getFetchDirection()int getFetchDirection()
throws SQLException Retrieves the direction for fetching rows from database tables that is the default for result sets generated from this Statement object. If this Statement object has not set a fetch direction by calling the method setFetchDirection, the return value is implementation-specific.
Statement objectSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setFetchDirection(int)void setFetchSize(int rows)
throws SQLException Gives the JDBC driver a hint as to the number of rows that should be fetched from the database when more rows are needed for ResultSet objects generated by this Statement. If the value specified is zero, then the hint is ignored. The default value is zero.
rows - the number of rows to fetchSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the condition rows >= 0 is not satisfied.getFetchSize()int getFetchSize()
throws SQLException Retrieves the number of result set rows that is the default fetch size for ResultSet objects generated from this Statement object. If this Statement object has not set a fetch size by calling the method setFetchSize, the return value is implementation-specific.
Statement objectSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setFetchSize(int)int getResultSetConcurrency()
throws SQLException Retrieves the result set concurrency for ResultSet objects generated by this Statement object.
ResultSet.CONCUR_READ_ONLY or ResultSet.CONCUR_UPDATABLE
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
int getResultSetType()
throws SQLException Retrieves the result set type for ResultSet objects generated by this Statement object.
ResultSet.TYPE_FORWARD_ONLY, ResultSet.TYPE_SCROLL_INSENSITIVE, or ResultSet.TYPE_SCROLL_SENSITIVE
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
void addBatch(String sql)
throws SQLException Adds the given SQL command to the current list of commands for this Statement object. The commands in this list can be executed as a batch by calling the method executeBatch.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - typically this is a SQL INSERT or UPDATE statementSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the driver does not support batch updates, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
executeBatch(), DatabaseMetaData.supportsBatchUpdates()
void clearBatch()
throws SQLException Empties this Statement object's current list of SQL commands.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the driver does not support batch updatesaddBatch(java.lang.String), DatabaseMetaData.supportsBatchUpdates()
int[] executeBatch()
throws SQLException Submits a batch of commands to the database for execution and if all commands execute successfully, returns an array of update counts. The int elements of the array that is returned are ordered to correspond to the commands in the batch, which are ordered according to the order in which they were added to the batch. The elements in the array returned by the method executeBatch may be one of the following:
SUCCESS_NO_INFO -- indicates that the command was processed successfully but that the number of rows affected is unknown If one of the commands in a batch update fails to execute properly, this method throws a BatchUpdateException, and a JDBC driver may or may not continue to process the remaining commands in the batch. However, the driver's behavior must be consistent with a particular DBMS, either always continuing to process commands or never continuing to process commands. If the driver continues processing after a failure, the array returned by the method BatchUpdateException.getUpdateCounts will contain as many elements as there are commands in the batch, and at least one of the elements will be the following:
EXECUTE_FAILED -- indicates that the command failed to execute successfully and occurs only if a driver continues to process commands after a command fails The possible implementations and return values have been modified in the Java 2 SDK, Standard Edition, version 1.3 to accommodate the option of continuing to process commands in a batch update after a BatchUpdateException object has been thrown.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the driver does not support batch statements. Throws BatchUpdateException (a subclass of SQLException) if one of the commands sent to the database fails to execute properly or attempts to return a result set.SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
addBatch(java.lang.String), DatabaseMetaData.supportsBatchUpdates()
Connection getConnection()
throws SQLException Retrieves the Connection object that produced this Statement object.
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
boolean getMoreResults(int current)
throws SQLException Moves to this Statement object's next result, deals with any current ResultSet object(s) according to the instructions specified by the given flag, and returns true if the next result is a ResultSet object.
There are no more results when the following is true:
// stmt is a Statement object
((stmt.getMoreResults(current) == false) && (stmt.getUpdateCount() == -1))
current - one of the following Statement constants indicating what should happen to current ResultSet objects obtained using the method getResultSet: Statement.CLOSE_CURRENT_RESULT, Statement.KEEP_CURRENT_RESULT, or Statement.CLOSE_ALL_RESULTS
true if the next result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the argument supplied is not one of the following: Statement.CLOSE_CURRENT_RESULT, Statement.KEEP_CURRENT_RESULT or Statement.CLOSE_ALL_RESULTS
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if DatabaseMetaData.supportsMultipleOpenResults returns false and either Statement.KEEP_CURRENT_RESULT or Statement.CLOSE_ALL_RESULTS are supplied as the argument.execute(java.lang.String)ResultSet getGeneratedKeys()
throws SQLException Retrieves any auto-generated keys created as a result of executing this Statement object. If this Statement object did not generate any keys, an empty ResultSet object is returned.
Note:If the columns which represent the auto-generated keys were not specified, the JDBC driver implementation will determine the columns which best represent the auto-generated keys.
ResultSet object containing the auto-generated key(s) generated by the execution of this Statement objectSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodint executeUpdate(String sql,
int autoGeneratedKeys)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver with the given flag about whether the auto-generated keys produced by this Statement object should be made available for retrieval. The driver will ignore the flag if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.autoGeneratedKeys - a flag indicating whether auto-generated keys should be made available for retrieval; one of the following constants: Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS Statement.NO_GENERATED_KEYS
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the given SQL statement returns a ResultSet object, the given constant is not one of those allowed, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method with a constant of Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYSSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
int executeUpdate(String sql,
int[] columnIndexes)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the indexes of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.columnIndexes - an array of column indexes indicating the columns that should be returned from the inserted rowSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the SQL statement returns a ResultSet object,the second argument supplied to this method is not an int array whose elements are valid column indexes, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
int executeUpdate(String sql,
String[] columnNames)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the names of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.columnNames - an array of the names of the columns that should be returned from the inserted rowINSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements, or 0 for SQL statements that return nothingSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the SQL statement returns a ResultSet object, the second argument supplied to this method is not a String array whose elements are valid column names, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
boolean execute(String sql,
int autoGeneratedKeys)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may return multiple results, and signals the driver that any auto-generated keys should be made available for retrieval. The driver will ignore this signal if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
In some (uncommon) situations, a single SQL statement may return multiple result sets and/or update counts. Normally you can ignore this unless you are (1) executing a stored procedure that you know may return multiple results or (2) you are dynamically executing an unknown SQL string.
The execute method executes an SQL statement and indicates the form of the first result. You must then use the methods getResultSet or getUpdateCount to retrieve the result, and getMoreResults to move to any subsequent result(s).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - any SQL statementautoGeneratedKeys - a constant indicating whether auto-generated keys should be made available for retrieval using the method getGeneratedKeys; one of the following constants: Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS or Statement.NO_GENERATED_KEYS
true if the first result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the second parameter supplied to this method is not Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS or Statement.NO_GENERATED_KEYS, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method with a constant of Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYSSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
getResultSet(), getUpdateCount(), getMoreResults(), getGeneratedKeys()
boolean execute(String sql,
int[] columnIndexes)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may return multiple results, and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the indexes of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
Under some (uncommon) situations, a single SQL statement may return multiple result sets and/or update counts. Normally you can ignore this unless you are (1) executing a stored procedure that you know may return multiple results or (2) you are dynamically executing an unknown SQL string.
The execute method executes an SQL statement and indicates the form of the first result. You must then use the methods getResultSet or getUpdateCount to retrieve the result, and getMoreResults to move to any subsequent result(s).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - any SQL statementcolumnIndexes - an array of the indexes of the columns in the inserted row that should be made available for retrieval by a call to the method getGeneratedKeys
true if the first result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the elements in the int array passed to this method are not valid column indexes, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
getResultSet(), getUpdateCount(), getMoreResults()
boolean execute(String sql,
String[] columnNames)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may return multiple results, and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the names of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
In some (uncommon) situations, a single SQL statement may return multiple result sets and/or update counts. Normally you can ignore this unless you are (1) executing a stored procedure that you know may return multiple results or (2) you are dynamically executing an unknown SQL string.
The execute method executes an SQL statement and indicates the form of the first result. You must then use the methods getResultSet or getUpdateCount to retrieve the result, and getMoreResults to move to any subsequent result(s).
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
sql - any SQL statementcolumnNames - an array of the names of the columns in the inserted row that should be made available for retrieval by a call to the method getGeneratedKeys
true if the next result is a ResultSet object; false if it is an update count or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement,the elements of the String array passed to this method are not valid column names, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
getResultSet(), getUpdateCount(), getMoreResults(), getGeneratedKeys()
int getResultSetHoldability()
throws SQLException Retrieves the result set holdability for ResultSet objects generated by this Statement object.
ResultSet.HOLD_CURSORS_OVER_COMMIT or ResultSet.CLOSE_CURSORS_AT_COMMIT
SQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
boolean isClosed()
throws SQLException Retrieves whether this Statement object has been closed. A Statement is closed if the method close has been called on it, or if it is automatically closed.
Statement object is closed; false if it is still openSQLException - if a database access error occursvoid setPoolable(boolean poolable)
throws SQLException Requests that a Statement be pooled or not pooled. The value specified is a hint to the statement pool implementation indicating whether the application wants the statement to be pooled. It is up to the statement pool manager as to whether the hint is used.
The poolable value of a statement is applicable to both internal statement caches implemented by the driver and external statement caches implemented by application servers and other applications.
By default, a Statement is not poolable when created, and a PreparedStatement and CallableStatement are poolable when created.
poolable - requests that the statement be pooled if true and that the statement not be pooled if false
SQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
boolean isPoolable()
throws SQLException Returns a value indicating whether the Statement is poolable or not.
true if the Statement is poolable; false otherwise
SQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
setPoolable(boolean)void closeOnCompletion()
throws SQLException Specifies that this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed. If execution of the Statement does not produce any result sets, this method has no effect.
Note: Multiple calls to closeOnCompletion do not toggle the effect on this Statement. However, a call to closeOnCompletion does effect both the subsequent execution of statements, and statements that currently have open, dependent, result sets.
SQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
boolean isCloseOnCompletion()
throws SQLException Returns a value indicating whether this Statement will be closed when all its dependent result sets are closed.
true if the Statement will be closed when all of its dependent result sets are closed; false otherwiseSQLException - if this method is called on a closed Statement
default long getLargeUpdateCount()
throws SQLException Retrieves the current result as an update count; if the result is a ResultSet object or there are no more results, -1 is returned. This method should be called only once per result.
This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
The default implementation will throw UnsupportedOperationException
ResultSet object or there are no more resultsSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
execute(java.lang.String)default void setLargeMaxRows(long max)
throws SQLException Sets the limit for the maximum number of rows that any ResultSet object generated by this Statement object can contain to the given number. If the limit is exceeded, the excess rows are silently dropped.
This method should be used when the row limit may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
The default implementation will throw UnsupportedOperationException
max - the new max rows limit; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the condition max >= 0 is not satisfiedgetMaxRows()default long getLargeMaxRows()
throws SQLException Retrieves the maximum number of rows that a ResultSet object produced by this Statement object can contain. If this limit is exceeded, the excess rows are silently dropped.
This method should be used when the returned row limit may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
The default implementation will return 0
ResultSet object produced by this Statement object; zero means there is no limitSQLException - if a database access error occurs or this method is called on a closed Statement
setMaxRows(int)default long[] executeLargeBatch()
throws SQLException Submits a batch of commands to the database for execution and if all commands execute successfully, returns an array of update counts. The long elements of the array that is returned are ordered to correspond to the commands in the batch, which are ordered according to the order in which they were added to the batch. The elements in the array returned by the method executeLargeBatch may be one of the following:
SUCCESS_NO_INFO -- indicates that the command was processed successfully but that the number of rows affected is unknown If one of the commands in a batch update fails to execute properly, this method throws a BatchUpdateException, and a JDBC driver may or may not continue to process the remaining commands in the batch. However, the driver's behavior must be consistent with a particular DBMS, either always continuing to process commands or never continuing to process commands. If the driver continues processing after a failure, the array returned by the method BatchUpdateException.getLargeUpdateCounts will contain as many elements as there are commands in the batch, and at least one of the elements will be the following:
EXECUTE_FAILED -- indicates that the command failed to execute successfully and occurs only if a driver continues to process commands after a command fails This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
The default implementation will throw UnsupportedOperationException
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement or the driver does not support batch statements. Throws BatchUpdateException (a subclass of SQLException) if one of the commands sent to the database fails to execute properly or attempts to return a result set.SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
addBatch(java.lang.String), DatabaseMetaData.supportsBatchUpdates()
default long executeLargeUpdate(String sql)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement, which may be an INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statement or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as an SQL DDL statement.
This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
The default implementation will throw UnsupportedOperationException
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the given SQL statement produces a ResultSet object, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
default long executeLargeUpdate(String sql,
int autoGeneratedKeys)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver with the given flag about whether the auto-generated keys produced by this Statement object should be made available for retrieval. The driver will ignore the flag if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.autoGeneratedKeys - a flag indicating whether auto-generated keys should be made available for retrieval; one of the following constants: Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYS Statement.NO_GENERATED_KEYS
SQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the given SQL statement returns a ResultSet object, the given constant is not one of those allowed, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this method with a constant of Statement.RETURN_GENERATED_KEYSSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
default long executeLargeUpdate(String sql,
int[] columnIndexes)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the indexes of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.columnIndexes - an array of column indexes indicating the columns that should be returned from the inserted rowSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the SQL statement returns a ResultSet object,the second argument supplied to this method is not an int array whose elements are valid column indexes, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
default long executeLargeUpdate(String sql,
String[] columnNames)
throws SQLException Executes the given SQL statement and signals the driver that the auto-generated keys indicated in the given array should be made available for retrieval. This array contains the names of the columns in the target table that contain the auto-generated keys that should be made available. The driver will ignore the array if the SQL statement is not an INSERT statement, or an SQL statement able to return auto-generated keys (the list of such statements is vendor-specific).
This method should be used when the returned row count may exceed Integer.MAX_VALUE.
Note:This method cannot be called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement.
The default implementation will throw SQLFeatureNotSupportedException
sql - an SQL Data Manipulation Language (DML) statement, such as INSERT, UPDATE or DELETE; or an SQL statement that returns nothing, such as a DDL statement.columnNames - an array of the names of the columns that should be returned from the inserted rowINSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements, or 0 for SQL statements that return nothingSQLException - if a database access error occurs, this method is called on a closed Statement, the SQL statement returns a ResultSet object, the second argument supplied to this method is not a String array whose elements are valid column names, the method is called on a PreparedStatement or CallableStatement
SQLFeatureNotSupportedException - if the JDBC driver does not support this methodSQLTimeoutException - when the driver has determined that the timeout value that was specified by the setQueryTimeout method has been exceeded and has at least attempted to cancel the currently running Statement
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