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  • Book Overview & Buying JDBC 4.0 and Oracle JDeveloper for J2EE Development
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JDBC 4.0 and Oracle JDeveloper for J2EE Development

JDBC 4.0 and Oracle JDeveloper for J2EE Development

By : Deepak Vohra
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JDBC 4.0 and Oracle JDeveloper for J2EE Development

JDBC 4.0 and Oracle JDeveloper for J2EE Development

3 (2)
By: Deepak Vohra

Overview of this book

Being a quick reference guide, this book has a focused approach. You will learn to develop J2EE applications with JDBC and JDeveloper in no time. The book covers lot of practical examples, which makes it developer-friendly learning material. The book is suitable for Java/J2EE and Oracle JDeveloper beginners. If you are a J2EE developer and want to use the JDeveloper IDE for J2EE development, this book is for you. JDeveloper developers who are new to J2EE will also benefit from the book. Most J2EE applications have a database component and the book is specially suited for database-based J2EE development in Oracle JDeveloper. You can also use this book if you are interested in learning how to utilize the new features offered in JDBC 4.0 for Java/J2EE development.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
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16
Index

Transactions

A transaction is a group of one or more statements run as a unit. If the default value of auto-commit is set to true, then each Statement that would be run represents a transaction. After each statement is run, changes to the database are made with the auto-commit set to true. Set the auto-commit to false, if a developer requires a group of statements to be run together. Changes to the database are not made till each of the statement has run. If auto-commit is set to false, the changes to the database are committed with the commit() method. The commit() method commits the SQL statements run after the previous commit to the database was made. The group of statements run between two consecutive commits to the database represents a transaction. The rollback() method rolls back the changes made in the current transaction. A transaction may be required to be rolled back, if an error or a SQLException is generated.

connection.rollback();

While one transaction is modifying a database table, another transaction could be reading from the same table. The type of read can be dirty-read, a non-repeatable read, or a phantom read. A dirty-read occurs when a row has been modified by a transaction, but has not been committed, and is being read by a different transaction. If the transaction that modifies the row rolls back the transaction, then the value retrieved by the second transaction would be erroneous. A non-repeatable transaction occurs when one transaction reads a row while the other transaction modifies it. The first transaction re-reads the row obtaining a different value. A phantom read occurs when one transaction retrieves a result set with a WHERE condition, while the other transaction adds a row that meets the WHERE condition. The first transaction re-runs to generate a result set that has an additional row. The default transaction level can be obtained with the getTransactionLevel() method:

int transactionLevel=connection. getTransactionIsolation();

The different transaction isolation levels are listed in following table:

Transaction Isolation Level

Description

TRANSACTION_NONE

Transactions are not supported.

TRANSACTION_READ_COMMITTED

Dirty-reads cannot be done. Non-repeatable reads and phantom reads can be done.

TRANSACTION_REPEATABLE_READ

Dirty reads and non-repeatable reads cannot be done. Phantom reads can be done.

TRANSACTION_SERIALIZABLE

Dirty-reads, non-repeatable reads and phantom reads cannot be done.

The transaction isolation level can be set with the setTransactionIsolation(int level) method:

connection.setTransactionIsolation(level);
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