Introduction / FirstSpirit Server configuration / Database connection / Examples of application

Examples for linking different database systems

Table of contents

The differences in the connection of the different DBMS are shown here in detail by way of examples. If a DBMS is to be prepared before a FirstSpirit installation and uncertainties exist regarding the database administrator's access parameters or the necessary driver files, in most cases it helps to test the database link by means of an external JDBC client. This can be done, e.g. using the DB Visualizer from https://www.dbvis.com.

The following configuration examples show use as a default layer. If used as a DBA layer, the jdbc.SCHEMA=… line is omitted.

Configuration example MySQL

Driver: mysql-connector-java-x.x-bin.jar

jdbc.DRIVER=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.URL=jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/dbname?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF8
jdbc.USER=test
jdbc.PASSWORD=test
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.mysql.MySQLLayer
jdbc.SCHEMA=dbname

It is only necessary to specify ?useUnicode=true&characterEncoding=UTF8 for jdbc.URL if using a UTF8-coded database (MySQL 5 and higher). If using the default MySQL coding (latin1, ISO-8859-1), it is not necessary to specify this parameter.

Configuration example MS-SQL-Server

Driver: sqljdbc-x.x.jar

jdbc.DRIVER=com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver  
jdbc.PASSWORD=test
jdbc.URL=jdbc:sqlserver://myServer3306;DatabaseName=testDB
jdbc.USER=test
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.mssql.MSSQL2005Layer
module=JDBC_MS_SQL_2016

Description of the MS-SQL specific parameters

Configuration example Oracle (< 19c)

Driver: ojdbcx_x.x.jar

jdbc.DRIVER=oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver
jdbc.URL=jdbc:oracle:thin:@myserver:1521:ORCL
jdbc.USER=test
jdbc.PASSWORD=test
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.oracle.OracleLayer
jdbc.SCHEMA=test
jdbc.oracle.TABLESPACE=USERS
jdbc.property.oracle.jdbc.RetainV9LongBindBehavior=true

For URL the instance name of the oracle server is specified as last parameter (in the example ORCL) and not the schema name. The schema name given with jdbc.SCHEMA complies with the user name specified by jdbc.USER.

Configuration example Oracle 19c

Driver: ojdbc8.jar

jdbc.URL=jdbc:oracle:thin:@tcp://localhost:1521/ora
jdbc.USER=dbuser
jdbc.PASSWORD=verysecret
jdbc.oracle.TABLESPACE=USERS
jdbc.DRIVER=oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.oracle.Oracle19cLayer
jdbc.property.oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant=true
jdbc.oracle.CHARACTERSET=AL32UTF8
jdbc.MAXSTRINGLENGTH=8191
module=JDBC_Oracle_Database_19c

For URL the instance name of the oracle server is specified as last parameter (in the example ORCL) and not the schema name.

Important A subsequent change of the parameter values "jdbc.MAXSTRINGLENGTH", "jdbc.oracle.CHARACTERSET" and "jdbc.property.oracle.jdbc.J2EE13Compliant" is not possible!
If you change your FirstSpirit database schema, new columns would then potentially be created and content already edited would no longer be accessible.

Configuration example PostgreSQL

Driver: postgresql-x.x.jdbc41.jar

jdbc.DRIVER=org.postgresql.Driver
jdbc.URL=jdbc:postgresql://myServer:5432/testDB
jdbc.USER=test
jdbc.PASSWORD=test
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.postgres.PostgreSQLLayer
jdbc.SCHEMA=public
module=JDBC_PostgreSQL

If using as a default layer, the value public can be entered for the parameter jdbc.SCHEMA in PostgreSQL (default value) and not the database name.

Configuration example DB2

Driver: db2jcc4.jar

Layer parameter:

For configuring an IBM DB2 data base a JDBC type 4 driver must be used:

jdbc.DRIVER=com.ibm.db2.jcc.DB2Driver
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.db2.DB2Layer
jdbc.URL=jdbc:db2://myServer:50000/test
jdbc.USER=test
jdbc.PASSWORD=test
jdbc.SCHEMA=test

Port: DB2 Java connector (is provided via: db2jstrt PORTNUMBER).

If using as a default layer, the same value is entered as parameter jdbc.SCHEMA in DB2 as for jdbc.USER, if the default schema of the given database (here “test)” is to be used. Optionally, another schema can be used. In both cases the schema must be created beforehand outside FirstSpirit using the SQL command “create schema test;”.

Drivers:

  • since DB 9.5: db2jcc4.jar, db2jcc_license_cu.jar
  • before DB 9.5: db2jcc.jar, db2jcc_license_cu.jar

The JAR files are located on the DB2 server in the directory db2inst1/sqllib/java. It is recommended to use always the driver version which is supplied with the DB" server to prevent incompatibilities.

Port: DB2 connector (db2jstrt is not necessary for type 4). Under Unix, the port number can be read out of the /etc/services file, db2_db2inst entry and as a default is set to 50000.

Configuration example: MariaDB

Driver: mysql-connector-java-x.x-bin.jar

The MariaDB JDBC driver must not be used – the MySQL driver must be used instead!

jdbc.DRIVER=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
jdbc.PASSWORD=<password>
jdbc.URL=jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/<user>
jdbc.USER=<user>
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.mysql.MySQLLayer
module=JDBC_MariaDB

Configuration example Internal Apache Derby database

The FirstSpirit server already contains a simple relational database system (Apache Derby) for test systems. FirstSpirit normally stores all data in the file system (Berkeley database) and – depending on the project requirements – only stores a few in relational databases. When a new project is created, this internal database can be activated for the project (see Project, “Internal database (Derby)” option) and write access to the database set for this project (see Databases (Project properties)). A Derby database can be subsequently created in the server properties (see Databases (Server properties)) and added to the project properties of the project (see Databases).

In order to use the Derby database from external processes, e.g. web application with FirstSpirit module DynamicDatabaseAccess in the external application server, the JDBC connector must first be activated for network connections (see Area: internal Database). The parameters from the database settings of the respective project are copied first as the connection parameters in the web application, e.g.

jdbc.URL=jdbc:derby:projects/project_12345/derby;create=true 
jdbc.DRIVER=org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedDriver
jdbc.USER=testuser
jdbc.PASSWORD=testpassword
jdbc.POOLMAX=1
jdbc.POOLMIN=1
jdbc.layerclass=de.espirit.or.impl.derby.DerbyLayer

Then, in the connection parameters for the web application, lines jdbc.URL and jdbc.DRIVER are replaced with the following, where the host name of the FirstSpirit server is entered instead of “fs5server” and the Project ID “12345” is replaced by the actual ID:

jdbc.URL=jdbc:derby://fs5server:1527/projects/project_12345/derby 
jdbc.DRIVER=org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDriver

The JDBC driver for integration in the web application can be downloaded as a file, derbyclient.jar from http://db.apache.org/derby/, in order to then copy it to WEB-INF/lib or into a global classpath directory of the application server. The respective active version of the Derby database in FirstSpirit can be read from the log file firstspirit5/log/fs-database.log.

In order to automatically create the JDBC configuration for the individual web applications, this modified database configuration can also be made directly in the layer settings of the FirstSpirit server. Then derbyclient.jar must also be copied to firstspirit5/shared/lib-isolated.

If precisely 1 schema is to be accessed in the external application, if necessary, extend jdbc.URL to include the DATABASENAME parameter. For {SCHEMA-ID} and {PROJECT-ID}, refer to the relevant FirstSpirit project for each.

jdbc.URL=jdbc:derby://fs5server:1527/projects/project_12345/derby;
DATABASENAME=P{SCHEMA-ID}_{PROJECT-ID}

It is recommended that JDBC drivers be integrated as a FirstSpirit module instead of in firstspirit5/shared/lib-isolated and manually in WEB-INF/lib, so that they are automatically integrated in all FirstSpirit web applications. Then, the parameter module=JDBC module name must additionally be given. See Creating a JDBC driver module.

© 2005 - 2024 Crownpeak Technology GmbH | All rights reserved. | FirstSpirit 2024.13 | Data privacy