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Designing: The Stored Procedure
 

Classic Java CAPS

Developing Java CAPS Projects

Using SOAP Message Handlers

Creating a Runtime Environment

Designing Business Processes in the Sun Business Process Manager

Working with TCP/IP HL7 Collaborations

Developing Sun Master Indexes (Repository)

Developing Sun Master Patient Indexes

Developing OTDs for Application Adapters

Developing OTDs for Communication Adapters

Developing OTDs for Database Adapters

Developing OTDs for Web Server Adapters

Designing with Application Adapters

Designing with Communication Adapters

Designing with Web Server Adapters

SWIFT Integration Projects

Java EE Based Components

Designing with Sun JCA Adapters

About the TCP/IP JCA Adapter

Defining Constants and Variables

Using Database Operations

Using JDBC/ODBC Operations

JDBC Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

JDBC Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

The Stored Procedure

Using Sybase Operations

Sybase Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

Sybase Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

The Stored Procedure

Using VSAM Operations

VSAM Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

VSAM Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

Prepared Statement

Batch Operations

Using SQL ServerOperations

SQL Server Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

SQL Server Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

The Stored Procedure

Using DB2 Operations

DB2 Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

DB2 Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

The Stored Procedure

Using DB2 Connect Operations

DB2 Connect Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

DB2 Connect Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

Prepared Statement

The Stored Procedure

Using Oracle Operations

Oracle Adapter Database Operations (BPEL)

Activity Input and Output

Oracle Adapter Outbound XA Support for BPEL

Oracle Adapter Database Operations (JCD)

The Table

The Stored Procedure

Oracle Table Data Types

Long RAW for Prepared Statements and Stored Procedure support:

Using CLOBs

Developing Sun Master Indexes

Using the JMS JCA Wizard

Using the JAXB Wizard and Code-Seeder Pallete

The Stored Procedure

A Stored Procedure OTD represents a database stored procedure. Fields correspond to the arguments of a stored procedure while methods are the operations that you can apply to the OTD. It allows you to execute a stored procedure. Remember that while in the Collaboration Editor you can drag and drop nodes from the OTD into the Collaboration Editor.

Executing Stored Procedures

The OTD represents the Stored Procedure “LookUpGlobal” with two parameters, an inbound parameter (INLOCALID) and an outbound parameter (OUTGLOBALPRODUCTID). These inbound and outbound parameters are generated by the DataBase Wizard and are represented in the resulting OTD as nodes. Within the Transformation Designer, you can drag values from the input parameters, execute the call, collect data, and drag the values to the output parameters.

  1. Specify the input values.

  2. Execute the Stored Procedure.

  3. Retrieve the output parameters if any.

For example:

package Storedprocedure;

public class sp_jce
{

    public com.stc.codegen.logger.Logger logger;

    public com.stc.codegen.alerter.Alerter alerter;

    public void receive( com.stc.connector.appconn.file.FileTextMessage input,
com.stc.connector.appconn.file.FileApplication FileClient_1,employeedb.
Db_employee employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1,insert_DB.Insert_DBOTD insert_DB_1 )
    throws Throwable
    {

        employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.unmarshalFromString( input.getText() );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().setEmployee_no( java.lang.Integer.
parseInt( employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.getEmployee_no() ) );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().setEmployee_Lname
( employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.getEmployee_lname() );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().setEmployee_Fname
( employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.getEmployee_fname() );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().setRate( java.lang.Float.parseFloat
( employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.getRate() ) );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().setUpdate_date( java.sql.Timestamp.valueOf
( employeedb_with_top_db_employee_1.getUpdate_date() ) );

        insert_DB_1.getInsert_new_employee().execute();

        insert_DB_1.commit();

        FileClient_1.setText( "procedure executed" );

        FileClient_1.write();
    }

}
Manipulating the ResultSet and Update Count Returned by Stored Procedure

For Stored Procedures that return ResultSets and Update Count, the following methods are provided to manipulate the ResultSet:

DB2 stored procedures do not return records as ResultSets, instead, the records are returned through output reference cursor parameters. Reference Cursor parameters are essentially ResultSets.

The resultsAvailable() method, added to the PreparedStatementAgent class, simplifies the whole process of determining whether any results, be it Update Counts or ResultSets, are available after a stored procedure has been executed. Although JDBC provides three methods (getMoreResults(), getUpdateCount(), and getResultSet()) to access the results of a stored procedure call, the information returned from these methods can be quite confusing to the inexperienced Java JDBC programmer and they also differ between vendors. You can simply call resultsAvailable() and if Boolean true is returned, you can expect either a valid Update Count when getUpdateCount() is called and/or the next ResultSet has been retrieved and made available to one of the ResultSet nodes defined for the Stored Procedure OTD, when that node’s available() method returns true.

Frequently, Update Counts information that is returned from a Stored Procedures is insignificant. You should process returned ResultSet information and avoid looping through all of the Update Counts. The following three methods control exactly what information should be returned from a stored procedure call. The enableResultSetsOnly() method, added to the PreparedStatement Agent class allows only ResultSets to be returned and thus every resultsAvailable() called only returns Boolean true if a ResultSet is available. Likewise, the enableUpdateCountsOnly() causes resultsAvailable() to return true only if an Update Count is available. The default case of enableResultsetsAndUpdateCount() method allows both ResultSets and Update Counts to be returned.

Collaboration usability for a stored procedure ResultSet

The Column data of the ResultSets can be dragged-and-dropped from their nodes to the Business Rules. Below is a code snippet that can be generated by the Collaboration Editor:

while (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().resultsAvailable())
{
if (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().getUpdateCount() > 0)
  {
    System.err.println("Updated "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi()
.getUpdateCount()+" rows");
  }

  if (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().getNormRS().available())
  {
    while (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().getNormRS().next())
    {
      System.err.println("Customer Id   = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getNormRS().getCustomerId());
      System.err.println("Customer Name = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi()
getNormRS().getCustomerName());
      System.err.println();
    }
    System.err.println("===");
  }
  else if (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().getDbEmployee().available())
  {
    while (getSPIn().getSpS_multi().getDbEmployee().next())
    {
      System.err.println("EMPNO    = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getEMPNO());
      System.err.println("ENAME    = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getENAME());
      System.err.println("JOB      = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getJOB());
      System.err.println("MGR      = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getMGR());
      System.err.println("HIREDATE = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getHIREDATE());
      System.err.println("SAL      = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getSAL());
      System.err.println("COMM     = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getCOMM());
      System.err.println("DEPTNO   = "+getSPIn().getSpS_multi().
getDbEmployee().getDEPTNO());
      System.err.println();
    }
    System.err.println("===");
  }
}

Note - resultsAvailable() and available() cannot be indiscriminately called because each time they move ResultSet pointers to the appropriate locations.

After calling "resultsAvailable()", the next result (if available) can be either a ResultSet or an UpdateCount if the default "enableResultSetsAndUpdateCount()" was used.

Because of limitations imposed by some DBMSs, it is recommended that for maximum portability, all of the results in a ResultSet object should be retrieved before OUT parameters are retrieved. Therefore, you should retrieve all ResultSet(s) and Update Counts first followed by retrieving the OUT type parameters and return values.

The following list includes specific ResultSet behavior that you may encounter:

The DBWizard Assistant expects the column names to be in English when creating a ResultSet.

Prepared Statement

A Prepared Statement OTD represents a SQL statement that has been compiled. Fields in the OTD correspond to the input values that users need to provide.

Prepared statements can be used to perform insert, update, delete and query operations. A prepared statement uses a question mark (?) as a place holder for input. For example:

insert into EMP_TAB(Age, Name, Dept No) value(?, ?, ?)

To execute a prepared statement, set the input parameters and call executeUpdate() and specify the input values if any.

getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setAge(23);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setName(”Peter Pan’);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setDeptNo(6);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().executeUpdate();
Batch Operations

To achieve better performance, consider using a bulk insert if you have to insert many records. This is the “Add Batch” capability. The only modification required is to include the addBatch() method for each SQL operation and then the executeBatch() call to submit the batch to the database server. Batch operations apply only to Prepared Statements.

getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setAge(23);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setName(”Peter Pan’);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setDeptNo(6);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().addBatch();

getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setAge(45);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setName(”Harrison Ford’);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().setDeptNo(7);
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().addBatch();
getPrepStatement().getPreparedStatementTest().executeBatch();