I have a swing desktop application that is
connected to a derby DB.
I use native sql query to select all data from the table
Now I want to update the data in the table with native sql queries
but first I have to retrieve the input data from the swing textfields.
I am able to use the jtextfielld.gettext()
to retrieve that data but how do i set these textfields data to
the update query since the sql query is executed as a string statement.
for example :
String sql = "UPDATE APP.REGISTRY SET LETTER_FROM ='Japan Motors' WHERE id = 7"
so how do execute this query from the swing interface.
Please help.
Have you looked at PreparedStatements ?
Although PreparedStatement objects can be used for SQL statements with
no parameters, you probably use them most often for SQL statements
that take parameters. The advantage of using SQL statements that take
parameters is that you can use the same statement and supply it with
different values each time you execute it.
See the linked doc and note in particular the placeholder capability (using ?s) that allows you to safely insert parameters in your SQL.
It appears you are new to JDBC and looking for a way to execute queries form Swing App. If this is a case, I will refer you to look at JDBC documentation.
In essence, you will need to get a reference to Connection object, then create a PreparedStatement using the connection and then then you can call executeUpdate() method followed by commit() method.
However, Please understand that you have very limited options for getting connection in a swing app. You will need to look at the usage of DriverManager for the way to get connection for a database.
I am aware that using Prepared Statements is the best way to protect against SQL Injection (and syntax errors due to unescaped characters in unchecked input).
My current situation is that I am writing some Java code to move data from one third party application to another. The destination application uses a proprietary version of Sybase and so whilst I do have the JTDS JDBC driver PreparedStatement fails, as the driver uses temporary stored procedures which aren't supported in this particular flavour of the database. So I only have Statement to work with and I have no control over the user input as it is coming from another application.
There is this similar question but that is focused on fixing the problem where you have a parameter such as a table which cannot be handled via a Prepared Statement. My case is different and hopefully simpler, since I have straightforward SQL statements. I would like to know if there is a best practice for replicating something like the following without using PreparedStatement:
PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement("UPDATE mytable SET value=? WHERE id=?");
statement.setInt(1, getID());
statement.setString(2,userInput);
statement.executeUpdate();
So I guess the problem is how can I sanitise the user input reliably? I can try to do that myself from scratch but this seems like a bad idea as there is likely to be at least one edge case I'd miss, so I was hoping there was a library out there that would do that for me, but I haven't been able to find one so far.
The ESAPI library has procedures for escaping input for SQL and for developing your own db specific encoders if necessary.
Check out JTDS FAQ - I'm pretty confident that with a combination of properties prepareSQL and maxStatements you could go there (or "could have gone" as you probably completed that task years ago :-) )
What does "precompiling" a statement do, because I have seen that
if I write a prepared statement with a bad SQL syntax that compilation does not report
any problem!
So if precompiling a prepared statement doesn't check for syntax validity what really does it do?
Creating a PreparedStatements may or may not involve SQL syntax validation or even DB server roundtrips, that depends entirely on the JDBC driver used. Some drivers will do a roundtrip or validate, others will not.
So on some JDBC drivers a PreparedStatement is no more "prepared" than a normal Statement. (In other words: with some JDBC drivers a PreparedStatement represents a server-side resource (similar to Connection), while on others it's a pure client-side construct).
An important difference, however is that a PreparedStatement will help you handle dynamic parameter values in a way that is guaranteed to avoid any escaping or formatting issues that you would have if you try to insert the values into the SQL statement string manually and execute it using a normal Statement.
That feature is indepdendent from the choice of "preparing" the statement beforehand or not, so it's provided by every JDBC driver, even if it doesn't do any other preparation steps.
'statement compilation' is something that happens on the database which helps it return results faster and more efficiently. If you use a PreparedStatement then it allows the database to reuse a statement which was already compiled and saves having to do it again. Bad SQL will likely result in a badly compiles database statement, but not always.
So I keep hearing that PreparedStatements are good for performance.
We have a Java application in which we use the regular 'Statement' more than we use the 'PreparedStatement'. While trying to move towards using more PreparedStatements, I am trying to get a more thorough understanding of how PreparedStatements work - on the client side and the server side.
So if we have some typical CRUD operations and update an object repeatedly in the application, does it help to use a PS? I understand that we will have to close the PS every time otherwise it will result in a cursor leak.
So how does it help with performance? Does the driver cache the precompiled statement and give me a copy the next time I do connection.prepareStatement? Or does the DB server help?
I understand the argument about the security benefits of PreparedStatements and I appreciate the answers below which emphasize it. However I really want to keep this discussion focused on the performance benefits of PreparedStatements.
Update: When I say update data, I really mean more in terms of that method randomly being called several times. I understand the advantage in the answer offered below which asks to re-use the statement inside a loop.
// some code blah blah
update();
// some more code blah blah
update();
....
public void update () throws SQLException{
try{
PreparedStatement ps = connection.prepareStatement("some sql");
ps.setString(1, "foobar1");
ps.setString(2, "foobar2");
ps.execute();
}finally {
ps.close();
}
}
There is no way to actually reuse the 'ps' java object and I understand that the actual connection.prepareStatement call is quite expensive.
Which is what brings me back to the original question. Is this "some sql" PreparedStatement still being cached and reused under the covers that I dont know about?
I should also mention that we support several databases.
Thanks in advance.
The notion that prepared statements are primarily about performance is something of a misconception, although it's quite a common one.
Another poster mentioned that he noted a speed improvement of about 20% in Oracle and SQL Server. I've noted a similar figure with MySQL. It turns out that parsing the query just isn't such a significant part of the work involved. On a very busy database system, it's also not clear that query parsing will affect overall throughput: overall, it'll probably just be using up CPU time that would otherwise be idle while data was coming back from the disk.
So as a reason for using prepared statements, the protection against SQL injection attacks far outweighs the performance improvement. And if you're not worried about SQL injection attacks, you probably should be...
Prepared statements can improve performance when re-using the same statement that you prepared:
PreparedStatement ps = connection.prepare("SOME SQL");
for (Data data : dataList) {
ps.setInt(1, data.getId());
ps.setString(2, data.getValue();
ps.executeUpdate();
}
ps.close();
This is much faster than creating the statement in the loop.
Some platforms also cache prepared statements so that even if you close them they can be reconstructed more quickly.
However even if the performance were identical you should still use prepared statements to prevent SQL Injection. At my company this is an interview question; get it wrong and we might not hire you.
Prepared statements are indeed cached after their first use, which is what they provide in performance over standard statements. If your statement doesn't change then it's advised to use this method. They are generally stored within a statement cache for alter use.
More info can be found here:
http://www.theserverside.com/tt/articles/article.tss?l=Prepared-Statments
and you might want to look at Spring JDBCTemplate as an alternative to using JDBC directly.
http://static.springframework.org/spring/docs/2.0.x/reference/jdbc.html
Parsing the SQL isn't the only thing that's going on. There's validating that the tables and columns do indeed exist, creating a query plan, etc. You pay that once with a PreparedStatement.
Binding to guard against SQL injection is a very good thing, indeed. Not sufficient, IMO. You still should validate input prior to getting to the persistence layer.
So how does it help with performance? Does the driver cache the
precompiled statement and give me a copy the next time I do
connection.prepareStatement? Or does the DB server help?
I will answer in terms of performance. Others here have already stipulated that PreparedStatements are resilient to SQL injection (blessed advantage).
The application (JDBC Driver) creates the PreparedStatement and passes it to the RDBMS with placeholders (the ?). The RDBMS precompiles, applying query optimization (if needed) of the received PreparedStatement and (in some) generally caches them. During execution of the PreparedStatement, the precompiled PreparedStatement is used, replacing each placeholders with their relevant values and calculated. This is in contrast to Statement which compiles it and executes it directly, the PreparedStatement compiles and optimizes the query only once. Now, this scenario explained above is not an absolute case by ALL JDBC vendors but in essence that's how PreparedStatement are used and operated on.
Anecdotally: I did some experiments with prepared vs. dynamic statements using ODBC in Java 1.4 some years ago, with both Oracle and SQL Server back-ends. I found that prepared statements could be as much as 20% faster for certain queries, but there were vendor-specific differences regarding which queries were improved to what extent. (This should not be surprising, really.)
The bottom line is that if you will be re-using the same query repeatedly, prepared statements may help improve performance; but if your performance is bad enough that you need to do something about it immediately, don't count on the use of prepared statements to give you a radical boost. (20% is usually nothing to write home about.)
Your mileage may vary, of course.
Which is what brings me back to the original question. Is this "some sql" PreparedStatement still being cached and reused under the covers that I dont know about?
Yes at least with Oracle. Per Oracle® Database JDBC Developer's Guide Implicit Statement Caching (emphasis added),
When you enable implicit Statement caching, JDBC automatically caches the prepared or callable statement when you call the close method of this statement object. The prepared and callable statements are cached and retrieved using standard connection object and statement object methods.
Plain statements are not implicitly cached, because implicit Statement caching uses a SQL string as a key and plain statements are created without a SQL string. Therefore, implicit Statement caching applies only to the OraclePreparedStatement and OracleCallableStatement objects, which are created with a SQL string. You cannot use implicit Statement caching with OracleStatement. When you create an OraclePreparedStatement or OracleCallableStatement, the JDBC driver automatically searches the cache for a matching statement.
1. PreparedStatement allows you to write dynamic and parametric query
By using PreparedStatement in Java you can write parametrized sql queries and send different parameters by using same sql queries which is lot better than creating different queries.
2. PreparedStatement is faster than Statement in Java
One of the major benefits of using PreparedStatement is better performance. PreparedStatement gets pre compiled
In database and there access plan is also cached in database, which allows database to execute parametric query written using prepared statement much faster than normal query because it has less work to do. You should always try to use PreparedStatement in production JDBC code to reduce load on database. In order to get performance benefit its worth noting to use only parametrized version of sql query and not with string concatenation
3. PreparedStatement prevents SQL Injection attacks in Java
Read more: http://javarevisited.blogspot.com/2012/03/why-use-preparedstatement-in-java-jdbc.html#ixzz3LejuMnVL
Short answer:
PreparedStatement helps performance because typically DB clients perform the same query repetitively, and this makes it possible to do some pre-processing for the initial query to speed up the following repetitive queries.
Long answer:
According to Wikipedia, the typical workflow of using a prepared statement is as follows:
Prepare: The statement template is created by the application and sent
to the database management system (DBMS). Certain values are left
unspecified, called parameters, placeholders or bind variables
(labelled "?" below): INSERT INTO PRODUCT (name, price) VALUES (?, ?)
(Pre-compilation): The DBMS parses, compiles, and performs query optimization on the
statement template, and stores the result without executing it.
Execute: At a later time, the application supplies (or binds) values
for the parameters, and the DBMS executes the statement (possibly
returning a result). The application may execute the statement as many
times as it wants with different values. In this example, it might
supply 'Bread' for the first parameter and '1.00' for the second
parameter.
Prepare:
In JDBC, the "Prepare" step is done by calling java.sql.Connection.prepareStatement(String sql) API. According to its Javadoc:
This method is optimized for handling parametric SQL statements that benefit from precompilation. If the driver supports precompilation, the method prepareStatement will send the statement to the database for precompilation. Some drivers may not support precompilation. In this case, the statement may not be sent to the database until the PreparedStatement object is executed. This has no direct effect on users; however, it does affect which methods throw certain SQLException objects.
Since calling this API may send the SQL statement to database, it is an expensive call typically. Depending on JDBC driver's implementation, if you have the same sql statement template, for better performance, you may have to avoiding calling this API multiple times in client side for the same sql statement template.
Precompilation:
The sent statement template will be pre-compiled on database and cached in db server. The database will probably use the connection and sql statement template as the key, and the pre-compiled query and the computed query plan as value in the cache. Parsing query may need to validate table, columns to be queried, so it could be an expensive operation, and computation of query plan is an expensive operation too.
Execute:
For following queries from the same connection and sql statement template, the pre-compiled query and query plan will be looked up directly from cache by database server without re-computation again.
Conclusion:
From performance perspective, using prepare statement is a two-phase process:
Phase 1, prepare-and-precompilation, this phase is expected to be
done once and add some overhead for the performance.
Phase 2,
repeated executions of the same query, since phase 1 has some pre
processing for the query, if the number of repeating query is large
enough, this can save lots of pre-processing effort for the same
query.
And if you want to know more details, there are some articles explaining the benefits of PrepareStatement:
http://javarevisited.blogspot.com/2012/03/why-use-preparedstatement-in-java-jdbc.html
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/jdbc/basics/prepared.html
Prepared statements have some advantages in terms of performance with respect to normal statements, depending on how you use them. As someone stated before, if you need to execute the same query multiple times with different parameters, you can reuse the prepared statement and pass only the new parameter set. The performance improvement depends on the specific driver and database you are using.
As instance, in terms of database performance, Oracle database caches the execution plan of some queries after each computation (this is not true for all versions and all configuration of Oracle). You can find improvements even if you close a statement and open a new one, because this is done at RDBMS level. This kind of caching is activated only if the two subsequent queries are (char-by-char) the same. This does not holds for normal statements because the parameters are part of the query and produce different SQL strings.
Some other RDBMS can be more "intelligent", but I don't expect they will use complex pattern matching algorithms for caching the execution plans because it would lower performance. You may argue that the computation of the execution plan is only a small part of the query execution. For the general case, I agree, but.. it depends. Keep in mind that, usually, computing an execution plan can be an expensive task, because the rdbms needs to consult off-memory data like statistics (not only Oracle).
However, the argument about caching range from execution-plans to other parts of the extraction process. Giving to the RDBMS multiple times the same query (without going in depth for a particular implementation) helps identifying already computed structures at JDBC (driver) or RDBMS level. If you don't find any particular advantage in performance now, you can't exclude that performance improvement will be implemented in future/alternative versions of the driver/rdbms.
Performance improvements for updates can be obtained by using prepared statements in batch-mode but this is another story.
Ok finally there is a paper that tests this, and the conclusion is that it doesn't improve performance, and in some cases its slower:
https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9854303
PDF: https://www.bib.irb.hr/1205158/download/1205158.Performance_analysis_of_SQL_Prepared_Statements_in_CRUD_operations_final.pdf