The main program opens the environment and databases, stores and retrieves objects within a transaction, and finally closes the environment databases. This section describes the main program shell, and the next section describes how to run transactions for storing and retrieving objects.
The Sample
class contains the main program. The skeleton
for the Sample
class follows.
import com.sleepycat.db.DatabaseException;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
public class Sample
{
private SampleDatabase db;
private SampleViews views;
public static void main(String args)
{
}
private Sample(String homeDir)
throws DatabaseException, FileNotFoundException
{
}
private void close()
throws DatabaseException
{
}
private void run()
throws Exception
{
}
}
The main program uses the SampleDatabase
and
SampleViews
classes that were described in the preceding
sections. The main
method will create an instance of the
Sample
class, and call its run()
and close()
methods.
The following statements parse the program's command line arguments.
public static void main(String[] args)
{
System.out.println("\nRunning sample: " + Sample.class);
String homeDir = "./tmp";
for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i += 1)
{
String arg = args[i];
if (args[i].equals("-h") && i < args.length - 1)
{
i += 1;
homeDir = args[i];
}
else
{
System.err.println("Usage:\n java " +
Sample.class.getName() +
"\n [-h <home-directory>]");
System.exit(2);
}
}
...
}
The usage command is:
java com.sleepycat.examples.bdb.shipment.basic.Sample
[-h <home-directory> ]
The -h
command is used to set the homeDir
variable, which will later be passed to the SampleDatabase()
constructor. Normally all Berkeley DB programs should provide a way
to configure their database environment home directory.
The default for the home directory is ./tmp
— the tmp
subdirectory of the current directory where the sample is run. The
home directory must exist before running the sample. To re-create
the sample database from scratch, delete all files in the home
directory before running the sample.
The home directory was described previously in Opening and Closing the Database Environment .
Of course, the command line arguments shown are only examples and a real-life application may use different techniques for configuring these options.
The following statements create an instance of the Sample
class and call its run()
and close()
methods.
public static void main(String args)
{
...
Sample sample = null;
try
{
sample = new Sample(homeDir);
sample.run();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
finally
{
if (sample != null)
{
try
{
sample.close();
}
catch (Exception e)
{
System.err.println("Exception during database close:");
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
}
The Sample()
constructor will open the environment and
databases, and the run()
method will run transactions for
storing and retrieving objects. If either of these throws an
exception, then the program was unable to run and should normally
terminate. (Transaction retries are handled at a lower level and
will be described later.) The first catch
statement handles
such exceptions.
The finally
statement is used to call the close()
method since an attempt should always be made to close the environment and
databases
cleanly. If an exception is thrown during close and a prior
exception occurred above, then the exception during close is likely
a side effect of the prior exception.
The Sample()
constructor creates the SampleDatabase
and SampleViews
objects.
private Sample(String homeDir)
throws DatabaseException, FileNotFoundException
{
db = new SampleDatabase(homeDir);
views = new SampleViews(db);
}
Recall that creating the SampleDatabase
object will open
the environment and all databases.
To close the database the Sample.close()
method simply
calls SampleDatabase.close()
.
private void close()
throws DatabaseException
{
db.close();
}
The run()
method is described in the next section.