Appboard/2.4/builder/data sources/database: Difference between revisions

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|Name of this SQL query entity. This field is limited to 256 characters. Note: if editing the name all references internal to AppBoard are updated automatically, however in some cases Data Processing Scripts may have hardcoded references that will break as a result of the rename. In cases where AppBoard can detect this an error message is presented to the administrator identifying the affected scripts. '''Note:  This field is required.'''
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|SQL statement defining the records to be returned by the query.  The SQL Query can contain a maximum of 8000 characters.
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Revision as of 16:27, 31 December 2013

This page provides details for configuring database adapters in AppBoard. For information on creating the database adapter, or other AppBoard adapters, see AppBoard Data Sources


The two types of database adapters to select from are Database Table or Database Query.


Database Table

This adapter retrieves a filtered set of tables from a RDBMS to create multiple Data Collections. It is equivalent to executing select * from <table_name> for the selected tables.


Database Query

This adapter retrieves data from a RDBMS using SQL queries to create a data set. This is frequently used to transform data through the use of SQL to prepare data for use in AppBoard.

When using the Database Table data adapter, you are presented with the visible tables and columns within those tables with little control over how they are formatted or filtered. This is quick and easy when the data exists in the form it is needed, but often there is a need for more control. Examples of situations where the Database Query adapter is required include:

  • the required data comes from a SQL stored procedure
  • some SQL calculations need to be done (such as date calculations)
  • complex joins need to be done in the source
  • the raw data set is too large to handle in memory and you need to select a dynamic subset of that data

Using SHIM Expressions in Queries

In many cases, you will want to pass a parameter value into a query rather than using a static query definition. AppBoard provides a system of variable expressions, called SHIM, that can be used for this purpose. For instructions on this option, see SHIM Expressions.


Database Data Source Configuration

[Optional] Enable Failover

In AppBoard versions 2.4 or higher, an "Enable Failover" option is provided on the "Connect" panel for certain adapters. For detailed instructions on enabling failover, see Data Source Failover.

Select Template

Before entering the various settings for the database adapter, you must select a template for the type of database that you are going to connect to. This will enable AppBoard to pre-fill the URL field with an appropriate connection string for the selected database platform.

For either the Database Table or Database Query adapter, select from the following supported databases:

  • DB2
  • H2
  • Hypersonic (HSQLDB)
  • MySQL
  • Oracle
  • PostgreSQL
  • SQLAnywhere
  • SQL Server

Configure Database Connection Settings

The following tables detail the settings available in the database adapters.

Database Table

The table below details the settings you can configure for a Database Table Data Source:

Name Description
driver The Java class name for the JDBC driver. Example: oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
connectTimeout Time (in seconds) after a timeout occurs to wait before attempting to re-establish the connection. Setting this value too low can impact the performance of the system.
timeout Time to wait (in seconds) before timing out on connecting to the datasource. If there is latency between AppBoard and the database, due to network configuration, this value may need to be increased.
cacheTimeout Time limit before re-loading results from the database.
catalogName Database catalog name. It is not required, used to limit the set of tables found on the search.
schemaName The database schema name. It is not required, used to limit the set of tables found on the search.
tableNameRegex Regular expression that defines the database tables that will be returned by the adapter. It is not required, but may be used to limit the set of tables found on the search. For example, if you had a couple of tables called Services and Locations, a useful regex to enter in that box would be “(Services|Locations)” - without the quotes. This is case-sensitive, and would match tables with names such as ServicesA, ServicesUS, LocationsB, or any table that contains either "Services" or "Locations" somewhere in the name. If you made the regex "^(Services|Locations)$" then it would only match exactly those names since the ^ and $ anchor the beginning and the end of the string.
ansiMode Check this box if your database is running in ANSI mode. Some databases (including MySQL and SQL Server) provide this variation on the character used to quote elements such as columns when the SQL statement is being constructed.
url The JDBC connection string/URL for defining the connection. This typically contains information about the database server and name, the user id, a password for connecting to the database, and an Oracle SID at the end which uniquely identifies the name of a particular database to connect to. Example: jdbc:mysql://myservername:3306/mydbname. The default connection string provided when you create the JDBC/Oracle adapter Data Source in AppBoard is the following: jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:portal. Note that the sample URL string contains an Oracle SID at the end ("portal"), which uniquely identifies the name of a particular database to connect to. It is recommended that you make sure the connection string includes this SID so the connection can be made between AppBoard and the database. You may need to ask the database or application administrator to provide the Oracle SID for the database. Example Oracle URL: jdbc:oracle:thin:@servername:1521:OracleSID
username User name credential used to connect to database.
password User password credential used to connect to database.
enabled Check this box to activate the connection defined in this Data Source. This is primary used in conjunction with setting failover configurations. Occasionally you may want to disable a Data Source. For example, you may set up a Data Source for testing purposes, but do not want it to continue running for performance reasons. Also, you may set up multiple connections to Data Sources and only want one to be active at a time, disabling the others until they may be needed.
connectionRetryInterval This setting works as part of the failover configuration. After a primary data source fails and failover occurs to a secondary or tertiary source, AppBoard will try to recover/revert to the highest priority configuration after this many seconds. Setting that determines how soon after a failed connection AppBoard will attempt to re-connect to that database. Setting this value too low can impact the performance of the system. Setting this higher will throttle the frequency of re-connect attempts when a database is not available. Setting this to 0 will implement a round-robin / no priority failover.

Database Query

You can configure one or more queries in each Database Query adapter configuration. Each configured query will have a different name, and result in a different Data Collection with that name. When naming a query, only alphanumeric characters, underscores, and hyphens are permitted.

The table below details the settings you can configure for a Database Query Data Source:

Connect Screen:

Name Description
driver The Java class name for the JDBC driver. Example: oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
connectTimeout Time (in seconds) after a timeout occurs to wait before attempting to re-establish the connection. Setting this value too low can impact the performance of the system.
timeout Time to wait (in seconds) before timing out on connecting to the datasource. If there is latency between AppBoard and the database, due to network configuration, this value may need to be increased.
url The JDBC connection string/URL for defining the connection. This typically contains information about the database server and name, the user id, a password for connecting to the database, and an Oracle SID at the end which uniquely identifies the name of a particular database to connect to. Example: jdbc:mysql://myservername:3306/mydbname. The default connection string provided when you create the JDBC/Oracle adapter Data Source in AppBoard is the following: jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:portal. Note that the sample URL string contains an Oracle SID at the end ("portal"), which uniquely identifies the name of a particular database to connect to. It is recommended that you make sure the connection string includes this SID so the connection can be made between AppBoard and the database. You may need to ask the database or application administrator to provide the Oracle SID for the database. Example Oracle URL: jdbc:oracle:thin:@servername:1521:OracleSID
username User name credential used to connect to database.
password User password credential used to connect to database.
enabled Check this box to activate the connection defined in this Data Source. This is primary used in conjunction with setting failover configurations. Occasionally you may want to disable a Data Source. For example, you may set up a Data Source for testing purposes, but do not want it to continue running for performance reasons. Also, you may set up multiple connections to Data Sources and only want one to be active at a time, disabling the others until they may be needed.
connectionRetryInterval This setting works as part of the failover configuration. After a primary data source fails and failover occurs to a secondary or tertiary source, AppBoard will try to recover/revert to the highest priority configuration after this many seconds. Setting that determines how soon after a failed connection AppBoard will attempt to re-connect to that database. Setting this value too low can impact the performance of the system. Setting this higher will throttle the frequency of re-connect attempts when a database is not available. Setting this to 0 will implement a round-robin / no priority failover.


Queries - Entity Settings Screen:

Name Description
Name Name of this SQL query entity. This field is limited to 256 characters. Note: if editing the name all references internal to AppBoard are updated automatically, however in some cases Data Processing Scripts may have hardcoded references that will break as a result of the rename. In cases where AppBoard can detect this an error message is presented to the administrator identifying the affected scripts. Note: This field is required.
Description A summary of the purpose of the query and any details or notes to provide for the system administrator. The Description field has a character limit of 512 characters.
Cache Timeout (seconds) Maximum time a response from the database is kept before discarding.
SQL Query SQL statement defining the records to be returned by the query. The SQL Query can contain a maximum of 8000 characters. Note: This field is required.
Update Statement Used in conjunction with the Write Static Value Action to write back to the original Data Source. Example: update asset set status=:status where assetName=:assetName. The Update Statement can contain a maximum of 1024 characters.
Data Processing Script(s) List of one or more Data Processing Scripts to be run on the query.

Detailed Database Configuration

There are a number of low-level database configuration parameters that can be manipulated in webapps/enportal/WEB-INF/config/appboard.properties. Note that as with all property changes, the recommended approach is to make the change to the property in appboard-custom.properties so that the changes will persist across upgrades.

Note that each parameter is documented in appboard.properties, and ideally the system defaults should be suitable for most users. However, under some high-load circumstances these are the parameters that may be of interest:

Name Description
appboard.jdbc.acquireIncrement When the available connections are about to run out, BoneCP will dynamically create new ones in batches. This property controls how many new connections to create in one go (up to a maximum of maxConnectionsPerPartition). Note: This is a per partition setting.
appboard.jdbc.connectionTestStatement Sets the connection test statement. The query to send to the DB to maintain keep-alives and test for dead connections. This# is database specific and should be set to a query that consumes the minimal amount of load on the server. Examples: MySQL: "/* ping */ SELECT 1", PostgreSQL: "SELECT NOW()". If you do not set this, then BoneCP will issue a metadata request instead that should work on all databases but is probably slower. (Note: In MySQL, prefixing the statement by /* ping */ makes the driver issue 1 fast packet instead. See http://blogs.sun.com/SDNChannel/entry/mysql_tips_for_java_developers )
appboard.jdbc.idleConnectionTestPeriod Sets the idleConnectionTestPeriod. This sets the time (in minutes), for a connection to remain idle before sending a test query to the DB. This is useful to prevent a DB from timing out connections on its end. Do not use aggressive values here! Set to 0 to disable
appboard.jdbc.idleMaxAge Sets Idle max age (in min). The time (in minutes), for a connection to remain unused before it is closed off. Do not use aggressive values here! Set to 0 to disable.
appboard.jdbc.maxConnectionsPerPartition Sets the maximum number of connections that will be contained in every partition. Setting this to 10 with our default number of partitions (2) means you may have 20 unique connections to the database. Note that the connection pool will not create all these connections in one go but rather start off with minConnectionsPerPartition and gradually increase connections as required.

The parameters above are global to all data sources. It is possible, however, to scope the parameters to the following, as well:

  • A particular adapter (data source) instance. Although users should understand that connection pools may be shared amongst data sources, so great care must be given to associating specific parameters to a particular data source, with the understanding that other data sources that share the same URL/username/password will be using the same pool. One scenario where this could be useful is if a system is configured to leverage data out of two different database backends (i.e., MySQL and Oracle) and the user would like to configure connectionTestStatement to have a different value for one pool than another. By making this parameter apply to a particular adapter, different setting values could be used when creating the pool associated with one database than another.
  • A particular SQL driver namespace. Some parameters are inherintly specific to one driver or another (such as 'connectionTestStatement') and are best configured on a per-driver basis.

In order to configure an connection setting on a particular adapter or SQL driver, specify the setting as '<namespace>'.'<setting>' where '<namespace>' corresponds to the fully qualified name of your adapter or SQL driver followed by the configuration parameter name above (omitting "appboard.jdbc").


Troubleshooting

Missing JDBC driver

The most common issue when connecting to a database is a missing JDBC driver. Within the builder this may appear as an error message showing "Data was not found." when progressing from the "Connect" step in the Data Source Wizard.

In the appboard.log there may be a number of java exceptions including messages which specifically identify the driver that is missing, for example:

ERROR ... Please install missing JDBC Driver: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver ...


See the Loading Database Drivers page for more information.

Incorrect or Unexpected Date/Time Values and Formatting

Occasionally, date and time values from a database will not appear in AppBoard with the correct value or format when using the default settings in configuring the data source. One of the difficulties in handling date and time values from various types of databases is that not all database types handle date and time data in the same manner. It is possible, however, to adjust certain settings within AppBoard and the database itself to achieve better results. For more information on this topic, please see Advanced Settings for Date and Time Data.