/* * This sample shows how to use the Oracle performance extensions * for row-prefetching. This allows the driver to fetch multiple * rows in one round-trip, saving unecessary round-trips to the database. * * This example shows how to set the rowPrefetch for individual * statements. * */ // You need to import the java.sql package to use JDBC import java.sql.*; // You need to import oracle.jdbc.driver in order to use the // Oracle extensions import oracle.jdbc.driver.*; class RowPrefetch_statement { public static void main (String args []) throws SQLException { // Load the Oracle JDBC driver DriverManager.registerDriver(new oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver()); // Connect to the database // You can put a database name after the @ sign in the connection URL. Connection conn = DriverManager.getConnection ("jdbc:oracle:oci7:@", "scott", "tiger"); // get the value of the default row prefetch from the connection object int default_row_prefetch = ((OracleConnection)conn).getDefaultRowPrefetch (); System.out.println ("The Default RowPrefetch for the connection is: " + default_row_prefetch); Statement stmt = conn.createStatement (); // set the RowPrefetch value from the statement object // This sets the rowPrefetch only for this particular statement. // All other statements will use the default RowPrefetch from the // connection. ((OracleStatement)stmt).setRowPrefetch (30); // Check to verify statement rowPrefetch value is 30. int row_prefetch = ((OracleStatement)stmt).getRowPrefetch (); System.out.println ("The RowPrefetch for the statement is: " + row_prefetch + "\n"); ResultSet rset = stmt.executeQuery ("select ename from emp"); while(rset.next ()) { System.out.println (rset.getString (1)); } stmt.close (); } }