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Using the driver : Tracking JDBC calls with DataDirect Spy : Enabling DataDirect Spy : Using JDBC Data Sources
  

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Using JDBC Data Sources
You can use DataDirect Spy to track JDBC calls made by a running application with either of these features:
*JNDI for Naming Databases
*Connection Pooling
The com.ddtek.jdbcx.autorest.AutoRESTDataSource class supports setting a semi-colon separated list of DataDirect Spy attributes.

Windows Example

AutoRESTDataSource sds = new AutoRESTDataSource();
sds.setDescription("My Autonomouse REST Connector Data Source");
sds.setConfig("C:/path/to/myrest.rest");
sds.setSpyAttributes("log=(file)C:\\temp\\spy.log;logIS=yes;logTName=yes");
Connection conn=sds.getConnection;
...
Note: If coding a path on Windows to the log file in a Java string, the backslash character (\) must be preceded by the Java escape character, a backslash. For example: log=(file)C:\\temp\\spy.log;logIS=yes;logTName=yes.
DataDirect Spy loads the driver and logs all JDBC activity to the spy.log file located in the C:\temp directory (log=(file)C:\\temp\\spy.log). In addition to regular JDBC activity, the spy.log file also logs activity on InputStream and Reader objects (logIS=yes). It also includes the name of the current thread (logTName=yes).

UNIX Example

AutoRESTDataSource mds = new AutoRESTDataSource();
mds.setDescription("My Autonomous REST Connector Datasource");
mds.setConfig("~/path/to/myrest.rest");
mds.setSpyAttributes("log=(file)/tmp/spy.log;logIS=yes;logTName=yes");
Connection conn=mds.getConnection;
...
DataDirect Spy loads the driver and logs all JDBC activity to the spy.log file located in the /tmp directory (log=(file)/tmp/spy.log). In addition to regular JDBC activity, the spy.log file also logs activity on InputStream and Reader objects (logIS=yes). It also includes the name of the current thread (logTName=yes).