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Using the driver : Connection Pool Manager : Implementing DataDirect connection pooling : Creating a driver DataSource object
  

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Creating a driver DataSource object
The following Java code example creates a Progress DataDirect DataSource object and registers it with a JNDI naming service. The DataSource class is database-dependent. This example is drawn from an Oracle use case; therefore, the DataSource class is OracleDataSource. Nevertheless, the example informs the implementation of DataSource objects for most Progress DataDirect drivers.
Note: The DataSource class implements the ConnectionPoolDataSource interface for pooling in addition to the DataSource interface for non-pooling.
//************************************************************************
// This code creates a Progress DataDirect for JDBC data source and
// registers it to a JNDI naming service. This JDBC data source uses the
// DataSource implementation provided by DataDirect Connect Series
// for JDBC Drivers.
//
// This data source registers its name as <jdbc/ConnectSparkyOracle>.
//// NOTE: To connect using a data source, the driver needs to access a JNDI data
// store to persist the data source information. To download the JNDI File
// System Service Provider, go to:
//
// http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javasebusiness/downloads/
// java-archive-downloads-java-plat-419418.html#7110-jndi-1.2.1-oth-JPR
////
// Make sure that the fscontext.jar and providerutil.jar files from the
// download are on your classpath.
//************************************************************************
// From DataDirect Connect Series for JDBC:
import com.ddtek.jdbcx.oracle.OracleDataSource;
import javax.sql.*;
import java.sql.*;
import javax.naming.*;
import javax.naming.directory.*;
import java.util.Hashtable;
public class OracleDataSourceRegisterJNDI
{   public static void main(String argv[])
   {
      try {
      // Set up data source reference data for naming context:
      // ----------------------------------------------------
      // Create a class instance that implements the interface
      // ConnectionPoolDataSource
      OracleDataSource ds = new OracleDataSource();
      ds.setDescription("Oracle on Sparky - Oracle Data Source");
      ds.setServerName("sparky");
      ds.setPortNumber(1521);
      ds.setUser("scott");
      ds.setPassword("test");
      // Set up environment for creating initial context
      Hashtable env = new Hashtable();
      env.put(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY,
         "com.sun.jndi.fscontext.RefFSContextFactory");
      env.put(Context.PROVIDER_URL, "file:c:\\JDBCDataSource");
      Context ctx = new InitialContext(env);
      // Register the data source to JNDI naming service
      ctx.bind("jdbc/ConnectSparkyOracle", ds);
      } catch (Exception e) {
      System.out.println(e);
      return;
      }
   } // Main
   // class OracleDataSourceRegisterJNDI