tutorial.html 28.7 KB
Newer Older
1
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
2
<!--
3
Copyright 2004-2008 H2 Group. Licensed under the H2 License, Version 1.0 (http://h2database.com/html/license.html).
4 5
Initial Developer: H2 Group
-->
6 7
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
<head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" /><title>
8
Tutorial
9
</title><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css" />
10 11 12 13 14 15
<script type="text/javascript" src="navigation.js"></script>
</head><body onload="frameMe();">
<table class="content"><tr class="content"><td class="content"><div class="contentDiv">

<h1>Tutorial</h1>
<a href="#tutorial_starting_h2_console">
16
    Starting and Using the H2 Console</a><br />
17
<a href="#connecting_using_jdbc">
18
    Connecting to a Database using JDBC</a><br />
19
<a href="#creating_new_databases">
20
    Creating New Databases</a><br />
21
<a href="#using_server">
22
    Using the Server</a><br />
23
<a href="#using_hibernate">
24
    Using Hibernate</a><br />
25
<a href="#web_applications">
26
    Using Databases in Web Applications</a><br />
27
<a href="#csv">
28
    CSV (Comma Separated Values) Support</a><br />
29
<a href="#upgrade_backup_restore">
30
    Upgrade, Backup, and Restore</a><br />
31 32
<a href="#command_line_tools">
    Command Line Tools</a><br />
33
<a href="#open_office">
34
    Using OpenOffice Base</a><br />
35
<a href="#web_start">
36
    Java Web Start / JNLP</a><br />
37 38
<a href="#connection_pool">
    Using a Connection Pool</a><br />
39 40
<a href="#fulltext">
    Fulltext Search</a><br />
41
<a href="#user_defined_variables">
42
    User-Defined Variables</a><br />
43 44
<a href="#date_time">
    Date and Time</a><br />
45

46
<br /><a name="tutorial_starting_h2_console"></a>
47
<h2>Starting and Using the H2 Console</h2>
48
<p>
49 50
This application lets you access a SQL database using a browser interface.
This can be a H2 database, or another database that supports the JDBC API.
51
</p>
52
<img src="images/console.png" alt="Web Browser - H2 Console Server - H2 Database" />
53
<p>
54
This is a client / server application, so both a server and a client (a browser) are required to run it.
55
</p><p>
56
Depending on your platform and environment, there are multiple ways to start the application:
57
</p>
58
<table><tr><th>OS</th><th>Start</th></tr>
59 60 61
<tr>
  <td>Windows</td>
  <td>
62 63 64
    Click [Start], [All Programs], [H2], and [H2 Console (Command Line)]<br />
    When using the Sun JDK 1.4 or 1.5, a window with the title 'H2 Console ' should appear.
    When using the Sun JDK 1.6, an icon will be added to the system tray:
65
    <img src="images/db-16.png" alt="[H2 icon]" /><br />
66
    If you don't get the window and the system tray icon,
67
    then maybe Java is not installed correctly (in this case, try another way to start the application).
68
    A browser window should open and point to the Login page http://localhost:8082).
69 70 71 72 73
  </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Windows</td>
  <td>
74
    Open a file browser, navigate to h2/bin, and double click on h2.bat.<br />
75 76
    A console window appears. If there is a problem, you will see an error message
    in this window. A browser window will open and point to the Login page
77
    (URL: http://localhost:8082).
78 79 80 81 82
  </td>
</tr>
<tr>
  <td>Any</td>
  <td>
83
      Open a console window, navigate to the directory 'h2/bin' and type:
84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91
<pre>
java -cp h2.jar org.h2.tools.Server
</pre>
  </td>
</tr>
</table>

<h3>Firewall</h3>
92
<p>
93
If you start the server, you may get a security warning from the firewall (if you have installed one).
94
If you don't want other computers in the network to access the application on your machine, you can
95 96 97
let the firewall block those connections. The connection from the local machine will still work.
Only if you want other computers to access the database on this computer, you need allow remote connections
in the firewall.
98
</p><p>
99
A small firewall is already built into the server: other computers may not connect to the server by default.
100
To change this, go to 'Preferences' and select 'Allow connections from other computers'.
101
</p>
102 103

<h3>Native Version</h3>
104
<p>
105 106
The native version does not require Java, because it is compiled using GCJ.
However H2 does currently not run stable with GCJ on Windows
107
It is possible to compile the software to different platforms.
108
</p>
109 110

<h3>Testing Java</h3>
111
<p>
112
To check the Java version you have installed, open a command prompt and type:
113
</p>
114 115 116
<pre>
java -version
</pre>
117
<p>
118
If you get an error message, you may need to add the Java binary directory to the path environment variable.
119
</p>
120 121

<h3>Error Message 'Port is in use'</h3>
122
<p>
123
You can only start one instance of the H2 Console,
124 125 126 127
otherwise you will get the following error message:
<code>Port is in use, maybe another ... server already running on...</code>.
It is possible to start multiple console applications on the same computer (using different ports),
but this is usually not required as the console supports multiple concurrent connections.
128
</p>
129 130

<h3>Using another Port</h3>
131
<p>
132 133 134 135
If the port is in use by another application, you may want to start the H2 Console on a different port.
This can be done by changing the port in the file .h2.server.properties. This file is stored
in the user directory (for Windows, this is usually in "Documents and Settings/&lt;username&gt;").
The relevant entry is webPort.
136
</p>
137 138

<h3>Starting Successfully</h3>
139
<p>
140
If starting the server from a console window was successful,
141
a new window will open and display the following text:
142
</p>
143 144 145 146
<pre>
H2 Server running on port 9092
Webserver running on https://localhost:8082/
</pre>
147
<p>
148
Don't click inside this window; otherwise you might block the application (if you have the Fast-Edit mode enabled).
149
</p>
150 151

<h3>Connecting to the Server using a Browser</h3>
152
<p>
153 154 155 156
If the server started successfully, you can connect to it using a web browser.
The browser needs to support JavaScript, frames and cascading stylesheets (css).
If you started the server on the same computer as the browser, go to http://localhost:8082 in the browser.
If you want to connect to the application from another computer, you need to provide the IP address of the server, for example:
157 158
<a href="http://192.168.0.2:8082">http://192.168.0.2:8082</a>. 
If you enabled SSL on the server side, the URL needs to start with HTTPS.
159
</p>
160 161

<h3>Multiple Concurrent Sessions</h3>
162
<p>
163 164
Multiple concurrent browser sessions are supported. As that the database objects reside on the server,
the amount of concurrent work is limited by the memory available to the server application.
165
</p>
166 167

<h3>Application Properties</h3>
168
<p>
169 170 171
Starting the server will create a configuration file in you local home directory called <code>.h2.server.properties</code>.
For Windows installations, this file will be in the directory <code>C:\Documents and Settings\[username]</code>.
This file contains the settings of the application.
172
</p>
173 174

<h3>Login</h3>
175
<p>
176 177 178
At the login page, you need to provide connection information to connect to a database.
Set the JDBC driver class of your database, the JDBC URL, user name and password.
If you are done, click [Connect].
179
</p><p>
180
You can save and reuse previously saved settings. The settings are stored in the
181
Application Properties file.
182
</p>
183 184

<h3>Error Messages</h3>
185
<p>
186 187
Error messages in are shown in red. You can show/hide the stack trace of the exception
by clicking on the message.
188
</p>
189 190

<h3>Adding Database Drivers</h3>
191
<p>
192
Additional database drivers can be registered by adding the Jar file location of the driver to the environment
193 194
variables H2DRIVERS or CLASSPATH. Example (Windows): To add the database driver library
C:\Programs\hsqldb\lib\hsqldb.jar, set the environment variable H2DRIVERS to
195 196
C:\Programs\hsqldb\lib\hsqldb.jar.
</p><p>
197 198
Multiple drivers can be set; each entry needs to be separated with a ';' (Windows) or ':' (other operating systems).
Spaces in the path names are supported. The settings must not be quoted.
199
</p>
200 201

<h3>Using the Application</h3>
202
<p>
203 204 205
The application has three main panels, the toolbar on top, the tree on the left and the query / result panel on the right.
The database objects (for example, tables) are listed on the left panel.
Type in a SQL command on the query panel and click 'Run'. The result of the command appears just below the command.
206
</p>
207 208

<h3>Inserting Table Names or Column Names</h3>
209
<p>
210 211 212 213
The table name and column names can be inserted in the script by clicking them in the tree.
If you click on a table while the query is empty, a 'SELECT * FROM ...' is added as well.
While typing a query, the table that was used is automatically expanded in the tree.
For, example if you type 'SELECT * FROM TEST T WHERE T.' then the table TEST is automatically expanded in the tree.
214
</p>
215 216

<h3>Disconnecting and Stopping the Application</h3>
217
<p>
218
On the browser, click 'Disconnect' on the toolbar panel. You will be logged out of the database.
219 220
However, the server is still running and ready to accept new sessions.
</p><p>
221 222
To stop the server, right click on the system tray icon and select [Exit].
If you don't have the icon (because you started it in another way),
223 224
press [Ctrl]+[C] on the console where the server was started (Windows),
or close the console window.
225
</p>
226

227
<br /><a name="connecting_using_jdbc"></a>
228
<h2>Connecting to a Database using JDBC</h2>
229
<p>
230
To connect to a database, a Java application first needs to load the database driver,
231
and then get a connection. A simple way to do that is using the following code:
232
</p>
233 234 235
<pre>
import java.sql.*;
public class Test {
236
  public static void main(String[] a)
237 238 239
  throws Exception {
    Class.forName("org.h2.Driver");
    Connection conn = DriverManager.
240
      getConnection("jdbc:h2:~/test", "sa", "");
241 242 243 244
    // add application code here
  }
}
</pre>
245
<p>
246 247 248 249 250 251 252
This code first loads the driver (<code>Class.forName()</code>)
and then opens a connection (using <code>DriverManager.getConnection()</code>).
The driver name is <code>"org.h2.Driver"</code> in every case.
The database URL always needs to start with <code>jdbc:h2:</code>
to be recognized by this database. The second parameter in the <code>getConnection()</code> call
is the user name ('sa' for System Administrator in this example). The third parameter is the password.
Please note that in this database, user names are not case sensitive, but passwords are case sensitive.
253
</p>
254

255
<br /><a name="creating_new_databases"></a>
256
<h2>Creating New Databases</h2>
257
<p>
258
By default, if the database specified in the URL does not yet exist, a new (empty)
259 260
database is created automatically. The user that created the database automatically becomes
the administrator of this database.
261
</p>
262

263
<br /><a name="using_server"></a>
264
<h2>Using the Server</h2>
265
<p>
266 267
H2 currently supports three servers: a Web Server, a TCP Server and an ODBC Server.
The servers can be started in different ways.
268
</p>
269

270
<h3>Starting the Server from Command Line</h3>
271
<p>
272
To start the Server from the command line with the default settings, run
273
</p>
274 275 276
<pre>
java org.h2.tools.Server
</pre>
277
<p>
278
This will start the Server with the default options. To get the list of options and default values, run
279
</p>
280 281 282
<pre>
java org.h2.tools.Server -?
</pre>
283
<p>
284
There are options available to use different ports, and start or not start
285
parts of the Server and so on. For details, see the API documentation of the Server tool.
286
</p>
287

288
<h3>Connecting to the TCP Server</h3>
289
<p>
290
To remotely connect to a database using the TCP server, use the following driver and database URL:
291
</p>
292 293 294 295
<ul>
<li>JDBC driver class: org.h2.Driver
</li><li>Database URL: jdbc:h2:tcp://localhost/~/test
</li></ul>
296
<p>
297
For details about the database URL, see also in Features.
298
</p>
299 300

<h3>Starting the Server within an Application</h3>
301
<p>
302
It is also possible to start and stop a Server from within an application. Sample code:
303
</p>
304 305 306
<pre>
import org.h2.tools.Server;
...
307
// start the TCP Server
308
Server server = Server.createTcpServer(args).start();
309 310 311 312 313 314
...
// stop the TCP Server
server.stop();
</pre>

<h3>Stopping a TCP Server from Another Process</h3>
315
<p>
316
The TCP Server can be stopped from another process.
317
To stop the server from the command line, run:
318
</p>
319 320 321
<pre>
java org.h2.tools.Server -tcpShutdown tcp://localhost:9092
</pre>
322
<p>
323
To stop the server from a user application, use the following code:
324
</p>
325 326 327
<pre>
org.h2.tools.Server.shutdownTcpServer("tcp://localhost:9094");
</pre>
328
<p>
329
This function will call System.exit on the server.
330
This function should be called after all connections to the databases are closed
331 332
to avoid recovery when the databases are opened the next time.
To stop remote server, remote connections must be enabled on the server.
333
</p>
334

335
<h3>Limitations of the Server</h3>
336
<p>
337
There currently are a few limitations when using the server or cluster mode:
338
</p>
339 340 341 342 343 344
<ul>
<li>Statement.cancel() is only supported in embedded mode.
    A connection can only execute one operation at a time in server or cluster mode,
    and is blocked until this operation is finished.
</li></ul>

345
<br /><a name="using_hibernate"></a>
346
<h2>Using Hibernate</h2>
347
<p>
348
This database supports Hibernate version 3.1 and newer. You can use the HSQLDB Dialect,
349
or the native H2 Dialect that is available in the file src/tools/org/h2/tools/hibernate/H2Dialect.txt.
350
The H2 dialect is included in newer version of Hibernate. For versions where the dialect is missing, you need to copy the file
351
into the folder src\org\hibernate\dialect (Hibernate 3.1), rename it to H2Dialect.java and re-compile hibernate.
352
</p>
353

354
<br /><a name="web_applications"></a>
355
<h2>Using Databases in Web Applications</h2>
356
<p>
357 358
There are multiple ways to access a database from within web
applications. Here are some examples if you use Tomcat or JBoss.
359
</p>
360 361

<h3>Embedded Mode</h3>
362
<p>
363
The (currently) simplest solution is to use the database in the
364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373
embedded mode, that means open a connection in your application when
it starts (a good solution is using a Servlet Listener, see below), or
when a session starts. A database can be accessed from multiple
sessions and applications at the same time, as long as they run in the
same process. Most Servlet Containers (for example Tomcat) are just
using one process, so this is not a problem (unless you run Tomcat in
clustered mode). Tomcat uses multiple threads and multiple
classloaders. If multiple applications access the same database at the
same time, you need to put the database jar in the shared/lib or
server/lib directory. It is a good idea to open the database when the
374
web application starts, and close it when the web application stops.
375 376 377 378 379
If using multiple applications, only one (any) of them needs to do
that. In the application, an idea is to use one connection per
Session, or even one connection per request (action). Those
connections should be closed after use if possible (but it's not that
bad if they don't get closed).
380
</p>
381 382

<h3>Server Mode</h3>
383
<p>
384
The server mode is similar, but it allows you to run the server in another process.
385
</p>
386 387

<h3>Using a Servlet Listener to Start and Stop a Database</h3>
388
<p>
389 390
Add the h2.jar file your web application, and
add the following snippet to your web.xml file (after context-param and before filter):
391
</p>
392 393
<pre>
&lt;listener>
394
   &lt;listener-class>org.h2.server.web.DbStarter&lt;/listener-class>
395 396
&lt;/listener>
</pre>
397
<p>
398
For details on how to access the database, see the code DbStarter.java
399
</p>
400

401
<br /><a name="csv"></a>
402
<h2>CSV (Comma Separated Values) Support</h2>
403
<p>
404
The CSV file support can be used inside the database using the functions CSVREAD and CSVWRITE,
405
and the CSV library can be used outside the database as a standalone tool.
406
</p>
407 408

<h3>Writing a CSV File from Within a Database</h3>
409
<p>
410 411
The built-in function CSVWRITE can be used to create a CSV file from a query.
Example:
412
</p>
413 414 415 416 417 418 419
<pre>
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT, NAME VARCHAR);
INSERT INTO TEST VALUES(1, 'Hello'), (2, 'World');
CALL CSVWRITE('test.csv', 'SELECT * FROM TEST');
</pre>

<h3>Reading a CSV File from Within a Database</h3>
420
<p>
421
A CSV file can be read using the function CSVREAD. Example:
422
</p>
423 424 425 426 427
<pre>
SELECT * FROM CSVREAD('test.csv');
</pre>

<h3>Writing a CSV File from a Java Application</h3>
428
<p>
429 430
The CSV tool can be used in a Java application even when not using a database at all.
Example:
431
</p>
432
<pre>
433 434 435
import org.h2.tools.Csv;
import org.h2.tools.SimpleResultSet;
...
436 437 438 439
SimpleResultSet rs = new SimpleResultSet();
rs.addColumn("NAME", Types.VARCHAR, 255, 0);
rs.addColumn("EMAIL", Types.VARCHAR, 255, 0);
rs.addColumn("PHONE", Types.VARCHAR, 255, 0);
440 441 442
rs.addRow(new String[] { "Bob Meier", "bob.meier@abcde.abc", "+41123456789" });
rs.addRow(new String[] { "John Jones", "john.jones@abcde.abc", "+41976543210" });
Csv.getInstance().write("data/test.csv", rs, null);
443 444 445
</pre>

<h3>Reading a CSV File from a Java Application</h3>
446
<p>
447 448
It is possible to read a CSV file without opening a database.
Example:
449
</p>
450
<pre>
451 452 453
import org.h2.tools.Csv;
...
ResultSet rs = Csv.getInstance().read("data/test.csv", null, null);
454
ResultSetMetaData meta = rs.getMetaData();
455 456 457
while (rs.next()) {
    for (int i = 0; i &lt; meta.getColumnCount(); i++) {
        System.out.println(meta.getColumnLabel(i + 1) + ": " + rs.getString(i + 1));
458 459 460 461 462 463
    }
    System.out.println();
}
rs.close();
</pre>

464
<br /><a name="upgrade_backup_restore"></a>
465 466 467
<h2>Upgrade, Backup, and Restore</h2>

<h3>Database Upgrade</h3>
468
<p>
469 470 471
The recommended way to upgrade from one version of the database engine to the next
version is to create a backup of the database (in the form of a SQL script) using the old engine,
and then execute the SQL script using the new engine.
472
</p>
473

474
<h3>Backup using the Script Tool</h3>
475
<p>
476 477
There are different ways to backup a database. For example, it is possible to copy the database files.
However, this is not recommended while the database is in use. Also, the database files are not human readable
478
and quite large. The recommended way to backup a database is to create a compressed SQL script file.
479
This can be done using the Script tool:
480
</p>
481
<pre>
482
java org.h2.tools.Script -url jdbc:h2:~/test -user sa -script test.zip -options compression zip
483
</pre>
484
<p>
485
It is also possible to use the SQL command SCRIPT to create the backup of the database.
486 487 488
For more information about the options, see the SQL command SCRIPT.
The backup can be done remotely, however the file will be created on the server side.
The built in FTP server could be used to retrieve the file from the server.
489
</p>
490

491
<h3>Restore from a Script</h3>
492
<p>
493
To restore a database from a SQL script file, you can use the RunScript tool:
494
</p>
495
<pre>
496
java org.h2.tools.RunScript -url jdbc:h2:~/test -user sa -script test.zip -options compression zip
497
</pre>
498
<p>
499 500 501 502 503 504 505
For more information about the options, see the SQL command RUNSCRIPT.
The restore can be done remotely, however the file needs to be on the server side.
The built in FTP server could be used to copy the file to the server.
It is also possible to use the SQL command RUNSCRIPT to execute a SQL script.
SQL script files may contain references to other script files, in the form of
RUNSCRIPT commands. However, when using the server mode, the references script files
need to be available on the server side.
506
</p>
507

508
<h3>Online Backup</h3>
509
<p>
510 511
The BACKUP SQL statement and the Backup tool both create a zip file
with all database files. However, the contents of this file are not human readable.
512 513 514
Other than the SCRIPT statement, the BACKUP statement does not lock the
database objects, and therefore does not block other users. The resulting
backup is transactionally consistent:
515
</p>
516 517 518
<pre>
BACKUP TO 'backup.zip'
</pre>
519
<p>
520 521
The Backup tool (org.h2.tools.Backup) can not be used to create a online backup;
the database must not be in use while running this program.
522
</p>
523

524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531 532 533 534 535 536
<br /><a name="command_line_tools"></a>
<h2>Command Line Tools</h2>
<p>
This database comes with a number of command line tools. To get more information about a tool,
start it with the parameter '-?', for example:
</p>
<pre>
java -cp h2.jar org.h2.tools.Backup -?
</pre>
<p>
The command line tools are:
</p>
<ul><li><b>Backup</b> creates a backup of a database.
537
</li><li><b>ChangePassword</b> allows changing the file password of a database.
538 539 540 541
</li><li><b>Console</b> starts the browser based H2 Console.
</li><li><b>ConvertTraceFile</b> converts a .trace.db file to a Java application and SQL script.
</li><li><b>CreateCluster</b> creates a cluster from a standalone database.
</li><li><b>DeleteDbFiles</b> deletes all files belonging to a database.
542
</li><li><b>Script</b> allows converting a database to a SQL script for backup or migration.
543 544 545 546 547 548 549 550 551 552 553
</li><li><b>Recover</b> helps recovering a corrupted database.
</li><li><b>Restore</b> restores a backup of a database.
</li><li><b>RunScript</b> runs a SQL script against a database.
</li><li><b>Server</b> is used in the server mode to start a H2 server.
</li><li><b>Shell</b> is a command line database tool. 
</li></ul>
<p>
The tools can also be called from an application by calling the main or another public methods. 
For details, see the Javadoc documentation.
</p>

554
<br /><a name="open_office"></a>
555
<h2>Using OpenOffice Base</h2>
556
<p>
557
OpenOffice.org Base supports database access over the JDBC API. To connect to a H2 database
558 559
using OpenOffice Base, you first need to add the JDBC driver to OpenOffice.
The steps to connect to a H2 database are:
560
</p>
561 562 563 564 565
<ul><li>Start OpenOffice Writer, go to [Tools], [Options]
</li><li>Make sure you have selected a Java runtime environment in OpenOffice.org / Java
</li><li>Click [Class Path...], [Add Archive...]
</li><li>Select your h2.jar (location is up to you, could be wherever you choose)
</li><li>Click [OK] (as much as needed), stop OpenOffice (including the Quickstarter)
566
</li><li>Start OpenOffice Base
567
</li><li>Connect to an existing database; select JDBC; [Next]
568
</li><li>Example datasource URL: jdbc:h2:~/test
569 570
</li><li>JDBC driver class: org.h2.Driver
</li></ul>
571
<p>
572
Now you can access the database stored in the current users home directory.
573
</p>
574 575 576 577 578 579 580 581 582 583 584 585 586 587 588 589 590 591 592 593 594 595 596 597 598 599
<p>
To use H2 in NeoOffice (OpenOffice without X11):
</p>
<ul><li>In NeoOffice, go to [NeoOffice], [Preferences]
</li><li>Look for the page under [NeoOffice], [Java]
</li><li>Click [Classpath], [Add Archive...]
</li><li>Select your h2.jar (location is up to you, could be wherever you choose)
</li><li>Click [OK] (as much as needed), restart NeoOffice.
</li></ul>
<p>
Now, when creating a new database using the "Database Wizard":
</p>
<ul><li>Select "connect to existing database" and the type "jdbc". Click next.
</li><li>Enter your h2 database URL. The normal behavior of H2 is that a new db is created if it doesn't exist.
</li><li>Next step - up to you... you can just click finish and start working.
</li></ul>
<p>
Another solution to use H2 in NeoOffice is:
</p>
<ul><li>Package the h2 jar within an extension package
</li><li>Install it as a Java extension in NeoOffice
</li></ul>
<p>
This can be done by create it using the NetBeans OpenOffice plugin.
See also <a href="http://wiki.services.openoffice.org/wiki/Extensions_development_java">Extensions Development</a>.
</p>
600 601 602

<br /><a name="web_start"></a>
<h2>Java Web Start / JNLP</h2>
603
<p>
604 605
When using Java Web Start / JNLP (Java Network Launch Protocol), permissions tags must be set in the .jnlp file,
and the application .jar file must be signed. Otherwise, when trying to write to the file system, the following
606 607
exception will occur: java.security.AccessControlException: access denied (java.io.FilePermission ... read).
Example permission tags:
608
</p>
609 610
<pre>
&lt;security>
611
    &lt;all-permissions/>
612 613 614
&lt;/security>
</pre>

615 616 617 618 619
<br /><a name="connection_pool"></a>
<h2>Using a Connection Pool</h2>
<p>
For many databases, opening a connection is slow, and it is a good idea to use a connection pool
to re-use connections. For H2 however opening a connection usually is fast if the database is already
620
open. Using a connection pool for H2 actually slows down the process a bit, except if
621
file encryption is used (in this case opening a connection is about half as fast as using
622
a connection pool). A simple connection pool is included in H2. It is based on the
623 624 625
<a href="http://www.source-code.biz/snippets/java/8.htm">Mini Connection Pool Manager</a>
from Christian d'Heureuse. There are other, more complex connection pools available, for example 
<a href="http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/dbcp/">DBCP</a>. The build-in
626
connection pool is used as follows:
627
</p>
628 629
<pre>
// init
630 631
import org.h2.jdbcx.*;
...
632 633 634 635
JdbcDataSource ds = new JdbcDataSource();
ds.setURL("jdbc:h2:~/test");
ds.setUser("sa");
ds.setPassword("sa");
636
JdbcConnectionPool cp = JdbcConnectionPool.create(ds);
637 638

// use
639
Connection conn = cp.getConnection();
640 641 642 643
...
conn.close();

// dispose
644
cp.dispose();
645
</pre>
646

647 648 649
<br /><a name="fulltext"></a>
<h2>Fulltext Search</h2>
<p>
650
H2 supports Lucene full text search and native full text search implementation.
651 652 653 654 655
</p>

<h3>Using the Native Full Text Search</h3>
<p>
To initialize, call:
656
</p>
657 658 659 660 661
<pre>
CREATE ALIAS IF NOT EXISTS FT_INIT FOR "org.h2.fulltext.FullText.init";
CALL FT_INIT();
</pre>
<p>
662
You need to initialize it in each database where you want to use it.
663 664 665 666 667 668 669 670
Afterwards, you can create a full text index for a table using:
</p>
<pre>
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT PRIMARY KEY, NAME VARCHAR);
INSERT INTO TEST VALUES(1, 'Hello World');
CALL FT_CREATE_INDEX('PUBLIC', 'TEST', NULL);
</pre>
<p>
671 672
PUBLIC is the schema, TEST is the table name. The list of column names (column separated) is optional,
in this case all columns are indexed. The index is updated in read time.
673 674 675 676 677 678 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686
To search the index, use the following query:
</p>
<pre>
SELECT * FROM FT_SEARCH('Hello', 0, 0);
</pre>
<p>
You can also call the index from within a Java application:
</p>
<pre>
org.h2.fulltext.FullText.search(conn, text, limit, offset)
</pre>

<h3>Using the Lucene Fulltext Search</h3>
<p>
687
To use the Lucene full text search, you need the Lucene library in the classpath.
688
How his is done depends on the application; if you use the H2 Console, you can add the Lucene
689
jar file to the environment variables H2DRIVERS or CLASSPATH.
690
To initialize the Lucene full text search in a database, call:
691 692 693 694 695 696
</p>
<pre>
CREATE ALIAS IF NOT EXISTS FTL_INIT FOR "org.h2.fulltext.FullTextLucene.init";
CALL FTL_INIT();
</pre>
<p>
697
You need to initialize it in each database where you want to use it.
698 699 700 701 702 703 704 705
Afterwards, you can create a full text index for a table using:
</p>
<pre>
CREATE TABLE TEST(ID INT PRIMARY KEY, NAME VARCHAR);
INSERT INTO TEST VALUES(1, 'Hello World');
CALL FTL_CREATE_INDEX('PUBLIC', 'TEST', NULL);
</pre>
<p>
706
PUBLIC is the schema, TEST is the table name. The list of column names (column separated) is optional,
707 708 709 710 711 712 713 714 715 716 717 718
in this case all columns are indexed. The index is updated in read time. To search the index, use the following query:
</p>
<pre>
SELECT * FROM FTL_SEARCH('Hello', 0, 0);
</pre>
<p>
You can also call the index from within a Java application:
</p>
<pre>
org.h2.fulltext.FullTextLucene.search(conn, text, limit, offset)
</pre>

719
<br /><a name="user_defined_variables"></a>
720
<h2>User-Defined Variables</h2>
721
<p>
722
This database supports user-defined variables. Variables start with @ and can be used wherever
723 724 725 726 727 728 729 730 731 732 733 734 735 736
expressions or parameters are used. Variables not persisted and session scoped, that means only visible for
the session where they are defined. A value is usually assigned using the SET command:
</p>
<pre>
SET @USER = 'Joe';
</pre>
<p>
It is also possible to change a value using the SET() method. This is useful in queries:
</p>
<pre>
SET @TOTAL = NULL;
SELECT X, SET(@TOTAL, IFNULL(@TOTAL, 1.) * X) F FROM SYSTEM_RANGE(1, 50);
</pre>
<p>
737
Variables that are not set evaluate to NULL. The data type of a user-defined variable is the data type
738
of the value assigned to it, that means it is not necessary (or possible) to declare variable names before using them.
739
There are no restrictions on the assigned values; large objects (LOBs) are supported as well.
740 741
</p>

742 743 744
<br /><a name="date_time"></a>
<h2>Date and Time</h2>
<p>
745
Date, time and timestamp values support ISO 8601 formatting, including time zone:
746
</p>
747 748 749
<pre>
CALL TIMESTAMP '2008-01-01 12:00:00+01:00';
</pre>
750
<p>
751
If the time zone is not set, the value is parsed using the current time zone setting of the system. 
752
Date and time information is stored in H2 database files in GMT (Greenwich Mean Time). 
753 754
If the database is opened using another system time zone, the date and time will change accordingly. 
If you want to move a database from one time zone to the other and don't want this to happen, 
755
you need to create a SQL script file using the SCRIPT command or Script tool, and then load 
756
the database using the RUNSCRIPT command or the RunScript tool in the new time zone.
757 758
</p>

759
</div></td></tr></table><!-- analytics --></body></html>