Tomcat makes it easy to set up a connection pool so that servlets and JSPs can efficiently share database connections. In web sites that have many simultaneous users, a connection pool improves efficiency by sharing existing database connections, rather than creating a new connection and tearing it down every time an application has to use the database.
Another benefit of configuring a connection pool is that you can change the database system that a servlet or JSP is using without touching the Java code, because the database resource is configured outside of the servlet or JSP.
Here are the steps for configuring a DataSource with Tomcat:
1. Create a Resource
and a ResourceParams element in server.xml, or in the XML file that you have placed in Tomcat's webapps directory. These elements describe the JNDI object you are creating in order to provide your servlets or JSPs with a DataSource.
2. Add a resource-ref
element to web.xml, which allows the components in the associated web application to access the configured DataSource.
Example below shows the Resource and a ResourceParams elements in server.xml. This example describes a DataSource that connects with an Oracle 8i database.
The resource element in server.xml
"Shareable" type="javax.sql.DataSource" auth=
"Container" description="Home Oracle 8i Personal Edition"/>
driverClassName
oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
url
jdbc:oracle:thin:@192.168.0.2:1521:ORCL
username
scott
password
tiger
Create a Resource and ResourceParams element for each database that your application uses. Example below shows the resource-ref element associated with the Resource specified by example above.
A resource-ref element specifies a DataSource in web.xml
jdbc/oracle-8i-athletes
javax.sql.DataSource
Container
The JNDI path to this DataSource, which you use in a JNDI lookup (see the next recipe), is jdbc/oracle-8i-athletes.
Another benefit of configuring a connection pool is that you can change the database system that a servlet or JSP is using without touching the Java code, because the database resource is configured outside of the servlet or JSP.
Here are the steps for configuring a DataSource with Tomcat:
1. Create a Resource
and a ResourceParams element in server.xml, or in the XML file that you have placed in Tomcat's webapps directory. These elements describe the JNDI object you are creating in order to provide your servlets or JSPs with a DataSource.
2. Add a resource-ref
element to web.xml, which allows the components in the associated web application to access the configured DataSource.
Example below shows the Resource and a ResourceParams elements in server.xml. This example describes a DataSource that connects with an Oracle 8i database.
The resource element in server.xml
"Container" description="Home Oracle 8i Personal Edition"/>
Create a Resource and ResourceParams element for each database that your application uses. Example below shows the resource-ref element associated with the Resource specified by example above.
A resource-ref element specifies a DataSource in web.xml
The JNDI path to this DataSource, which you use in a JNDI lookup (see the next recipe), is jdbc/oracle-8i-athletes.
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