Difference between revisions of "DBOInsert"
Line 47: | Line 47: | ||
| autogenerate-keys || optional || Tell the engine to handle auto generated keys at runtime (ex. autoincrement primary key fields). Default to false. | | autogenerate-keys || optional || Tell the engine to handle auto generated keys at runtime (ex. autoincrement primary key fields). Default to false. | ||
|} | |} | ||
+ | </div> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <div class="version_ge3.5"> | ||
+ | It's possible to use positional parameters ''?'' notation or named parameters '':name'' notation into statement definition, but not mixed in the same statement. | ||
</div> | </div> | ||
Revision as of 10:02, 3 January 2015
Description
The DBOInsert element represents the DBO optimized for insert operations.
GreenVulcano® ESB configuration
DBOInsert allows you to make insert data into the database.
Each statement is identified by the id.
Actions can be defined in two ways:
- Single execution of a statement
- Complex execution guided by XML
In the first modality any input is ignored and the code executes the first statement configured.
In the second mode, the input XML (or its transformation) must contain the command (row) valid with all parameters (COL) required by the statement.
It is used by DBOBuilder.
The following table shows the DBOInsert attributes:
Attribute | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
type | fixed | This attribute must assume the value dbo |
class | fixed | This attribute must assume the value it.greenvulcano.gvesb.datahandling.dbo.DBOInsert |
name | required | DBOInsert name |
transformation | optional | Transformation to be applied on the input data to obtain the internal XML commands. |
force-mode | optional | (caller or xml2db): Force mode of the DBO, can be used in DBOBuilder whit more heterogeneous DBO. Mode: caller - inherit the mode of the caller xml2db - data entry mode |
jdbc-connection-name | optional | DataSource JNDI name. Override connection defined in DBOBuilder. |
ignore-input | optional | (true or false): Tells the engine do not use the input data. |
input-data | optional | The default is the value of @name-Input. Can be set as the @output-data of a preceding DBO to use its output as input. |
output-data | optional | The default is the value of @name-Output. |
Attribute | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
autogenerate-keys | optional | Tell the engine to handle auto generated keys at runtime (ex. autoincrement primary key fields). Default to false. |
It's possible to use positional parameters ? notation or named parameters :name notation into statement definition, but not mixed in the same statement.
For example, the following configuration:
<DBOBuilder class="it.greenvulcano.gvesb.datahandling.dbobuilder.DBOBuilder"
jdbc-connection-name="ds.test" name="Insert" type="dbobuilder">
<DBOInsert class="it.greenvulcano.gvesb.datahandling.dbo.DBOInsert"
name="Insert" transformation="Insert" type="dbo">
<statement id="0" type="insert">insert into TEST_TABLE_A (C1, C2, C3, C4, C5, C6, C7)
values (?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?, ?)</statement>
</DBOInsert>
</DBOBuilder>
using the following input XML:
<ser:load xmlns:ser="http://www.gvtest.com/services">
<ser:c1>text field</ser:c1>
<ser:c2>another text field</ser:c2>
<ser:c3>123456</ser:c3>
<ser:c4>123456.789</ser:c4>
<ser:c5>1.2345</ser:c5>
<ser:c6>2014-10-17T10:12:23</ser:c6>
<ser:c7>2014-10-17T10:13:00.123</ser:c7>
</ser:load>
and the following XSL transformation:
<xsl:stylesheet xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" exclude-result-prefixes="xsl fs java gvt" version="2.0"
xmlns:fs="http://www.w3.org/2005/xpath-functions"
xmlns:java="http://xml.apache.org/xalan/java"
xmlns:gvt="http://www.gvtest.com/services"
xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
<xsl:output encoding="utf-8" indent="yes" method="xml"/>
<xsl:template match="/gvt:load">
<xsl:element name="RowSet">
<xsl:element name="data">
<xsl:element name="row">
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c1"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c2"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:attribute name="type">number</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c3"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:attribute name="type">float</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="decimal-separator">.</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="grouping-separator">,</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c4"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:attribute name="type">float</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="decimal-separator">.</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="grouping-separator">,</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c5"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:attribute name="type">timestamp</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="format">yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c6"/>
</xsl:element>
<xsl:element name="col">
<xsl:attribute name="type">timestamp</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:attribute name="format">yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSS</xsl:attribute>
<xsl:value-of select="gvt:c7"/>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:element>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
loads data into the following table:
CREATE TABLE "TEST_GV"."TEST_TABLE_A" (
"C1" VARCHAR2(50 CHAR),
"C2" VARCHAR2(20 CHAR),
"C3" NUMBER,
"C4" NUMBER(10,3),
"C5" NUMBER(5,4),
"C6" DATE,
"C7" TIMESTAMP (6)
)
Might contain the following sub-elements: