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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.
For one-off executions of a raw query string.
create with SimpleStatement.newInstance() or SimpleStatement.builder().
values: ?
or :name
, fill with setPositionalValues()
or setNamedValues()
respectively.
Driver has to guess target CQL types, this can lead to ambiguities.
built-in implementation is immutable. Setters always return a new object, don’t ignore the result.
Use SimpleStatement for queries that will be executed only once (or just a few times):
SimpleStatement statement =
SimpleStatement.newInstance(
"SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = 'greeting_message'");
session.execute(statement);
Each time you execute a simple statement, Cassandra parses the query string again; nothing is cached (neither on the client nor on the server):
client driver Cassandra
--+----------------------------------+---------------------+------
| | |
| session.execute(SimpleStatement) | |
|--------------------------------->| |
| | QUERY(query_string) |
| |-------------------->|
| | |
| | |
| | | - parse query string
| | | - execute query
| | |
| | ROWS |
| |<--------------------|
| | |
|<---------------------------------| |
If you execute the same query often (or a similar query with different column values), consider a prepared statement instead.
The driver provides various ways to create simple statements instances. First, SimpleStatement
has
a few static factory methods:
SimpleStatement statement =
SimpleStatement.newInstance(
"SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = 'greeting_message'");
You can then use setter methods to configure additional options. Note that, like all statement implementations, simple statements are immutable, so these methods return a new instance each time. Make sure you don’t ignore the result:
// WRONG: ignores the result
statement.setIdempotent(true);
// Instead, reassign the statement every time:
statement = statement.setIdempotent(true);
If you have many options to set, you can use a builder to avoid creating intermediary instances:
SimpleStatement statement =
SimpleStatement.builder("SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = 'greeting_message'")
.setIdempotence(true)
.build();
Finally, Session
provides a shorthand method when you only have a simple query string:
session.execute("SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = 'greeting_message'");
Instead of hard-coding everything in the query string, you can use bind markers and provide values separately:
by position:
SimpleStatement.builder("SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = ?")
.addPositionalValues("greeting_message")
.build();
by name:
SimpleStatement.builder("SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = :n")
.addNamedValue("n", "greeting_message")
.build();
This syntax has a few advantages:
if the values come from some other part of your code, it looks cleaner than doing the concatenation yourself;
you don’t need to translate the values to their string representation. The driver will send them alongside the query, in their serialized binary form.
The number of values must match the number of placeholders in the query string, and their types must match the database schema. Note that the driver does not parse simple statements, so it cannot perform those checks on the client side; if you make a mistake, the query will be sent anyway, and the server will reply with an error, that gets translated into a driver exception:
session.execute(
SimpleStatement.builder("SELECT value FROM application_params WHERE name = :n")
.addPositionalValues("greeting_message", "extra_value")
.build());
// Exception in thread "main" com.datastax.oss.driver.api.core.servererrors.InvalidQueryException:
// Invalid amount of bind variables
Another consequence of not parsing query strings is that the driver has to guess how to serialize values, based on their Java type (see the default type mappings). This can be tricky, in particular for numeric types:
// schema: create table bigints(b bigint primary key)
session.execute(
SimpleStatement.builder("INSERT INTO bigints (b) VALUES (?)")
.addPositionalValues(1)
.build());
// Exception in thread "main" com.datastax.oss.driver.api.core.servererrors.InvalidQueryException:
// Expected 8 or 0 byte long (4)
The problem here is that the literal 1
has the Java type int
. So the driver serializes it as a
CQL int
(4 bytes), but the server expects a CQL bigint
(8 bytes). The fix is to specify the
correct Java type:
session.execute(
SimpleStatement.builder("INSERT INTO bigints (b) VALUES (?)")
.addPositionalValues(1L) // long literal
.build());
Similarly, strings are always serialized to varchar
, so you could have a problem if you target an
ascii
column:
// schema: create table ascii_quotes(id int primary key, t ascii)
session.execute(
SimpleStatement.builder("INSERT INTO ascii_quotes (id, t) VALUES (?, ?)")
.addPositionalValues(1, "Touché sir, touché...")
.build());
// Exception in thread "main" com.datastax.oss.driver.api.core.servererrors.InvalidQueryException:
// Invalid byte for ascii: -61
In that situation, there is no way to hint at the correct type. Fortunately, you can encode the value manually as a workaround:
TypeCodec<Object> codec = session.getContext().getCodecRegistry().codecFor(DataTypes.ASCII);
ByteBuffer bytes =
codec.encode("Touché sir, touché...", session.getContext().getProtocolVersion());
session.execute(
SimpleStatement.builder("INSERT INTO ascii_quotes (id, t) VALUES (?, ?)")
.addPositionalValues(1, bytes)
.build());
Or you could also use prepared statements, which don’t have this limitation since parameter types are known in advance.
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ScyllaDB Java Driver is available under the Apache v2 License. ScyllaDB Java Driver is a fork of DataStax Java Driver. See Copyright here.