/* * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more * contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file distributed with * this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership. * The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0 * (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with * the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package java.sql; import java.io.Serializable; /** * This exception is thrown if a problem occurs during a batch update operation. *
* A {@code BatchUpdateException} provides additional information about the * problem that occurred, compared with a standard {@code SQLException}. It * supplies update counts for successful commands which were executed before the * exception was encountered. *
* The element order in the array of update counts matches the order that the * commands were added to the batch operation. *
* Once a batch update command fails and a {@code BatchUpdateException} is * thrown, the JDBC driver may continue processing the remaining commands in the * batch. If the driver does process more commands after the problem occurs, the * array returned by {@code BatchUpdateException.getUpdateCounts} has an element * for every command in the batch, not only those that executed successfully. In * this case, the array element for any command which encountered a problem is * set to {@code Statement.EXECUTE_FAILED}. */ public class BatchUpdateException extends SQLException implements Serializable { private static final long serialVersionUID = 5977529877145521757L; private int[] updateCounts = null; /** * Creates a default {@code BatchUpdateException} with the parameters * reason, SQLState, and update counts set to {@code * null} and the vendor code set to 0. */ public BatchUpdateException() { } /** * Creates an BatchUpdateException object. The reason is set to * null if cause == null otherwise to cause.toString(), and the cause * Throwable object is set to the given cause Throwable object. * * @param cause the Throwable object for the underlying reason this SQLException * * @since 1.6 */ public BatchUpdateException(Throwable cause) { this(null, cause); } /** * Creates an BatchUpdateException object. The Reason string is set to the * null if cause == null otherwise to cause.toString(), and the cause * Throwable object is set to the given cause Throwable object. SQLState is * initialized to null while vendorCode is zero. * * @param cause the Throwable object for the underlying reason this SQLException * * @since 1.6 */ public BatchUpdateException(int[] updateCounts, Throwable cause) { super(cause); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates an BatchUpdateException object. The cause Throwable object is set * to the given cause Throwable object. SQLState is initialized to null * while vendorCode is zero. * * @param cause the Throwable object for the underlying reason this SQLException * * @since 1.6 */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, int[] updateCounts, Throwable cause) { super(reason, cause); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates an BatchUpdateException object. The cause Throwable object is set * to the given cause Throwable object and the updateCounts array set to the * int array parameter. SQLState is initialized to null while vendorCode is * zero. * * @param cause the Throwable object for the underlying reason this SQLException * * @since 1.6 */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, String SQLState, int[] updateCounts, Throwable cause) { super(reason, SQLState, cause); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates an BatchUpdateException object. The cause Throwable object is set * to the given cause Throwable object and the updateCounts array set to the * int array parameter. VendorCode is set to the given vendorCode. SQLState * is initialized to null while vendorCode is zero. * * @param cause the Throwable object for the underlying reason this SQLException * * @since 1.6 */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, String SQLState, int vendorCode, int[] updateCounts, Throwable cause) { super(reason, SQLState, vendorCode, cause); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates a {@code BatchUpdateException} with the {@code updateCounts} set * to the supplied value. All other fields are set to their * default values. * * @param updateCounts * the array of {@code updateCounts} giving the number of * successful updates (or another status code) for each command * in the batch that was attempted. */ public BatchUpdateException(int[] updateCounts) { this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates a {@code BatchUpdateException} with the {@code updateCounts} and * {@code reason} set to the supplied values. All other fields are set to their * default values. * * @param reason * the message providing information about the source of this * exception. * @param updateCounts * the array of {@code updateCounts} giving the number of * successful updates (or another status code) for each command * in the batch that was attempted. */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, int[] updateCounts) { super(reason); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates a {@code BatchUpdateException} with the {@code reason}, {@code * SQLState} and {@code updateCounts} set to the supplied values. All other * fields are set to their default values. * * @param reason * the message providing information about the source of this * exception. * @param SQLState * the X/OPEN value to use for the {@code SQLState} * @param updateCounts * the array of {@code updateCounts} giving the number of * successful updates (or another status code) for each command * in the batch that was attempted. */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, String SQLState, int[] updateCounts) { super(reason, SQLState); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Creates a {@code BatchUpdateException} for the case where all relevant * information is provided. * * @param reason * the message providing information about the source of this * exception. * @param SQLState * the X/OPEN value to use for the {@code SQLState}. * @param vendorCode * the value to use for the vendor error code. * @param updateCounts * the array of {@code updateCounts} giving the number of * successful updates (or another status code) for each command * in the batch that was attempted. */ public BatchUpdateException(String reason, String SQLState, int vendorCode, int[] updateCounts) { super(reason, SQLState, vendorCode); this.updateCounts = updateCounts; } /** * Gets the update count array giving status information for every * command that was attempted in the batch. *
* If a batch update command fails and a {@code BatchUpdateException} is * thrown, the JDBC driver may continue processing the remaining commands in * the batch. If the driver does so, the array returned by {@code * BatchUpdateException.getUpdateCounts} has an element for every command in * the batch, not only those that executed successfully. In this case, the * array element for any command which encountered a problem is set to * {@code Statement.EXECUTE_FAILED}. * * @return an array that contains the successful update counts, before this * exception was thrown. Alternatively, if the driver continues to * process commands following an error, for each successive command * there is a corresponding element in the array giving one of the * following status values: *