How do you connect to a MySQL database in Java?
When I try, I get
java.sql.SQLException: No suitable driver found for jdbc:mysql://database/table
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(DriverManager.java:689)
at java.sql.DriverManager.getConnection(DriverManager.java:247)
Or
java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
Or
java.lang.ClassNotFoundException: com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver
Here's a step by step explanation how to install MySQL and JDBC and how to use it:
Download and install the MySQL server. Just do it the usual way. Remember the port number whenever you've changed it. It's by default 3306
.
Download the JDBC driver and put in classpath, extract the ZIP file and put the containing JAR file in the classpath. The vendor-specific JDBC driver is a concrete implementation of the JDBC API (tutorial here).
If you're using an IDE like Eclipse or Netbeans, then you can add it to the classpath by adding the JAR file as Library to the Build Path in project's properties.
If you're doing it "plain vanilla" in the command console, then you need to specify the path to the JAR file in the -cp
or -classpath
argument when executing your Java application.
java -cp .;/path/to/mysql-connector.jar com.example.YourClass
The .
is just there to add the current directory to the classpath as well so that it can locate com.example.YourClass
and the ;
is the classpath separator as it is in Windows. In Unix and clones :
should be used.
Create a database in MySQL. Let's create a database javabase
. You of course want World Domination, so let's use UTF-8 as well.
CREATE DATABASE javabase DEFAULT CHARACTER SET utf8 COLLATE utf8_unicode_ci;
Create an user for Java and grant it access. Simply because using root
is a bad practice.
CREATE USER 'java'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
GRANT ALL ON javabase.* TO 'java'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'password';
Yes, java
is the username and password
is the password here.
Determine the JDBC URL. To connect the MySQL database using Java you need an JDBC URL in the following syntax:
jdbc:mysql://hostname:port/databasename
hostname
: The hostname where MySQL server is installed. If it's installed at the same machine where you run the Java code, then you can just use localhost
. It can also be an IP address like 127.0.0.1
. If you encounter connectivity problems and using 127.0.0.1
instead of localhost
solved it, then you've a problem in your network/DNS/hosts config.
port
: The TCP/IP port where MySQL server listens on. This is by default 3306
.
databasename
: The name of the database you'd like to connect to. That's javabase
.
So the final URL should look like:
jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/javabase
Test the connection to MySQL using Java. Create a simple Java class with a main()
method to test the connection.
String url = "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/javabase";
String username = "java";
String password = "password";
System.out.println("Connecting database...");
try (Connection connection = DriverManager.getConnection(url, username, password)) {
System.out.println("Database connected!");
} catch (SQLException e) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Cannot connect the database!", e);
}
If you get a SQLException: No suitable driver
, then it means that either the JDBC driver wasn't autoloaded at all or that the JDBC URL is wrong (i.e. it wasn't recognized by any of the loaded drivers). Normally, a JDBC 4.0 driver should be autoloaded when you just drop it in runtime classpath. To exclude one and other, you can always manually load it as below:
System.out.println("Loading driver...");
try {
Class.forName("com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
System.out.println("Driver loaded!");
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Cannot find the driver in the classpath!", e);
}
Note that the newInstance()
call is not needed here. It's just to fix the old and buggy org.gjt.mm.mysql.Driver
. Explanation here. If this line throws ClassNotFoundException
, then the JAR file containing the JDBC driver class is simply not been placed in the classpath.
Note that you don't need to load the driver everytime before connecting. Just only once during application startup is enough.
If you get a SQLException: Connection refused
or Connection timed out
or a MySQL specific CommunicationsException:
Communications link failure
, then it means that the DB isn't reachable at all. This can have one or more of the following causes:
To solve the one or the other, follow the following advices:
ping
.my.cnf
of MySQL DB.--skip-networking option
.finally
.Note that closing the Connection
is extremely important. If you don't close connections and keep getting a lot of them in a short time, then the database may run out of connections and your application may break. Always acquire the Connection
in a try-with-resources
statement. Or if you're not on Java 7 yet, explicitly close it in finally
of a try-finally
block. Closing in finally
is just to ensure that it get closed as well in case of an exception. This also applies to Statement
, PreparedStatement
and ResultSet
.
That was it as far the connectivity concerns. You can find here a more advanced tutorial how to load and store fullworthy Java model objects in a database with help of a basic DAO class.
Using a Singleton Pattern for the DB connection is a bad approach. See among other questions: http://stackoverflow.com/q/9428573/. This is a #1 starters mistake.