The source installation method is important where you want to customize or modifies the installation process or for those platforms where a binary installation package is not available. The binary method is easy which is a bundle of necessary libraries and other files pre-built, with an installer program.
Mysql connectorj install#
You can install the Connector/J package drivers using either the binary, binary installation or source installation.
Mysql connectorj download#
You can download the latest version of MySQL Connector/J binary or source distribution from the following web site -įor Platform Independent select any one from the following :
![mysql connectorj mysql connectorj](https://img.javatt.com/cc/ccee39bbf8e909c1b76f648fc5e3f101.png)
Mysql connectorj driver#
Procedures 7.4 Retrieving AUTO_INCREMENT Column Values through JDBC 8 Connection Pooling with Connector/J 9 Multi-Host Connections 9.1 Configuring Server Failover for Connections Using JDBC 9.2 Configuring Server Failover for Connections Using X DevAPI 9.3 Configuring Load Balancing with Connector/J 9.4 Configuring Source/Replica Replication with Connector/J 9.5 Advanced Load-balancing and Failover Configuration 10 Using the X DevAPI with Connector/J: Special Topics 10.1 Connection Compression Using X DevAPI 10.2 Schema Validation 11 Using the Connector/J Interceptor Classes 12 Using Logging Frameworks with SLF4J 13 Using Connector/J with Tomcat 14 Using Connector/J with Spring 14.1 Using JdbcTemplate 14.2 Transactional JDBC Access 14.3 Connection Pooling with Spring 15 Troubleshooting Connector/J Applications 16 Known Issues and Limitations 17 Connector/J Support 17.1 Connector/J Community Support 17.MySQL Connector/J is the official JDBC driver for MySQL. Interface 7.2 Using JDBC Statement Objects to Execute SQL 7.3 Using JDBC CallableStatements to Execute Stored
![mysql connectorj mysql connectorj](https://img.javatt.com/f7/f72ef85f2490f9dc075f61bf32a20697.png)
Table of Contents Preface and Legal Notices 1 Overview of MySQL Connector/J 2 Compatibility with MySQL and Java Versions 3 What's New in Connector/J 8.0? 4 Connector/J Installation 4.1 Installing Connector/J from a Binary Distribution 4.2 Installing Connector/J Using Maven 4.3 Installing from Source 4.4 Upgrading from an Older Version 4.4.1 Upgrading to MySQL Connector/J 8.0 4.5 Testing Connector/J 5 Connector/J Examples 6 Connector/J Reference 6.1 Driver/Datasource Class Name 6.2 Connection URL Syntax 6.3 Configuration Properties 6.3.1 Authentication 6.3.2 Connection 6.3.3 Session 6.3.4 Networking 6.3.5 Security 6.3.6 Statements 6.3.7 Prepared Statements 6.3.8 Result Sets 6.3.9 Metadata 6.3.10 BLOB/CLOB processing 6.3.11 Datetime types processing 6.3.12 High Availability and Clustering 6.3.13 Performance Extensions 6.3.14 Debugging/Profiling 6.3.15 Exceptions/Warnings 6.3.16 Tunes for integration with other products 6.3.17 JDBC compliance 6.3.18 X Protocol and X DevAPI 6.4 JDBC API Implementation Notes 6.5 Java, JDBC, and MySQL Types 6.6 Handling of Date-Time Values 6.6.1 Preserving Time Instants 6.6.2 Fractional Seconds 6.6.3 Handling of YEAR Values 6.7 Using Character Sets and Unicode 6.8 Using Query Attributes 6.9 Connecting Securely Using SSL 6.10 Connecting Using Unix Domain Sockets 6.11 Connecting Using Named Pipes 6.12 Connecting Using Various Authentication Methods 6.12.1 Connecting Using PAM Authentication 6.12.2 Connecting Using Kerberos 6.12.3 Connecting Using Multifactor Authentication 6.12.4 Connecting Using Fast Identity Online (FIDO) Authentication 6.13 Using Source/Replica Replication with ReplicationConnection 6.14 Support for DNS SRV Records 6.15 Client Session State Tracker 6.16 Mapping MySQL Error Numbers to JDBC SQLState Codes 7 JDBC Concepts 7.1 Connecting to MySQL Using the JDBC DriverManager