activerecord-jdbc-adapter is a database adapter for Rails' ActiveRecord component that can be used with JRuby[http://www.jruby.org/]. It allows use of virtually any JDBC-compliant database with your JRuby on Rails application. == Project Info * Mailing Lists: http://kenai.com/projects/activerecord-jdbc/lists * Issues: http://kenai.com/jira/browse/ACTIVERECORD_JDBC * Source: git://kenai.com/activerecord-jdbc~main git://github.com/nicksieger/activerecord-jdbc-adapter.git == Databases What's there, and what is not there: * MySQL - Complete support * PostgreSQL - Complete support * Oracle - Complete support * Microsoft SQL Server - Complete support except for change_column_default * DB2 - Complete, except for the migrations: * change_column * change_column_default * remove_column * rename_column * add_index * remove_index * rename_table * FireBird - Complete, except for change_column_default and rename_column * Derby - Complete, except for: * change_column * change_column_default * remove_column * rename_column * HSQLDB - Complete * H2 - Complete * SQLite3 - work in progress * Informix - Fairly complete support, all tests pass and migrations appear to work. Comments welcome. Other databases will require testing and likely a custom configuration module. Please join the activerecord-jdbc mailing-lists[http://kenai.com/projects/activerecord-jdbc/lists] to help us discover support for more databases. == Using ActiveRecord JDBC === Inside Rails To use activerecord-jdbc-adapter with JRuby on Rails: 1. Choose the adapter you wish to gem install. The following pre-packaged adapters are available: * base jdbc (activerecord-jdbc-adapter). Supports all available databases via JDBC, but requires you to download and manually install the database vendor's JDBC driver .jar file. * mysql (activerecord-jdbcmysql-adapter) * postgresql (activerecord-jdbcpostgresql-adapter) * derby (activerecord-jdbcderby-adapter) * hsqldb (activerecord-jdbchsqldb-adapter) * h2 (activerecord-jdbch2-adapter) * sqlite3 (activerecord-jdbcsqlite3-adapter) 2. Run the "jdbc" generator to prepare your Rails application for JDBC. jruby script/generate jdbc The initializer and rake task files generated are guarded such that they won't be loaded if you still run your application un C Ruby. Legacy: If you're using Rails prior to version 2.0, you'll need to add one-time setup to your config/environment.rb file in your Rails application. Add the following lines just before the Rails::Initializer. (If you're using activerecord-jdbc-adapter under the old gem name used in versions 0.5 and earlier (ActiveRecord-JDBC), replace 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter' with 'ActiveRecord-JDBC' below.) if RUBY_PLATFORM =~ /java/ require 'rubygems' gem 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter' require 'jdbc_adapter' end 3. Configure your database.yml in the normal Rails style. Legacy configuration: If you use one of the convenience 'activerecord-jdbcXXX-adapter' adapters, you can still put a 'jdbc' prefix in front of the databas adapter name as below. development: adapter: jdbcmysql username: blog password: hostname: localhost database: weblog_development For other databases, you'll need to know the database driver class and URL. Example: development: adapter: jdbc username: blog password: driver: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver url: jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/weblog_development === Standalone, with ActiveRecord 1. Install the gem with JRuby: jruby -S gem install activerecord-jdbc-adapter If you wish to use the adapter for a specific database, you can install it directly and a driver gem will be installed as well: jruby -S gem install activerecord-jdbcderby-adapter 2. If using ActiveRecord 2.0 (Rails 2.0) or greater, you can skip to the next step. Otherwise, ensure the following code gets executed in your script: require 'rubygems' gem 'activerecord-jdbc-adapter' require 'jdbc_adapter' require 'active_record' 3. After this you can establish a JDBC connection like this: ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection( :adapter => 'jdbcderby', :database => "db/my-database" ) or like this (but requires that you manually put the driver jar on the classpath): ActiveRecord::Base.establish_connection( :adapter => 'jdbc', :driver => 'org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedDriver', :url => 'jdbc:derby:test_ar;create=true' ) == Getting the source The source for activerecord-jdbc-adapter is available using git. git clone git://github.com/nicksieger/activerecord-jdbc-adapter.git == Feedback Please file bug reports at http://kenai.com/jira/browse/ACTIVERECORD_JDBC. If you're not sure if something's a bug, feel free to pre-report it on the mailing lists. == Running AR-JDBC's Tests Drivers for 6 open-source databases are included. Provided you have MySQL installed, you can simply type jruby -S rake to run the tests. A database named weblog_development is needed beforehand with a connection user of "blog" and an empty password. If you also have PostgreSQL available, those tests will be run if the `psql' executable can be found. Also ensure you have a database named weblog_development and a user named "blog" and an empty password. If you want rails logging enabled during these test runs you can edit test/jdbc_common.rb and add the following line: require 'db/logger' == Running AR Tests To run the current AR-JDBC sources with ActiveRecord, just use the included "rails:test" task. Be sure to specify a driver and a path to the ActiveRecord sources. jruby -S rake rails:test DRIVER=mysql RAILS=/path/activerecord_source_dir == Authors This project was written by Nick Sieger and Ola Bini with lots of help from the JRuby community. == License activerecord-jdbc-adapter is released under a BSD license. See the LICENSE file included with the distribution for details. Open-source driver gems for activerecord-jdbc-adapter are licensed under the same license the database's drivers are licensed. See each driver gem's LICENSE.txt file for details.