rnentjes authored on 21 Oct 2015
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readme.md

A simple wrapper around jdbc drivers that will show some statistics about the running queries on a simple web page on port 18080.

See a running example here:

  http://phoibe.astraeus.nl:18080/ /* demo might be down */

Screenshot:

Screenshot

Download:

jdbc-stats-1.2-nodeb.jar

How to use:

Add the jar to your classpath:

  • jdbc-stats-1.2-nodeb.jar

Set your jdbc driver property to the following class:

  nl.astraeus.jdbc.Driver

Add the following to the front of your current jdbc url:

  jdbc:stat:<settings>:
  
  (eg. jdbc:postgresql://localhost/mydb becomes: jdbc:stat::jdbc:postgresql://localhost/mydb)

If you want a login screen add the following instead:

  jdbc:secstat:<settings>:

Use the same credentials as the ones for your database connection to login.

Start your application and goto: http://<host app is running on>:18080/

You will see an overview of the last 2500 queries run on your database and some timing stats about them.

Drivers automatically discovered atm:

  org.postgresql.Driver
  oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver
  com.sybase.jdbc2.jdbc.SybDriver
  net.sourceforge.jtds.jdbc.Driver
  com.microsoft.jdbc.sqlserver.SQLServerDriver
  com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerDriver
  weblogic.jdbc.sqlserver.SQLServerDriver
  com.informix.jdbc.IfxDriver
  org.apache.derby.jdbc.ClientDriver
  org.apache.derby.jdbc.EmbeddedDriver
  com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
  org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver
  org.h2.Driver

If your driver is not in there, make sure it's known before you connect to the database (eg Class.forName("<driver class name>"); )

There are some settings that can be passed in the jdbc url. There is a settings menu where you can change them at runtime and it will show you an example for your jdbc url.

Example (default values): webServerPort=18080;webServerConnections=2;numberOfQueries=2500;logStacktraces=true;formattedQueries=true