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A driver for Apache Cassandra 1.2+ that works exclusively with the Cassandra Query Language version 3 (CQL3) and Cassandra's binary protocol.

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/*
 * Copyright DataStax, Inc.
 *
 * Licensed 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 com.datastax.driver.core;

import com.datastax.driver.core.Frame.Header;
import com.datastax.driver.core.Requests.QueryFlag;
import com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.InvalidTypeException;
import com.datastax.driver.core.exceptions.UnsupportedProtocolVersionException;
import com.datastax.driver.core.querybuilder.BuiltStatement;
import com.datastax.driver.core.schemabuilder.SchemaStatement;
import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.util.Map;

/**
 * A regular (non-prepared and non batched) CQL statement.
 *
 * 

This class represents a query string along with query options (and optionally binary values, * see {@code getValues}). It can be extended but {@link SimpleStatement} is provided as a simple * implementation to build a {@code RegularStatement} directly from its query string. */ public abstract class RegularStatement extends Statement { /** Creates a new RegularStatement. */ protected RegularStatement() {} /** * Returns the query string for this statement. * *

It is important to note that the query string is merely a CQL representation of this * statement, but it does not convey all the information stored in {@link Statement} * objects. * *

For example, {@link Statement} objects carry numerous protocol-level settings, such as the * {@link Statement#getConsistencyLevel() consistency level} to use, or the {@link * Statement#isIdempotent() idempotence flag}, among others. None of these settings will be * included in the resulting query string. * *

Similarly, if values have been set on this statement because it has bind markers, these * values will not appear in the resulting query string. * *

Note: the consistency level was conveyed at CQL level in older versions of the CQL grammar, * but since CASSANDRA-4734 it * is now a protocol-level setting and consequently does not appear in the query string. * * @param codecRegistry the codec registry that will be used if the actual implementation needs to * serialize Java objects in the process of generating the query. Note that it might be * possible to use the no-arg {@link #getQueryString()} depending on the type of statement * this is called on. * @return a valid CQL query string. * @see #getQueryString() */ public abstract String getQueryString(CodecRegistry codecRegistry); /** * Returns the query string for this statement. * *

This method calls {@link #getQueryString(CodecRegistry)} with {@link * CodecRegistry#DEFAULT_INSTANCE}. Whether you should use this or the other variant depends on * the type of statement this is called on: * *

    *
  • for a {@link SimpleStatement} or {@link SchemaStatement}, the codec registry isn't * actually needed, so it's always safe to use this method; *
  • for a {@link BuiltStatement} you can use this method if you use no custom codecs, or if * your custom codecs are registered with the default registry. Otherwise, use the other * method and provide the registry that contains your codecs (see {@link BuiltStatement} for * more explanations on why this is so); *
  • for a {@link BatchStatement}, use the first rule if it contains no built statements, or * the second rule otherwise. *
* * @return a valid CQL query string. */ public String getQueryString() { return getQueryString(CodecRegistry.DEFAULT_INSTANCE); } /** * The positional values to use for this statement. * *

A statement can use either positional or named values, but not both. So if this method * returns a non-null result, {@link #getNamedValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry)} will return * {@code null}. * *

Values for a RegularStatement (i.e. if either method does not return {@code null}) are not * supported with the native protocol version 1: you will get an {@link * UnsupportedProtocolVersionException} when submitting one if version 1 of the protocol is in use * (i.e. if you've forced version 1 through {@link Cluster.Builder#withProtocolVersion} or you use * Cassandra 1.2). * * @param protocolVersion the protocol version that will be used to serialize the values. * @param codecRegistry the codec registry that will be used to serialize the values. * @throws InvalidTypeException if one of the values is not of a type that can be serialized to a * CQL3 type * @see SimpleStatement#SimpleStatement(String, Object...) */ public abstract ByteBuffer[] getValues( ProtocolVersion protocolVersion, CodecRegistry codecRegistry); /** * The named values to use for this statement. * *

A statement can use either positional or named values, but not both. So if this method * returns a non-null result, {@link #getValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry)} will return * {@code null}. * *

Values for a RegularStatement (i.e. if either method does not return {@code null}) are not * supported with the native protocol version 1: you will get an {@link * UnsupportedProtocolVersionException} when submitting one if version 1 of the protocol is in use * (i.e. if you've forced version 1 through {@link Cluster.Builder#withProtocolVersion} or you use * Cassandra 1.2). * * @param protocolVersion the protocol version that will be used to serialize the values. * @param codecRegistry the codec registry that will be used to serialize the values. * @return the named values. * @throws InvalidTypeException if one of the values is not of a type that can be serialized to a * CQL3 type * @see SimpleStatement#SimpleStatement(String, Map) */ public abstract Map getNamedValues( ProtocolVersion protocolVersion, CodecRegistry codecRegistry); /** * Whether or not this statement has values, that is if {@code getValues} will return {@code null} * or not. * * @param codecRegistry the codec registry that will be used if the actual implementation needs to * serialize Java objects in the process of determining if the query has values. Note that it * might be possible to use the no-arg {@link #hasValues()} depending on the type of statement * this is called on. * @return {@code false} if both {@link #getValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry)} and {@link * #getNamedValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry)} return {@code null}, {@code true} * otherwise. * @see #hasValues() */ public abstract boolean hasValues(CodecRegistry codecRegistry); /** * Whether this statement uses named values. * * @return {@code false} if {@link #getNamedValues(ProtocolVersion, CodecRegistry)} returns {@code * null}, {@code true} otherwise. */ public abstract boolean usesNamedValues(); /** * Whether or not this statement has values, that is if {@code getValues} will return {@code null} * or not. * *

This method calls {@link #hasValues(CodecRegistry)} with {@link * ProtocolVersion#NEWEST_SUPPORTED}. Whether you should use this or the other variant depends on * the type of statement this is called on: * *

    *
  • for a {@link SimpleStatement} or {@link SchemaStatement}, the codec registry isn't * actually needed, so it's always safe to use this method; *
  • for a {@link BuiltStatement} you can use this method if you use no custom codecs, or if * your custom codecs are registered with the default registry. Otherwise, use the other * method and provide the registry that contains your codecs (see {@link BuiltStatement} for * more explanations on why this is so); *
  • for a {@link BatchStatement}, use the first rule if it contains no built statements, or * the second rule otherwise. *
* * @return {@code false} if {@link #getValues} returns {@code null}, {@code true} otherwise. */ public boolean hasValues() { return hasValues(CodecRegistry.DEFAULT_INSTANCE); } @Override public int requestSizeInBytes(ProtocolVersion protocolVersion, CodecRegistry codecRegistry) { int size = Header.lengthFor(protocolVersion); try { size += CBUtil.sizeOfLongString(getQueryString(codecRegistry)); switch (protocolVersion) { case V1: size += CBUtil.sizeOfConsistencyLevel(getConsistencyLevel()); break; case V2: case V3: case V4: case V5: size += CBUtil.sizeOfConsistencyLevel(getConsistencyLevel()); size += QueryFlag.serializedSize(protocolVersion); if (hasValues()) { if (usesNamedValues()) { size += CBUtil.sizeOfNamedValueList(getNamedValues(protocolVersion, codecRegistry)); } else { size += CBUtil.sizeOfValueList(getValues(protocolVersion, codecRegistry)); } } // Fetch size, serial CL and default timestamp also depend on session-level defaults // (QueryOptions). // We always count them to avoid having to inject QueryOptions here, at worst we // overestimate by a // few bytes. size += 4; // fetch size if (getPagingState() != null) { size += CBUtil.sizeOfValue(getPagingState()); } size += CBUtil.sizeOfConsistencyLevel(getSerialConsistencyLevel()); if (ProtocolFeature.CLIENT_TIMESTAMPS.isSupportedBy(protocolVersion)) { size += 8; // timestamp } if (ProtocolFeature.CUSTOM_PAYLOADS.isSupportedBy(protocolVersion) && getOutgoingPayload() != null) { size += CBUtil.sizeOfBytesMap(getOutgoingPayload()); } break; default: throw protocolVersion.unsupported(); } } catch (Exception e) { size = -1; } return size; } /** * Returns this statement as a CQL query string. * *

It is important to note that the query string is merely a CQL representation of this * statement, but it does not convey all the information stored in {@link Statement} * objects. * *

See the javadocs of {@link #getQueryString()} for more information. * * @return this statement as a CQL query string. * @see #getQueryString() */ @Override public String toString() { return getQueryString(); } }





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