All Downloads are FREE. Search and download functionalities are using the official Maven repository.

com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc.SQLServerPreparedStatement42Helper Maven / Gradle / Ivy

Go to download

Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server. The Azure Key Vault feature in Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server depends on Azure SDK for JAVA and Azure Active Directory Library For Java.

There is a newer version: 12.7.0.jre11-preview
Show newest version
/*
 * Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server
 * 
 * Copyright(c) Microsoft Corporation All rights reserved.
 * 
 * This program is made available under the terms of the MIT License. See the LICENSE file in the project root for more information.
 */

package com.microsoft.sqlserver.jdbc;

import java.sql.SQLType;

/**
 * 
 * This class provides the underlying implementation of ISQLServerPreparedStatement42 interface to SQLServerPreparedStatement42 and
 * SQLServerCallableStatement42, so that SQLServerPreparedStatement42 and SQLServerCallableStatement42 have the same implementation for same methods.
 *
 */
class SQLServerPreparedStatement42Helper {

    static final void setObject(SQLServerPreparedStatement ps,
            int index,
            Object obj,
            SQLType jdbcType) throws SQLServerException {
        DriverJDBCVersion.checkSupportsJDBC42();

        if (SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.isLoggable(java.util.logging.Level.FINER))
            SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.entering(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject", new Object[] {index, obj, jdbcType});

        // getVendorTypeNumber() returns the same constant integer values as in java.sql.Types
        ps.setObject(index, obj, jdbcType.getVendorTypeNumber());

        SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.exiting(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject");
    }

    static final void setObject(SQLServerPreparedStatement ps,
            int parameterIndex,
            Object x,
            SQLType targetSqlType,
            int scaleOrLength) throws SQLServerException {
        DriverJDBCVersion.checkSupportsJDBC42();

        if (SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.isLoggable(java.util.logging.Level.FINER))
            SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.entering(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject",
                    new Object[] {parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType, scaleOrLength});

        // getVendorTypeNumber() returns the same constant integer values as in java.sql.Types
        ps.setObject(parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType.getVendorTypeNumber(), scaleOrLength);

        SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.exiting(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject");
    }

    static final void setObject(SQLServerPreparedStatement ps,
            int parameterIndex,
            Object x,
            SQLType targetSqlType,
            Integer precision,
            Integer scale) throws SQLServerException {
        DriverJDBCVersion.checkSupportsJDBC42();

        if (SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.isLoggable(java.util.logging.Level.FINER))
            SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.entering(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject",
                    new Object[] {parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType, precision, scale});

        // getVendorTypeNumber() returns the same constant integer values as in java.sql.Types
        ps.setObject(parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType.getVendorTypeNumber(), precision, scale, false);

        SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.exiting(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject");
    }

    static final void setObject(SQLServerPreparedStatement ps,
            int parameterIndex,
            Object x,
            SQLType targetSqlType,
            Integer precision,
            Integer scale,
            boolean forceEncrypt) throws SQLServerException {
        DriverJDBCVersion.checkSupportsJDBC42();

        if (SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.isLoggable(java.util.logging.Level.FINER))
            SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.entering(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject",
                    new Object[] {parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType, precision, scale, forceEncrypt});

        // getVendorTypeNumber() returns the same constant integer values as in java.sql.Types
        ps.setObject(parameterIndex, x, targetSqlType.getVendorTypeNumber(), precision, scale, forceEncrypt);

        SQLServerStatement.loggerExternal.exiting(ps.getClassNameLogging(), "setObject");
    }
}




© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy