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/*
 * Copyright 2002-2018 the original author or authors.
 *
 * 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 org.springframework.jdbc.core;

import java.sql.CallableStatement;
import java.sql.SQLException;

import org.springframework.dao.DataAccessException;
import org.springframework.lang.Nullable;

/**
 * Generic callback interface for code that operates on a CallableStatement.
 * Allows to execute any number of operations on a single CallableStatement,
 * for example a single execute call or repeated execute calls with varying
 * parameters.
 *
 * 

Used internally by JdbcTemplate, but also useful for application code. * Note that the passed-in CallableStatement can have been created by the * framework or by a custom CallableStatementCreator. However, the latter is * hardly ever necessary, as most custom callback actions will perform updates * in which case a standard CallableStatement is fine. Custom actions will * always set parameter values themselves, so that CallableStatementCreator * capability is not needed either. * * @author Juergen Hoeller * @since 16.03.2004 * @param the result type * @see JdbcTemplate#execute(String, CallableStatementCallback) * @see JdbcTemplate#execute(CallableStatementCreator, CallableStatementCallback) */ @FunctionalInterface public interface CallableStatementCallback { /** * Gets called by {@code JdbcTemplate.execute} with an active JDBC * CallableStatement. Does not need to care about closing the Statement * or the Connection, or about handling transactions: this will all be * handled by Spring's JdbcTemplate. * *

NOTE: Any ResultSets opened should be closed in finally blocks * within the callback implementation. Spring will close the Statement * object after the callback returned, but this does not necessarily imply * that the ResultSet resources will be closed: the Statement objects might * get pooled by the connection pool, with {@code close} calls only * returning the object to the pool but not physically closing the resources. * *

If called without a thread-bound JDBC transaction (initiated by * DataSourceTransactionManager), the code will simply get executed on the * JDBC connection with its transactional semantics. If JdbcTemplate is * configured to use a JTA-aware DataSource, the JDBC connection and thus * the callback code will be transactional if a JTA transaction is active. * *

Allows for returning a result object created within the callback, i.e. * a domain object or a collection of domain objects. A thrown RuntimeException * is treated as application exception: it gets propagated to the caller of * the template. * * @param cs active JDBC CallableStatement * @return a result object, or {@code null} if none * @throws SQLException if thrown by a JDBC method, to be auto-converted * into a DataAccessException by a SQLExceptionTranslator * @throws DataAccessException in case of custom exceptions */ @Nullable T doInCallableStatement(CallableStatement cs) throws SQLException, DataAccessException; }





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