Primeiros passos com o Spanner no JDBC


Objetivos

Neste tutorial, mostramos as seguintes etapas usando o Spanner Driver JDBC:

  • Criar uma instância e um banco de dados do Spanner.
  • Gravar, ler e executar consultas SQL em dados contidos no banco de dados.
  • Atualizar o esquema do banco de dados.
  • Atualizar dados usando uma transação de leitura e gravação.
  • Adicionar um índice secundário ao banco de dados.
  • Usar o índice para ler e executar consultas SQL nos dados.
  • Recuperar dados usando uma transação somente leitura.

Custos

Neste tutorial, usamos o Spanner, que é um componente faturável da Google Cloud. Para informações sobre o custo do uso do Spanner, consulte Preços.

Antes de começar

Conclua as etapas descritas em Configurar, que abrangem a criação e a configuração de um projeto padrão do Google Cloud, o faturamento, a API Cloud Spanner e a configuração do OAuth 2.0 para receber credenciais de autenticação para usar a API Cloud Spanner.

Especificamente, execute gcloud auth application-default login para configurar o ambiente de desenvolvimento local com credenciais de autenticação.

Preparar seu ambiente JDBC local

  1. Instale os seguintes itens na sua máquina de desenvolvimento se ainda não estiverem instalados:

  2. Clone o repositório do app de amostra na máquina local:

    git clone https://github.com/googleapis/java-spanner-jdbc.git
    
  3. Mude para o diretório que contém o exemplo de código do Spanner:

    cd java-spanner-jdbc/samples/snippets
    

Criar uma instância

Quando você usa o Spanner pela primeira vez, precisa criar uma instância, que é um alocação de recursos usados pelos bancos de dados do Spanner. Ao criar uma instância, escolha uma configuração que determine onde os dados serão armazenados e também o número de nós a serem usados. Isso determina a quantidade de recursos de exibição e armazenamento na instância.

Execute o seguinte comando para criar uma instância do Spanner na região us-central1 com 1 nó:

gcloud spanner instances create test-instance --config=regional-us-central1 \
    --description="Test Instance" --nodes=1

A instância criada tem as seguintes características:

  • Código da instância: test-instance
  • Nome de exibição: Test Instance
  • Configuração da instância: regional-us-central1 as configurações regionais armazenam dados em uma região, enquanto as configurações multirregionais distribuem dados em várias regiões. Para mais informações, consulte Sobre instâncias.
  • Um nó node_count corresponde à quantidade de recursos de exibição e armazenamento disponíveis aos bancos de dados na instância. Saiba mais em Nós e unidades de processamento.

Você verá:

Creating instance...done.

Consultar os arquivos de amostra

O repositório de amostras contém uma amostra que mostra como usar o Spanner com o JDBC.

O pom.xml adiciona o driver JDBC do Spanner ao do projeto e configura o plug-in assembly para criar uma arquivo JAR executável com a classe Java definida neste tutorial.

Criar a amostra com Diretório samples/snippets:

mvn package -DskipTests

Criar um banco de dados

Crie um banco de dados com o nome example-db na instância com o nome test-instance ao executando o seguinte na linha de comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
createdatabase test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
createpgdatabase test-instance example-db

Você verá:

Created database [projects/my-project/instances/test-instance/databases/example-db]
O código a seguir cria um banco de dados e duas tabelas no banco de dados.

GoogleSQL

static void createDatabase(
    final DatabaseAdminClient dbAdminClient,
    final InstanceName instanceName,
    final String databaseId,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Use the Spanner admin client to create a database.
  CreateDatabaseRequest createDatabaseRequest =
      CreateDatabaseRequest.newBuilder()
          .setCreateStatement("CREATE DATABASE `" + databaseId + "`")
          .setParent(instanceName.toString())
          .build();
  try {
    dbAdminClient.createDatabaseAsync(createDatabaseRequest).get();
  } catch (ExecutionException e) {
    throw SpannerExceptionFactory.asSpannerException(e.getCause());
  } catch (InterruptedException e) {
    throw SpannerExceptionFactory.propagateInterrupt(e);
  }

  // Connect to the database with the JDBC driver and create two test tables.
  String projectId = instanceName.getProject();
  String instanceId = instanceName.getInstance();
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              projectId, instanceId, databaseId),
          properties)) {
    try (Statement statement = connection.createStatement()) {
      // Create the tables in one batch.
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE Singers ("
              + "  SingerId   INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  FirstName  STRING(1024),"
              + "  LastName   STRING(1024),"
              + "  SingerInfo BYTES(MAX),"
              + "  FullName STRING(2048) AS "
              + "  (ARRAY_TO_STRING([FirstName, LastName], \" \")) STORED"
              + ") PRIMARY KEY (SingerId)");
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE Albums ("
              + "  SingerId     INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  AlbumId      INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  AlbumTitle   STRING(MAX)"
              + ") PRIMARY KEY (SingerId, AlbumId),"
              + "  INTERLEAVE IN PARENT Singers ON DELETE CASCADE");
      statement.executeBatch();
    }
  }
  System.out.printf(
      "Created database [%s]\n",
      DatabaseName.of(projectId, instanceId, databaseId));
}

PostgreSQL

static void createPostgreSQLDatabase(
    final DatabaseAdminClient dbAdminClient,
    final InstanceName instanceName,
    final String databaseId,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Use the Spanner admin client to create a database.
  CreateDatabaseRequest createDatabaseRequest =
      CreateDatabaseRequest.newBuilder()
          // PostgreSQL database names and other identifiers
          // must be quoted using double quotes.
          .setCreateStatement("create database \"" + databaseId + "\"")
          .setParent(instanceName.toString())
          .setDatabaseDialect(DatabaseDialect.POSTGRESQL)
          .build();
  try {
    dbAdminClient.createDatabaseAsync(createDatabaseRequest).get();
  } catch (ExecutionException e) {
    throw SpannerExceptionFactory.asSpannerException(e.getCause());
  } catch (InterruptedException e) {
    throw SpannerExceptionFactory.propagateInterrupt(e);
  }

  // Connect to the database with the JDBC driver and create two test tables.
  String projectId = instanceName.getProject();
  String instanceId = instanceName.getInstance();
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              projectId, instanceId, databaseId),
          properties)) {
    try (Statement statement = connection.createStatement()) {
      // Create the tables in one batch.
      statement.addBatch(
          "create table singers ("
              + "  singer_id   bigint primary key not null,"
              + "  first_name  varchar(1024),"
              + "  last_name   varchar(1024),"
              + "  singer_info bytea,"
              + "  full_name   varchar(2048) generated always as (\n"
              + "      case when first_name is null then last_name\n"
              + "          when last_name  is null then first_name\n"
              + "          else first_name || ' ' || last_name\n"
              + "      end) stored"
              + ")");
      statement.addBatch(
          "create table albums ("
              + "  singer_id     bigint not null,"
              + "  album_id      bigint not null,"
              + "  album_title   varchar,"
              + "  primary key (singer_id, album_id)"
              + ") interleave in parent singers on delete cascade");
      statement.executeBatch();
    }
  }
  System.out.printf(
      "Created database [%s]\n",
      DatabaseName.of(projectId, instanceId, databaseId));
}

O próximo passo é gravar dados no seu banco de dados.

Criar uma conexão JDBC

Antes de fazer leituras ou gravações, você deve criar um Connection. Todas as suas interações com o Spanner precisam passar por um Connection. O nome do banco de dados e outros são especificadas no URL de conexão JDBC e no java.util.Properties definido.

GoogleSQL

static void createConnection(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Connection properties can be specified both with in a Properties object
  // and in the connection URL.
  properties.put("numChannels", "8");
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s"
                  + ";minSessions=400;maxSessions=400",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection.createStatement().executeQuery("select 'Hello World!'")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.println(resultSet.getString(1));
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void createConnection(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Connection properties can be specified both with in a Properties object
  // and in the connection URL.
  properties.put("numChannels", "8");
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s"
                  + ";minSessions=400;maxSessions=400",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection.createStatement().executeQuery("select 'Hello World!'")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.println(resultSet.getString(1));
      }
    }
  }
}

Para uma lista completa das propriedades compatíveis, consulte Propriedades do URL de conexão.

Cada Connection usa recursos, então é recomendável fechar conexões quando não são mais necessárias ou usar um pool de conexões para e reutilizar as conexões em todo o aplicativo.

Leia mais no Javadoc Connection. de referência.

Conectar o driver JDBC ao emulador

Você pode conectar o driver JDBC ao emulador do Spanner duas maneiras:

  • Defina a variável de ambiente SPANNER_EMULATOR_HOST. Isso instrui o Driver JDBC para se conectar ao emulador. O Spanner instância e banco de dados no URL de conexão JDBC já deve existir na emulador.
  • Adicione autoConfigEmulator=true ao URL de conexão: isso instrui o o driver JDBC para se conectar ao emulador e criar automaticamente o Instância e banco de dados do Spanner no URL de conexão do JDBC se eles não existirem.

Este exemplo mostra como usar o URL de conexão autoConfigEmulator=true é a melhor opção.

GoogleSQL

static void createConnectionWithEmulator(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Add autoConfigEmulator=true to the connection URL to instruct the JDBC
  // driver to connect to the Spanner emulator on localhost:9010.
  // The Spanner instance and database are automatically created if these
  // don't already exist.
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s"
                  + ";autoConfigEmulator=true",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection.createStatement().executeQuery("select 'Hello World!'")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.println(resultSet.getString(1));
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void createConnectionWithEmulator(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  // Add autoConfigEmulator=true to the connection URL to instruct the JDBC
  // driver to connect to the Spanner emulator on localhost:9010.
  // The Spanner instance and database are automatically created if these
  // don't already exist.
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s"
                  + ";autoConfigEmulator=true",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection.createStatement().executeQuery("select 'Hello World!'")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.println(resultSet.getString(1));
      }
    }
  }
}

Gravar dados com DML

É possível inserir dados usando a linguagem de manipulação de dados (DML, na sigla em inglês) em uma transação de leitura/gravação.

Use o método PreparedStatement.executeUpdate() para executar uma DML .

GoogleSQL

static void writeDataWithDml(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Add 4 rows in one statement.
    // JDBC always uses '?' as a parameter placeholder.
    try (PreparedStatement preparedStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "INSERT INTO Singers (SingerId, FirstName, LastName) VALUES "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?)")) {

      final ImmutableList<Singer> singers =
          ImmutableList.of(
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 12L, "Melissa", "Garcia"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 13L, "Russel", "Morales"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 14L, "Jacqueline", "Long"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 15L, "Dylan", "Shaw"));

      // Note that JDBC parameters start at index 1.
      int paramIndex = 0;
      for (Singer singer : singers) {
        preparedStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, singer.singerId);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.firstName);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.lastName);
      }

      int updateCount = preparedStatement.executeUpdate();
      System.out.printf("%d records inserted.\n", updateCount);
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void writeDataWithDmlPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Add 4 rows in one statement.
    // JDBC always uses '?' as a parameter placeholder.
    try (PreparedStatement preparedStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "INSERT INTO singers (singer_id, first_name, last_name) VALUES "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?), "
                + "(?, ?, ?)")) {

      final ImmutableList<Singer> singers =
          ImmutableList.of(
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 12L, "Melissa", "Garcia"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 13L, "Russel", "Morales"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 14L, "Jacqueline", "Long"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 15L, "Dylan", "Shaw"));

      // Note that JDBC parameters start at index 1.
      int paramIndex = 0;
      for (Singer singer : singers) {
        preparedStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, singer.singerId);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.firstName);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.lastName);
      }

      int updateCount = preparedStatement.executeUpdate();
      System.out.printf("%d records inserted.\n", updateCount);
    }
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writeusingdml test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writeusingdmlpg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

4 records inserted.

Gravar dados com um lote DML

Você usa as APIs PreparedStatement#addBatch() e métodos PreparedStatement#executeBatch() para executar várias instruções DML em um lote.

GoogleSQL

static void writeDataWithDmlBatch(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Add multiple rows in one DML batch.
    // JDBC always uses '?' as a parameter placeholder.
    try (PreparedStatement preparedStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "INSERT INTO Singers (SingerId, FirstName, LastName) "
                + "VALUES (?, ?, ?)")) {
      final ImmutableList<Singer> singers =
          ImmutableList.of(
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 16L, "Sarah", "Wilson"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 17L, "Ethan", "Miller"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 18L, "Maya", "Patel"));

      for (Singer singer : singers) {
        // Note that JDBC parameters start at index 1.
        int paramIndex = 0;
        preparedStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, singer.singerId);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.firstName);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.lastName);
        preparedStatement.addBatch();
      }

      int[] updateCounts = preparedStatement.executeBatch();
      System.out.printf(
          "%d records inserted.\n",
          Arrays.stream(updateCounts).sum());
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void writeDataWithDmlBatchPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Add multiple rows in one DML batch.
    // JDBC always uses '?' as a parameter placeholder.
    try (PreparedStatement preparedStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "INSERT INTO singers (singer_id, first_name, last_name)"
                + " VALUES (?, ?, ?)")) {
      final ImmutableList<Singer> singers =
          ImmutableList.of(
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 16L, "Sarah", "Wilson"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 17L, "Ethan", "Miller"),
              new Singer(/* SingerId = */ 18L, "Maya", "Patel"));

      for (Singer singer : singers) {
        // Note that JDBC parameters start at index 1.
        int paramIndex = 0;
        preparedStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, singer.singerId);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.firstName);
        preparedStatement.setString(++paramIndex, singer.lastName);
        preparedStatement.addBatch();
      }

      int[] updateCounts = preparedStatement.executeBatch();
      System.out.printf(
          "%d records inserted.\n",
          Arrays.stream(updateCounts).sum());
    }
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writeusingdmlbatch test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writeusingdmlbatchpg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

3 records inserted.

Gravar dados com mutações

Também é possível inserir dados usando mutações.

É possível gravar dados usando um objeto Mutation. Um objeto Mutation é um contêiner para operações de mutação. Um Mutation representa uma sequência de inserções, atualizações e exclusões que o Spanner são aplicados atomicamente em diferentes linhas e tabelas em um banco de dados do Spanner.

O newInsertBuilder() na classe Mutation constrói uma mutação INSERT, que insere uma nova linha em uma tabela. Se a linha já existir, a gravação falhará. Como alternativa, use o newInsertOrUpdateBuilder para construir uma mutação INSERT_OR_UPDATE, que atualiza os valores da coluna se a linha já existir.

O write() na interface CloudSpannerJdbcConnection grava as mutações. Todos mutações em um único lote são aplicadas atomicamente.

É possível desencapsular a interface CloudSpannerJdbcConnection de um Spanner Connection do JDBC.

Este código mostra como gravar dados usando mutações:

GoogleSQL

/** The list of Singers to insert. */
static final List<Singer> SINGERS =
    Arrays.asList(
        new Singer(1, "Marc", "Richards"),
        new Singer(2, "Catalina", "Smith"),
        new Singer(3, "Alice", "Trentor"),
        new Singer(4, "Lea", "Martin"),
        new Singer(5, "David", "Lomond"));

/** The list of Albums to insert. */
static final List<Album> ALBUMS =
    Arrays.asList(
        new Album(1, 1, "Total Junk"),
        new Album(1, 2, "Go, Go, Go"),
        new Album(2, 1, "Green"),
        new Album(2, 2, "Forever Hold Your Peace"),
        new Album(2, 3, "Terrified"));

static void writeDataWithMutations(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Unwrap the CloudSpannerJdbcConnection interface
    // from the java.sql.Connection.
    CloudSpannerJdbcConnection cloudSpannerJdbcConnection =
        connection.unwrap(CloudSpannerJdbcConnection.class);

    List<Mutation> mutations = new ArrayList<>();
    for (Singer singer : SINGERS) {
      mutations.add(
          Mutation.newInsertBuilder("Singers")
              .set("SingerId")
              .to(singer.singerId)
              .set("FirstName")
              .to(singer.firstName)
              .set("LastName")
              .to(singer.lastName)
              .build());
    }
    for (Album album : ALBUMS) {
      mutations.add(
          Mutation.newInsertBuilder("Albums")
              .set("SingerId")
              .to(album.singerId)
              .set("AlbumId")
              .to(album.albumId)
              .set("AlbumTitle")
              .to(album.albumTitle)
              .build());
    }
    // Apply the mutations atomically to Spanner.
    cloudSpannerJdbcConnection.write(mutations);
    System.out.printf("Inserted %d rows.\n", mutations.size());
  }
}

PostgreSQL

/** The list of Singers to insert. */
static final List<Singer> SINGERS =
    Arrays.asList(
        new Singer(1, "Marc", "Richards"),
        new Singer(2, "Catalina", "Smith"),
        new Singer(3, "Alice", "Trentor"),
        new Singer(4, "Lea", "Martin"),
        new Singer(5, "David", "Lomond"));

/** The list of Albums to insert. */
static final List<Album> ALBUMS =
    Arrays.asList(
        new Album(1, 1, "Total Junk"),
        new Album(1, 2, "Go, Go, Go"),
        new Album(2, 1, "Green"),
        new Album(2, 2, "Forever Hold Your Peace"),
        new Album(2, 3, "Terrified"));

static void writeDataWithMutationsPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Unwrap the CloudSpannerJdbcConnection interface
    // from the java.sql.Connection.
    CloudSpannerJdbcConnection cloudSpannerJdbcConnection =
        connection.unwrap(CloudSpannerJdbcConnection.class);

    List<Mutation> mutations = new ArrayList<>();
    for (Singer singer : SINGERS) {
      mutations.add(
          Mutation.newInsertBuilder("singers")
              .set("singer_id")
              .to(singer.singerId)
              .set("first_name")
              .to(singer.firstName)
              .set("last_name")
              .to(singer.lastName)
              .build());
    }
    for (Album album : ALBUMS) {
      mutations.add(
          Mutation.newInsertBuilder("albums")
              .set("singer_id")
              .to(album.singerId)
              .set("album_id")
              .to(album.albumId)
              .set("album_title")
              .to(album.albumTitle)
              .build());
    }
    // Apply the mutations atomically to Spanner.
    cloudSpannerJdbcConnection.write(mutations);
    System.out.printf("Inserted %d rows.\n", mutations.size());
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
write test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writepg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

Inserted 10 rows.

Consultar dados usando SQL

O Spanner dá suporte a uma interface SQL para leitura de dados, que pode acesso na linha de comando usando a Google Cloud CLI ou programaticamente usando e o driver JDBC do Spanner.

Na linha de comando

Execute a instrução SQL a seguir para ler os valores de todas as colunas da tabela Albums:

GoogleSQL

gcloud spanner databases execute-sql example-db --instance=test-instance \
    --sql='SELECT SingerId, AlbumId, AlbumTitle FROM Albums'

PostgreSQL

gcloud spanner databases execute-sql example-db --instance=test-instance \
    --sql='SELECT singer_id, album_id, album_title FROM albums'

O resultado será:

SingerId AlbumId AlbumTitle
1        1       Total Junk
1        2       Go, Go, Go
2        1       Green
2        2       Forever Hold Your Peace
2        3       Terrified

Usar o driver JDBC do Spanner

Além de executar uma instrução SQL na linha de comando, você pode emitir o mesma instrução SQL de maneira programática usando o driver JDBC do Spanner.

Os seguintes métodos e classes são usados para executar a consulta SQL:

  • O createStatement() na interface Connection: use-o para criar um novo objeto de instrução. para executar uma instrução SQL.
  • O método executeQuery(String) da classe Statement: use este método para executar uma consulta em um banco de dados.
  • O Statement classe: use-a para executar uma string SQL.
  • O ResultSet class: use-a para acessar os dados retornados por uma instrução SQL.

Veja como emitir a consulta e acessar os dados:

GoogleSQL

static void queryData(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT SingerId, AlbumId, AlbumTitle "
                + "FROM Albums")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("SingerId"),
            resultSet.getLong("AlbumId"),
            resultSet.getString("AlbumTitle"));
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void queryDataPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT singer_id, album_id, album_title "
                    + "FROM albums")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("singer_id"),
            resultSet.getLong("album_id"),
            resultSet.getString("album_title"));
      }
    }
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
query test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
querypg test-instance example-db

Você verá o seguinte resultado:

1 1 Total Junk
1 2 Go, Go, Go
2 1 Green
2 2 Forever Hold Your Peace
2 3 Terrified

Consulta usando um parâmetro SQL

Se seu aplicativo tiver uma consulta executada com frequência, você poderá melhorar seu desempenho ao parametrizar-o. A consulta paramétrica resultante pode ser armazenada em cache e reutilizada, o que reduz os custos de compilação. Para mais informações, consulte Use parâmetros de consulta para acelerar as consultas executadas com frequência.

Aqui está um exemplo de como usar um parâmetro na cláusula WHERE para registros de consulta que contêm um valor específico para LastName.

Usar um java.sql.PreparedStatement para executar uma consulta com um parâmetro.

GoogleSQL

static void queryWithParameter(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (PreparedStatement statement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "SELECT SingerId, FirstName, LastName "
                + "FROM Singers "
                + "WHERE LastName = ?")) {
      statement.setString(1, "Garcia");
      try (ResultSet resultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
        while (resultSet.next()) {
          System.out.printf(
              "%d %s %s\n",
              resultSet.getLong("SingerId"),
              resultSet.getString("FirstName"),
              resultSet.getString("LastName"));
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void queryWithParameterPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (PreparedStatement statement =
        connection.prepareStatement(
            "SELECT singer_id, first_name, last_name "
                + "FROM singers "
                + "WHERE last_name = ?")) {
      statement.setString(1, "Garcia");
      try (ResultSet resultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
        while (resultSet.next()) {
          System.out.printf(
              "%d %s %s\n",
              resultSet.getLong("singer_id"),
              resultSet.getString("first_name"),
              resultSet.getString("last_name"));
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
querywithparameter test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
querywithparameterpg test-instance example-db

Você verá o seguinte resultado:

12 Melissa Garcia

Atualizar o esquema do banco de dados

Suponha que você precise adicionar uma nova coluna denominada MarketingBudget à tabela Albums. Para isso, é necessário atualizar seu esquema de banco de dados. O Spanner dá suporte a atualizações de esquema em um banco de dados, enquanto o banco de dados continua a disponibilizar o tráfego. As atualizações de esquema não exigem banco de dados off-line e não bloqueiam tabelas ou colunas inteiras. você pode continuar gravação de dados no banco de dados durante a atualização do esquema. Leia mais sobre os recursos e o desempenho das alterações de esquema Faça atualizações de esquema.

Adicionar uma coluna

É possível adicionar uma coluna na linha de comando usando a Google Cloud CLI ou programaticamente usando o driver JDBC do Spanner.

Na linha de comando

Use o seguinte comando ALTER TABLE para adicionar a nova coluna à tabela:

GoogleSQL

gcloud spanner databases ddl update example-db --instance=test-instance \
    --ddl='ALTER TABLE Albums ADD COLUMN MarketingBudget INT64'

PostgreSQL

gcloud spanner databases ddl update example-db --instance=test-instance \
    --ddl='ALTER TABLE albums ADD COLUMN marketing_budget BIGINT'

Você verá:

Schema updating...done.

Usar o driver JDBC do Spanner

Usar o execute(String) da classe java.sql.Statement para modificar o esquema:

GoogleSQL

static void addColumn(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("ALTER TABLE Albums ADD COLUMN MarketingBudget INT64");
    System.out.println("Added MarketingBudget column");
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void addColumnPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("alter table albums add column marketing_budget bigint");
    System.out.println("Added marketing_budget column");
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
addmarketingbudget test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
addmarketingbudgetpg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

Added MarketingBudget column.

Executar um lote DDL

É recomendável executar várias modificações de esquema em um lote. Use o addBatch(String) de java.sql.Statement para adicionar várias instruções DDL a um lote.

GoogleSQL

static void ddlBatch(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (Statement statement = connection.createStatement()) {
      // Create two new tables in one batch.
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE Venues ("
              + "  VenueId     INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  Name        STRING(1024),"
              + "  Description JSON"
              + ") PRIMARY KEY (VenueId)");
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE Concerts ("
              + "  ConcertId INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  VenueId   INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  SingerId  INT64 NOT NULL,"
              + "  StartTime TIMESTAMP,"
              + "  EndTime   TIMESTAMP,"
              + "  CONSTRAINT Fk_Concerts_Venues FOREIGN KEY"
              + "    (VenueId) REFERENCES Venues (VenueId),"
              + "  CONSTRAINT Fk_Concerts_Singers FOREIGN KEY"
              + "    (SingerId) REFERENCES Singers (SingerId),"
              + ") PRIMARY KEY (ConcertId)");
      statement.executeBatch();
    }
    System.out.println("Added Venues and Concerts tables");
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void ddlBatchPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    try (Statement statement = connection.createStatement()) {
      // Create two new tables in one batch.
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE venues ("
              + "  venue_id    bigint not null primary key,"
              + "  name        varchar(1024),"
              + "  description jsonb"
              + ")");
      statement.addBatch(
          "CREATE TABLE concerts ("
              + "  concert_id bigint not null primary key ,"
              + "  venue_id   bigint not null,"
              + "  singer_id  bigint not null,"
              + "  start_time timestamptz,"
              + "  end_time   timestamptz,"
              + "  constraint fk_concerts_venues foreign key"
              + "    (venue_id) references venues (venue_id),"
              + "  constraint fk_concerts_singers foreign key"
              + "    (singer_id) references singers (singer_id)"
              + ")");
      statement.executeBatch();
    }
    System.out.println("Added venues and concerts tables");
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
ddlbatch test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
ddlbatchpg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

Added Venues and Concerts tables.

Gravar dados na nova coluna

O código a seguir grava dados na coluna nova. Ele define MarketingBudget como 100000 para a linha indexada por Albums(1, 1) e como 500000 para a linha indexada por Albums(2, 2).

GoogleSQL

static void updateDataWithMutations(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Unwrap the CloudSpannerJdbcConnection interface
    // from the java.sql.Connection.
    CloudSpannerJdbcConnection cloudSpannerJdbcConnection =
        connection.unwrap(CloudSpannerJdbcConnection.class);

    final long marketingBudgetAlbum1 = 100000L;
    final long marketingBudgetAlbum2 = 500000L;
    // Mutation can be used to update/insert/delete a single row in a table.
    // Here we use newUpdateBuilder to create update mutations.
    List<Mutation> mutations =
        Arrays.asList(
            Mutation.newUpdateBuilder("Albums")
                .set("SingerId")
                .to(1)
                .set("AlbumId")
                .to(1)
                .set("MarketingBudget")
                .to(marketingBudgetAlbum1)
                .build(),
            Mutation.newUpdateBuilder("Albums")
                .set("SingerId")
                .to(2)
                .set("AlbumId")
                .to(2)
                .set("MarketingBudget")
                .to(marketingBudgetAlbum2)
                .build());
    // This writes all the mutations to Cloud Spanner atomically.
    cloudSpannerJdbcConnection.write(mutations);
    System.out.println("Updated albums");
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void updateDataWithMutationsPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Unwrap the CloudSpannerJdbcConnection interface
    // from the java.sql.Connection.
    CloudSpannerJdbcConnection cloudSpannerJdbcConnection =
        connection.unwrap(CloudSpannerJdbcConnection.class);

    final long marketingBudgetAlbum1 = 100000L;
    final long marketingBudgetAlbum2 = 500000L;
    // Mutation can be used to update/insert/delete a single row in a table.
    // Here we use newUpdateBuilder to create update mutations.
    List<Mutation> mutations =
        Arrays.asList(
            Mutation.newUpdateBuilder("albums")
                .set("singer_id")
                .to(1)
                .set("album_id")
                .to(1)
                .set("marketing_budget")
                .to(marketingBudgetAlbum1)
                .build(),
            Mutation.newUpdateBuilder("albums")
                .set("singer_id")
                .to(2)
                .set("album_id")
                .to(2)
                .set("marketing_budget")
                .to(marketingBudgetAlbum2)
                .build());
    // This writes all the mutations to Cloud Spanner atomically.
    cloudSpannerJdbcConnection.write(mutations);
    System.out.println("Updated albums");
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
update test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
updatepg test-instance example-db

A resposta será parecida com esta:

Updated albums

Também é possível executar uma consulta SQL ou uma chamada de leitura para coletar os valores que você acabou de gravar.

Veja a seguir o código para executar a consulta:

GoogleSQL

static void queryDataWithNewColumn(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Rows without an explicit value for MarketingBudget will have a
    // MarketingBudget equal to null.
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT SingerId, AlbumId, MarketingBudget "
                + "FROM Albums")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        // Use the ResultSet#getObject(String) method to get data
        // of any type from the ResultSet.
        System.out.printf(
            "%s %s %s\n",
            resultSet.getObject("SingerId"),
            resultSet.getObject("AlbumId"),
            resultSet.getObject("MarketingBudget"));
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void queryDataWithNewColumnPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Rows without an explicit value for marketing_budget will have a
    // marketing_budget equal to null.
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "select singer_id, album_id, marketing_budget "
                    + "from albums")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        // Use the ResultSet#getObject(String) method to get data
        // of any type from the ResultSet.
        System.out.printf(
            "%s %s %s\n",
            resultSet.getObject("singer_id"),
            resultSet.getObject("album_id"),
            resultSet.getObject("marketing_budget"));
      }
    }
  }
}

Para realizar esta consulta, execute o seguinte comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
querymarketingbudget test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
querymarketingbudgetpg test-instance example-db

Você verá:

1 1 100000
1 2 null
2 1 null
2 2 500000
2 3 null

Atualizar dados

É possível atualizar dados usando DML em uma transação de leitura/gravação.

Defina AutoCommit=false para executar transações de leitura e gravação no JDBC.

GoogleSQL

static void writeWithTransactionUsingDml(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);

    // Transfer marketing budget from one album to another.
    // We do it in a transaction to ensure that the transfer is atomic.
    // There is no need to explicitly start the transaction. The first
    // statement on the connection will start a transaction when
    // AutoCommit=false.
    String selectMarketingBudgetSql =
        "SELECT MarketingBudget "
        + "FROM Albums "
        + "WHERE SingerId = ? AND AlbumId = ?";
    long album2Budget = 0;
    try (PreparedStatement selectMarketingBudgetStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(selectMarketingBudgetSql)) {
      // Bind the query parameters to SingerId=2 and AlbumId=2.
      selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(1, 2);
      selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(2, 2);
      try (ResultSet resultSet =
          selectMarketingBudgetStatement.executeQuery()) {
        while (resultSet.next()) {
          album2Budget = resultSet.getLong("MarketingBudget");
        }
      }
      // The transaction will only be committed if this condition still holds
      // at the time of commit. Otherwise, the transaction will be aborted.
      final long transfer = 200000;
      if (album2Budget >= transfer) {
        long album1Budget = 0;
        // Re-use the existing PreparedStatement for selecting the
        // MarketingBudget to get the budget for Album 1.
        // Bind the query parameters to SingerId=1 and AlbumId=1.
        selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(1, 1);
        selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(2, 1);
        try (ResultSet resultSet =
            selectMarketingBudgetStatement.executeQuery()) {
          while (resultSet.next()) {
            album1Budget = resultSet.getLong("MarketingBudget");
          }
        }

        // Transfer part of the marketing budget of Album 2 to Album 1.
        album1Budget += transfer;
        album2Budget -= transfer;
        String updateSql =
            "UPDATE Albums "
                + "SET MarketingBudget = ? "
                + "WHERE SingerId = ? and AlbumId = ?";
        try (PreparedStatement updateStatement =
            connection.prepareStatement(updateSql)) {
          // Update Album 1.
          int paramIndex = 0;
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, album1Budget);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 1);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 1);
          // Create a DML batch by calling addBatch on
          // the current PreparedStatement.
          updateStatement.addBatch();

          // Update Album 2 in the same DML batch.
          paramIndex = 0;
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, album2Budget);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 2);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 2);
          updateStatement.addBatch();

          // Execute both DML statements in one batch.
          updateStatement.executeBatch();
        }
      }
    }
    // Commit the current transaction.
    connection.commit();
    System.out.println(
        "Transferred marketing budget from Album 2 to Album 1");
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void writeWithTransactionUsingDmlPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);

    // Transfer marketing budget from one album to another. We do it in a
    // transaction to ensure that the transfer is atomic. There is no need
    // to explicitly start the transaction. The first statement on the
    // connection will start a transaction when AutoCommit=false.
    String selectMarketingBudgetSql =
        "SELECT marketing_budget "
            + "from albums "
            + "WHERE singer_id = ? and album_id = ?";
    long album2Budget = 0;
    try (PreparedStatement selectMarketingBudgetStatement =
        connection.prepareStatement(selectMarketingBudgetSql)) {
      // Bind the query parameters to SingerId=2 and AlbumId=2.
      selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(1, 2);
      selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(2, 2);
      try (ResultSet resultSet =
          selectMarketingBudgetStatement.executeQuery()) {
        while (resultSet.next()) {
          album2Budget = resultSet.getLong("marketing_budget");
        }
      }
      // The transaction will only be committed if this condition still holds
      // at the time of commit. Otherwise, the transaction will be aborted.
      final long transfer = 200000;
      if (album2Budget >= transfer) {
        long album1Budget = 0;
        // Re-use the existing PreparedStatement for selecting the
        // marketing_budget to get the budget for Album 1.
        // Bind the query parameters to SingerId=1 and AlbumId=1.
        selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(1, 1);
        selectMarketingBudgetStatement.setLong(2, 1);
        try (ResultSet resultSet =
            selectMarketingBudgetStatement.executeQuery()) {
          while (resultSet.next()) {
            album1Budget = resultSet.getLong("marketing_budget");
          }
        }

        // Transfer part of the marketing budget of Album 2 to Album 1.
        album1Budget += transfer;
        album2Budget -= transfer;
        String updateSql =
            "UPDATE albums "
                + "SET marketing_budget = ? "
                + "WHERE singer_id = ? and album_id = ?";
        try (PreparedStatement updateStatement =
            connection.prepareStatement(updateSql)) {
          // Update Album 1.
          int paramIndex = 0;
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, album1Budget);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 1);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 1);
          // Create a DML batch by calling addBatch
          // on the current PreparedStatement.
          updateStatement.addBatch();

          // Update Album 2 in the same DML batch.
          paramIndex = 0;
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, album2Budget);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 2);
          updateStatement.setLong(++paramIndex, 2);
          updateStatement.addBatch();

          // Execute both DML statements in one batch.
          updateStatement.executeBatch();
        }
      }
    }
    // Commit the current transaction.
    connection.commit();
    System.out.println(
        "Transferred marketing budget from Album 2 to Album 1");
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writewithtransactionusingdml test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
writewithtransactionusingdmlpg test-instance example-db

Tags de transação e de solicitação

Usar tags de transação e tags de solicitação para solucionar problemas de transações e consultas no Spanner. Você pode definir tags de transação e de solicitação no JDBC com o TRANSACTION_TAG e STATEMENT_TAG.

GoogleSQL

static void tags(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);
    // Set the TRANSACTION_TAG session variable to set a transaction tag
    // for the current transaction.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("SET TRANSACTION_TAG='example-tx-tag'");

    // Set the STATEMENT_TAG session variable to set the request tag
    // that should be included with the next SQL statement.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("SET STATEMENT_TAG='query-marketing-budget'");
    long marketingBudget = 0L;
    long singerId = 1L;
    long albumId = 1L;
    try (PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(
        "SELECT MarketingBudget "
        + "FROM Albums "
        + "WHERE SingerId=? AND AlbumId=?")) {
      statement.setLong(1, singerId);
      statement.setLong(2, albumId);
      try (ResultSet albumResultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
        while (albumResultSet.next()) {
          marketingBudget = albumResultSet.getLong(1);
        }
      }
    }
    // Reduce the marketing budget by 10% if it is more than 1,000.
    final long maxMarketingBudget = 1000L;
    final float reduction = 0.1f;
    if (marketingBudget > maxMarketingBudget) {
      marketingBudget -= (long) (marketingBudget * reduction);
      connection
          .createStatement()
          .execute("SET STATEMENT_TAG='reduce-marketing-budget'");
      try (PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(
          "UPDATE Albums SET MarketingBudget=? "
              + "WHERE SingerId=? AND AlbumId=?")) {
        int paramIndex = 0;
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, marketingBudget);
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, singerId);
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, albumId);
        statement.executeUpdate();
      }
    }

    // Commit the current transaction.
    connection.commit();
    System.out.println("Reduced marketing budget");
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void tagsPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);
    // Set the TRANSACTION_TAG session variable to set a transaction tag
    // for the current transaction.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("set spanner.transaction_tag='example-tx-tag'");

    // Set the STATEMENT_TAG session variable to set the request tag
    // that should be included with the next SQL statement.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("set spanner.statement_tag='query-marketing-budget'");
    long marketingBudget = 0L;
    long singerId = 1L;
    long albumId = 1L;
    try (PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(
        "select marketing_budget "
            + "from albums "
            + "where singer_id=? and album_id=?")) {
      statement.setLong(1, singerId);
      statement.setLong(2, albumId);
      try (ResultSet albumResultSet = statement.executeQuery()) {
        while (albumResultSet.next()) {
          marketingBudget = albumResultSet.getLong(1);
        }
      }
    }
    // Reduce the marketing budget by 10% if it is more than 1,000.
    final long maxMarketingBudget = 1000L;
    final float reduction = 0.1f;
    if (marketingBudget > maxMarketingBudget) {
      marketingBudget -= (long) (marketingBudget * reduction);
      connection
          .createStatement()
          .execute("set spanner.statement_tag='reduce-marketing-budget'");
      try (PreparedStatement statement = connection.prepareStatement(
          "update albums set marketing_budget=? "
              + "where singer_id=? AND album_id=?")) {
        int paramIndex = 0;
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, marketingBudget);
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, singerId);
        statement.setLong(++paramIndex, albumId);
        statement.executeUpdate();
      }
    }

    // Commit the current transaction.
    connection.commit();
    System.out.println("Reduced marketing budget");
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
tags test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
tagspg test-instance example-db

Recuperar dados usando transações somente leitura

Suponha que você queira executar mais de uma leitura no mesmo carimbo de data/hora. As transações somente leitura observam um prefixo consistente do histórico de confirmações da transação. Portanto, o aplicativo sempre recebe dados consistentes. Defina ReadOnly=true e AutoCommit=false em um java.sql.Connection ou use instrução SQL SET TRANSACTION READ ONLY, para executar um comando transação.

Veja a seguir como executar uma consulta e fazer uma leitura na mesma transação somente leitura.

GoogleSQL

static void readOnlyTransaction(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);
    // This SQL statement instructs the JDBC driver to use
    // a read-only transaction.
    connection.createStatement().execute("SET TRANSACTION READ ONLY");

    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT SingerId, AlbumId, AlbumTitle "
                    + "FROM Albums "
                    + "ORDER BY SingerId, AlbumId")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("SingerId"),
            resultSet.getLong("AlbumId"),
            resultSet.getString("AlbumTitle"));
      }
    }
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT SingerId, AlbumId, AlbumTitle "
                    + "FROM Albums "
                    + "ORDER BY AlbumTitle")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("SingerId"),
            resultSet.getLong("AlbumId"),
            resultSet.getString("AlbumTitle"));
      }
    }
    // End the read-only transaction by calling commit().
    connection.commit();
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void readOnlyTransactionPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Set AutoCommit=false to enable transactions.
    connection.setAutoCommit(false);
    // This SQL statement instructs the JDBC driver to use
    // a read-only transaction.
    connection.createStatement().execute("set transaction read only");

    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT singer_id, album_id, album_title "
                    + "FROM albums "
                    + "ORDER BY singer_id, album_id")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("singer_id"),
            resultSet.getLong("album_id"),
            resultSet.getString("album_title"));
      }
    }
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "SELECT singer_id, album_id, album_title "
                    + "FROM albums "
                    + "ORDER BY album_title")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %d %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("singer_id"),
            resultSet.getLong("album_id"),
            resultSet.getString("album_title"));
      }
    }
    // End the read-only transaction by calling commit().
    connection.commit();
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
readonlytransaction test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
readonlytransactionpg test-instance example-db

Você verá uma saída como:

    1 1 Total Junk
    1 2 Go, Go, Go
    2 1 Green
    2 2 Forever Hold Your Peace
    2 3 Terrified
    2 2 Forever Hold Your Peace
    1 2 Go, Go, Go
    2 1 Green
    2 3 Terrified
    1 1 Total Junk

Consultas particionadas e Data Boost

O partitionQuery divide a consulta em partes menores, ou partições, e usa várias para buscar as partições em paralelo. Cada partição é identificada por uma token de partição. A API PartitionQuery tem latência maior que a API API de consulta, já que ela se destina apenas a operações em massa, como exportar ou verificar todo o banco de dados.

Otimização de dados você executa consultas analíticas e exportações de dados com nas cargas de trabalho atuais na instância provisionada do Spanner. O Data Boost só é compatível com consultas particionadas.

GoogleSQL

static void dataBoost(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // This enables Data Boost for all partitioned queries on this connection.
    connection.createStatement().execute("SET DATA_BOOST_ENABLED=TRUE");

    // Run a partitioned query. This query will use Data Boost.
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "RUN PARTITIONED QUERY "
                    + "SELECT SingerId, FirstName, LastName "
                    + "FROM Singers")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %s %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("SingerId"),
            resultSet.getString("FirstName"),
            resultSet.getString("LastName"));
      }
    }
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void dataBoostPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // This enables Data Boost for all partitioned queries on this connection.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("set spanner.data_boost_enabled=true");

    // Run a partitioned query. This query will use Data Boost.
    try (ResultSet resultSet =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeQuery(
                "run partitioned query "
                    + "select singer_id, first_name, last_name "
                    + "from singers")) {
      while (resultSet.next()) {
        System.out.printf(
            "%d %s %s\n",
            resultSet.getLong("singer_id"),
            resultSet.getString("first_name"),
            resultSet.getString("last_name"));
      }
    }
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
databoost test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
databoostpg test-instance example-db

Para mais informações sobre como executar consultas particionadas e usar o Data Boost com o driver JDBC, consulte:

DML particionada

A Linguagem de manipulação de dados (DML, na sigla em inglês) particionada é projetada para os seguintes tipos de atualizações e exclusões em massa:

  • Limpeza periódica e coleta de lixo.
  • Preenchimento de novas colunas com valores padrão.
. * { GoogleSQL }

static void partitionedDml(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Enable Partitioned DML on this connection.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("SET AUTOCOMMIT_DML_MODE='PARTITIONED_NON_ATOMIC'");
    // Back-fill a default value for the MarketingBudget column.
    long lowerBoundUpdateCount =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeUpdate("UPDATE Albums "
                + "SET MarketingBudget=0 "
                + "WHERE MarketingBudget IS NULL");
    System.out.printf("Updated at least %d albums\n", lowerBoundUpdateCount);
  }
}

PostgreSQL

static void partitionedDmlPostgreSQL(
    final String project,
    final String instance,
    final String database,
    final Properties properties) throws SQLException {
  try (Connection connection =
      DriverManager.getConnection(
          String.format(
              "jdbc:cloudspanner:/projects/%s/instances/%s/databases/%s",
              project, instance, database),
          properties)) {
    // Enable Partitioned DML on this connection.
    connection
        .createStatement()
        .execute("set spanner.autocommit_dml_mode='partitioned_non_atomic'");
    // Back-fill a default value for the MarketingBudget column.
    long lowerBoundUpdateCount =
        connection
            .createStatement()
            .executeUpdate("update albums "
                + "set marketing_budget=0 "
                + "where marketing_budget is null");
    System.out.printf("Updated at least %d albums\n", lowerBoundUpdateCount);
  }
}

Execute o exemplo com este comando:

GoogleSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
pdml test-instance example-db

PostgreSQL

java -jar target/jdbc-snippets/jdbc-samples.jar \
pdmlpg test-instance example-db

Para mais informações sobre AUTOCOMMIT_DML_MODE, consulte:

Limpeza

Para não gerar cobranças extras na sua conta do Google Cloud pelos recursos usados neste tutorial, suspenda o banco de dados e exclua a instância que você criou.

Excluir o banco de dados

Se você excluir uma instância, todos os bancos de dados nela serão excluídos automaticamente. Nesta etapa, mostramos como excluir um banco de dados sem remover a instância. Ainda pode haver cobrança em relação à instância.

Na linha de comando

gcloud spanner databases delete example-db --instance=test-instance

Use o console do Google Cloud

  1. Acesse a página Instâncias do Spanner no console do Google Cloud.

    Acessar a página "Instâncias"

  2. Clique na instância.

  3. Clique no banco de dados que você quer excluir.

  4. Na página Detalhes do banco de dados, clique em Excluir.

  5. Confirme se quer excluir o banco de dados e clique em Excluir.

Excluir a instância

A exclusão de uma instância descarta automaticamente todos os bancos de dados criados nela.

Na linha de comando

gcloud spanner instances delete test-instance

Use o console do Google Cloud

  1. Acesse a página Instâncias do Spanner no console do Google Cloud.

    Acessar a página "Instâncias"

  2. Clique na sua instância.

  3. Clique em Excluir.

  4. Confirme se quer excluir a instância e clique em Excluir.

A seguir