The SOCI Oracle backend is currently supported for use with Oracle 10 or later.
Older versions of Oracle may work as well, but they have not been tested by the SOCI team.
| Oracle version | Operating System | Compiler |
|---|---|---|
| 10.2.0 (XE) | RedHat 5 | g++ 4.3 |
The SOCI Oracle backend requires Oracle's libclntsh client library.
Depending on the particular system, the libnnz10 library might be needed as well.
Note that the SOCI library itself depends also on libdl, so the minimum set of libraries needed to compile a basic client program is:
-lsoci_core -lsoci_oracle -ldl -lclntsh -lnnz10
To establish a connection to an Oracle database, create a session object
using the oracle backend factory together with a connection string:
session sql(oracle, "service=orcl user=scott password=tiger");
// or:
session sql("oracle", "service=orcl user=scott password=tiger");
// or:
session sql("oracle://service=orcl user=scott password=tiger");
The set of parameters used in the connection string for Oracle is:
serviceuserpasswordmode (optional)The first 3 of these parameters have to be provided as part of the connection string.
The mode parameter allows to specify the connection mode and can be any of:
default (which is assumed if omitted)sysdbasysoperOnce you have created a session object as shown above, you can use it to access the database, for example:
int count; sql << "select count(*) from user_tables", into(count);
(See the SOCI basics and exchanging data documentation for general information on using the session class.)
The Oracle backend supports the use of the SOCI row class, which facilitates retrieval of data which type is not known at compile time.
When calling row::get<T>(), the type you should pass as T depends upon the underlying database type.
For the Oracle backend, this type mapping is:
| Oracle Data Type | SOCI Data Type | row::get<T> specializations |
|---|---|---|
| number (where scale > 0) | dt_double |
double |
| number (where scale = 0 and precision ≤ std::numeric_limits<int>::digits10) |
dt_integer |
int |
| number | dt_long_long |
long long |
| char, varchar, varchar2 | dt_string |
std::string |
| date | dt_date |
std::tm |
(See the dynamic resultset binding documentation for general information on using the row class.)
In addition to binding by position, the Oracle backend supports binding by name, via an overload of the use() function:
int id = 7; sql << "select name from person where id = :id", use(id, "id")
SOCI's use of ':' to indicate a value to be bound within a SQL string is consistant with the underlying Oracle client library syntax.
The Oracle backend has full support for SOCI's bulk operations interface.
Transactions are also fully supported by the Oracle backend, although transactions with non-default isolation levels have to be managed by explicit SQL statements.
The Oracle backend supports working with data stored in columns of type Blob, via SOCI's blob class.
Oracle rowid's are accessible via SOCI's rowid class.
The Oracle backend supports selecting into objects of type statement, so that you may work with nested sql statements and PL/SQL cursors:
statement stInner(sql);
statement stOuter = (sql.prepare <<
"select cursor(select name from person order by id)"
" from person where id = 1",
into(stInner));
stInner.exchange(into(name));
stOuter.execute();
stOuter.fetch();
while (stInner.fetch())
{
std::cout << name << '\n';
}
Oracle stored procedures can be executed by using SOCI's procedure class.
SOCI provides access to underlying datbabase APIs via several get_backend() functions, as described in the Beyond SOCI documentation.
The Oracle backend provides the following concrete classes for navite API access:
| Accessor Function | Concrete Class |
|---|---|
session_backend * session::get_backend() |
oracle_session_backend |
statement_backend * statement::get_backend() |
oracle_statement_backend |
blob_backend * blob::get_backend() |
oracle_blob_backend |
rowid_backend * rowid::get_backend() |
oracle_rowid_backend |
The Oracle backend can throw instances of class oracle_soci_error,
which is publicly derived from soci_error and has an
additional public err_num_ member containing the Oracle error code:
int main()
{
try
{
// regular code
}
catch (oracle_soci_error const & e)
{
cerr << "Oracle error: " << e.err_num_
<< " " << e.what() << endl;
}
catch (exception const &e)
{
cerr << "Some other error: " << e.what() << endl;
}
}
Copyright © 2004-2008 Maciej Sobczak, Stephen Hutton