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| Problem | Using the WebSphere® Application Server data source with the Connect JDBC™ driver (DataDirect Connect JDBC, WebSphere embedded Connect JDBC or Microsoft® SQL Server 2000 Driver) to connect to SQL Server 2000, results in the following exception:
java.sql.SQLException "[Microsoft][SQLServer 2000 Driver for JDBC]The specified SQL type is not supported by this driver" | | Cause | This is not a problem with the WebSphere Application Server Connection Manager. The java.sql.SQLException: [Microsoft][SQLServer 2000 Driver for JDBC]The specified SQL type is not supported by this driver is returned from JDBC Driver (DataDirect Connect JDBC, WebSphere embedded Connect JDBC or Microsoft SQL Server 2000 Driver) when an application uses something that is not supported by the JDBC Driver.
The JDBC specification, Chapter 17 Customized Type Mapping, section 17.7 on "NULL Data" states:
"An application uses the existing getObject and setObject mechanism to retrieve and store SQLData values. We note that when the second parameter, x, of method PreparedStatement.setObject has the value null, the driver executes the SQL statement as if the SQL literal NULL had appeared in its place. void setObject (int i, Object x) throws SQLException; When parameter x is null, there is no enforcement that the corresponding argument expression is of a Java type that could successfully be passed to that SQL statement if its value were not null. The Java programming language null carries no type information. For example, a null Java programming language variable of class AntiMatter could be passed as an argument to an SQL statement that requires a value of SQL type MATTER, and no error would result, even though the relevant type map object did not permit the translation of MATTER to AntiMatter."
Based on the JDBC specification, it is not recommended to use setObject(int, null). | | Solution | The following 3 setObject methods are available for use with the PreparedStatement object:
- setObject(int, Object)
- setObject(int, Object, int)
- setObject(int, Object, int, int)
Using the second method setObject(int, Object, int) where the third parameter is the targetJDBCType works fine. For example:
setObject(1, null, java.sql.Types.VARCHAR) | |
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Product categories: Software, Application Servers, Distributed Application & Web Servers, WebSphere Application Server, DB Connections/Connection Pooling Operating system(s): AIX, HPUX, Linux, Multi-Platform, Solaris, Windows Software version: 3.5, 4.0, 5.0, 5.1, 6.0 Software edition: Advanced, Base, Edition Independent, Network Deployment, Single Server, Standard Reference #: 1195926 IBM Group: Software Group Modified date: 2005-01-17
(C) Copyright IBM Corporation 2000, 2004. All Rights Reserved.
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