http://ofbiz.116.s1.nabble.com/Check-DB-connection-availability-tp141538p141540.html
using that for this. Clustering is really what is intended to solve
this sort of problem.
the C-JDBC driver.
> I'm using oracle DB.
> For stored procedures, I can create 2 db links to the 2 db (life
> and backup) on my schema, and inside the stored procedure I can do
> the following:
> Retrieve the data from the life one,
> If no data found then retrieve the data from the backup one
>
> ==================================
> Mamdouh Kaadan
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David E Jones [mailto:
[hidden email]]
> Sent: Sunday, August 27, 2006 8:39 PM
> To:
[hidden email]
> Subject: Re: Check DB connection availability
>
>
> Which database are you using? Some database drivers are a bit inane
> by default and don't reconnect to the database automatically. For
> these there is usually a JDBC uri parameter to turn on this option.
>
> Use stored procedures to get the data? I have no idea how this would
> help with a lost connection problem... but it certainly does follow
> the what has been the database design and DBA agenda for the first
> few decades of the life of databases... ;)
>
> -David
>
>
> On Aug 27, 2006, at 10:37 AM, Mamdouh Kaadan wrote:
>
>> Dear all
>>
>>
>>
>> I'm facing a problem with my DB connections, I have 2 DBs, one life
>> and
>> the other is Backup.
>>
>> Sometimes, the life one due to unexpected error shut down suddenly,
>> and
>> all the pages in OFBiz related to this DB give an error.
>>
>>
>>
>> How can I check if the connection is still available or not, and in
>> case
>> of unavailability, how can I connect to the backup DB in a
>> transparent
>> way??
>>
>> The DBA advised me to retrieve the data through stored procedures,
>> but
>> as I know, the stored procedure is not supported by OFBiz.
>>
>>
>>
>> Please advice
>>
>>
>>
>> Kind regards
>>
>>
>>
>> ==================================
>>
>> Mamdouh Kaadan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>