Handling SQLExceptions

This page covers the following topics:

Overview of SQLException

When JDBC encounters an error during an interaction with a data source, it throws an instance of SQLException as opposed to Exception. (A data source in this context represents the database to which a Connection object is connected.) The SQLException instance contains the following information that can help you determine the cause of the error:

  • A description of the error. Retrieve the String object that contains this description by calling the method SQLException.getMessage.

  • A SQLState code. These codes and their respective meanings have been standardized by ISO/ANSI and Open Group (X/Open), although some codes have been reserved for database vendors to define for themselves. This String object consists of five alphanumeric characters. Retrieve this code by calling the method SQLException.getSQLState.

  • An error code. This is an integer value identifying the error that caused the SQLException instance to be thrown. Its value and meaning are implementation-specific and might be the actual error code returned by the underlying data source. Retrieve the error by calling the method SQLException.getErrorCode.

  • A cause. A SQLException instance might have a causal relationship, which consists of one or more Throwable objects that caused the SQLException instance to be thrown. To navigate this chain of causes, recursively call the method SQLException.getCause until a null value is returned.

  • A reference to any chained exceptions. If more than one error occurs, the exceptions are referenced through this chain. Retrieve these exceptions by calling the method SQLException.getNextException on the exception that was thrown.

Retrieving Exceptions

The following method, JDBCTutorialUtilities.printSQLException outputs the SQLState, error code, error description, and cause (if there is one) contained in the SQLException as well as any other exception chained to it:

public static void printSQLException(SQLException ex) {

    for (Throwable e : ex) {
        if (e instanceof SQLException) {
            if (ignoreSQLException(
                ((SQLException)e).
                getSQLState()) == false) {

                e.printStackTrace(System.err);
                System.err.println("SQLState: " +
                    ((SQLException)e).getSQLState());

                System.err.println("Error Code: " +
                    ((SQLException)e).getErrorCode());

                System.err.println("Message: " + e.getMessage());

                Throwable t = ex.getCause();
                while(t != null) {
                    System.out.println("Cause: " + t);
                    t = t.getCause();
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

For example, if you call the method CoffeesTable.dropTable with Java DB as your DBMS, the table COFFEES does not exist, and you remove the call to JDBCTutorialUtilities.ignoreSQLException, the output will be similar to the following:

SQLState: 42Y55
Error Code: 30000
Message: 'DROP TABLE' cannot be performed on
'TESTDB.COFFEES' because it does not exist.

Instead of outputting SQLException information, you could instead first retrieve the SQLState then process the SQLException accordingly. For example, the method JDBCTutorialUtilities.ignoreSQLException returns true if the SQLState is equal to code 42Y55 (and you are using Java DB as your DBMS), which causes JDBCTutorialUtilities.printSQLException to ignore the SQLException:

public static boolean ignoreSQLException(String sqlState) {

    if (sqlState == null) {
        System.out.println("The SQL state is not defined!");
        return false;
    }

    // X0Y32: Jar file already exists in schema
    if (sqlState.equalsIgnoreCase("X0Y32"))
        return true;

    // 42Y55: Table already exists in schema
    if (sqlState.equalsIgnoreCase("42Y55"))
        return true;

    return false;
}

Retrieving Warnings

SQLWarning objects are a subclass of SQLException that deal with database access warnings. Warnings do not stop the execution of an application, as exceptions do; they simply alert the user that something did not happen as planned. For example, a warning might let you know that a privilege you attempted to revoke was not revoked. Or a warning might tell you that an error occurred during a requested disconnection.

A warning can be reported on a Connection object, a Statement object (including PreparedStatement and CallableStatement objects), or a ResultSet object. Each of these classes has a getWarnings method, which you must invoke in order to see the first warning reported on the calling object. If getWarnings returns a warning, you can call the SQLWarning method getNextWarning on it to get any additional warnings. Executing a statement automatically clears the warnings from a previous statement, so they do not build up. This means, however, that if you want to retrieve warnings reported on a statement, you must do so before you execute another statement.

The following methods from JDBCTutorialUtilities illustrate how to get complete information about any warnings reported on Statement or ResultSet objects:

public static void getWarningsFromResultSet(ResultSet rs)
    throws SQLException {
    JDBCTutorialUtilities.printWarnings(rs.getWarnings());
}

public static void getWarningsFromStatement(Statement stmt)
    throws SQLException {
    JDBCTutorialUtilities.printWarnings(stmt.getWarnings());
}

public static void printWarnings(SQLWarning warning)
    throws SQLException {

    if (warning != null) {
        System.out.println("\n---Warning---\n");

    while (warning != null) {
        System.out.println("Message: " + warning.getMessage());
        System.out.println("SQLState: " + warning.getSQLState());
        System.out.print("Vendor error code: ");
        System.out.println(warning.getErrorCode());
        System.out.println("");
        warning = warning.getNextWarning();
    }
}

The most common warning is a DataTruncation warning, a subclass of SQLWarning. All DataTruncation objects have a SQLState of 01004, indicating that there was a problem with reading or writing data. DataTruncation methods let you find out in which column or parameter data was truncated, whether the truncation was on a read or write operation, how many bytes should have been transferred, and how many bytes were actually transferred.

Categorized SQLExceptions

Your JDBC driver might throw a subclass of SQLException that corresponds to a common SQLState or a common error state that is not associated with a specific SQLState class value. This enables you to write more portable error-handling code. These exceptions are subclasses of one of the following classes:

  • SQLNonTransientException
  • SQLTransientException
  • SQLRecoverableException

See the latest Javadoc of the java.sql package or the documentation of your JDBC driver for more information about these subclasses.

Other Subclasses of SQLException

The following subclasses of SQLException can also be thrown:

  • BatchUpdateException is thrown when an error occurs during a batch update operation. In addition to the information provided by SQLException, BatchUpdateException provides the update counts for all statements that were executed before the error occurred.
  • SQLClientInfoException is thrown when one or more client information properties could not be set on a Connection. In addition to the information provided by SQLException, SQLClientInfoException provides a list of client information properties that were not set.