PhixFlow Help

Driver Classes

This page is for administrators who need to connect PhixFlow to external databases using Driver Classes.

Overview

The PhixFlow application communicates with:

  • the database on which it is installed.
  • an external database from which it needs to load data.
    This is configured using a Datasource in an analysis model.

To communicate with a database, PhixFlow needs:

  • The appropriate database driver jar files in its Driver Class File Directory.
    This location is set directly in the PhixFlow database, and is displayed in System Configuration.
  • A Driver Class for the database. One driver class can have multiple Driver Class Files.

There are three databases on which PhixFlow can be installed:

  • MariaDB
  • Microsoft (MS) SQL Server
  • Oracle.

For each of these, PhixFlow is preconfigured with:

  • database driver jar files in tomcat/webapps/phixflow/lib 
  • driver classes that use the database driver jar files.
Sections on this page



PhixFlow automatically uses the appropriate driver class to communicate with its own database. You can use these driver classes in a datasource. However, you cannot update their properties or see their driver class files.

You can use the MariaDB driver class to connect to a MySQL database.

You may need to configure additional database drivers to support:

  • other types of database
  • different versions a database.

How to Configure a Driver Class

  1. Find out which JDBC database drivers you require. This information is available in the documentation for your database. Also check the System Requirements and Compatibility page for supported versions. Communication to a database may require multiple JDBC driver files. 
  2. Download the required JDBC driver files from:
  3. Save the files to the Driver Class File Directory. You need permission to add system files to do this.
    • If it has been set in the PhixFlow database, it will be listed in the System Configuration.
    • If it has not been set:
      To set the driver class file directory in the PhixFlow database, use an SQL statement, for example:

      update system_configuration set driver_class_file_dir = ‘/opt/phixflow-drivers’;
      commit;

      Restart Tomcat to make the change visible to the PhixFlow application.

  4. In the PhixFlow application, for each type of database, create one Driver Class; see Adding or Changing a Driver Class, below.
  5. In the driver class properties → Driver Class File section, add all the JDBC driver files that the database requires; see Driver Classes and Driver Class File Properties, below.
  6. For each driver class file, specify the full path to the file, which is stored in the Driver Class File Directory, or a sub-directory of it.

Adding or Changing a Driver Class 

To create a driver class, in the full repository scroll down to the  Driver Classes section. 

To add a new driver, right-click Driver Classes and select  Add. PhixFlow opens a property tab where you can enter the details for the new driver.

To open an existing driver class, in the repository click on its name.

You cannot change the pre-configured driver classes supplied with your PhixFlow installation. These have the System Defined property ticked.

Driver Classes and Driver Class File Properties 

The driver classes configured in the repository populate the drop-down list in  Datasource properties Basic Settings → Driver Class

For information about the properties toolbar, and about the sections Parent Details, Analysis Models, Description and Audit Summary, see Common Properties.  For a full list of all the PhixFlow property tabs and windows, see Property Tabs.

Basic Settings

FieldDescription

Name

Enter a unique name for the database driver, which will appear in the PhixFlow repository.
Driver Class Name

Enter the driver class name, which you will find in the driver documentation. For example, for MySQL, the driver name is: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver

System Defined

Read-only.

 Untick indicates this driver class is custom defined for your PhixFlow instance. You can change it's configuration.

 Tick indicates this driver is preconfigured when PhixFlow is installed. It is required for the system and cannot be updated.

DescriptionOptionally enter a description for the driver.

Driver Class File

This section has a toolbar with standard buttons

The grid lists the jar files for this driver class. Each database usually requires multiple jar files. To add a jar file to the list:

  1. Click  Add to open a the properties for a new Driver Class File Location.
    (Driver Class File Location properties are only available from this grid. They are not listed in the repository.)
  2. In the Basic Settings section, set:

    FieldDescription

    Name

    Enter a unique name for the driver.  
    Connector Jar File Location

    Specify the full path to the to the database directory and driver class jar file. For example:

    • Linux:  /opt/phixflow-drivers/<driver.jar>
    • Windows:  C:\opt\phixflow-drivers\<driver.jar>

    The root Driver Class File Directory, must also be specified in System Configuration

  3. Click  OK to save and close the properties and return to the driver class properties.

To remove a jar file from the grid, use the toolbar button  Permanently Delete.

Using Drivers Across Multiple Instances

If you run multiple instances of PhixFlow, you must ensure that any custom driver classes you create:

  • are exported and then imported to other instances
  • have access to the database driver jar file from the other instances.

This ensures that all datasource objects that use the database driver continue to work on the other instances. 

How PhixFlow Decides Which Driver to Use

PhixFlow is configured with a class path for finding drivers. This will use the first appropriate driver it finds in:

  1. The Connector Jar File Location configured for the driver classes file. 
  2. tomcat/webapps/phixflow/WEB-INF/lib
  3. tomcat/lib.

In PhixFlow version 8.2 it is possible to use tomcat/lib as the System Configuration → Driver Class File Directory. However this is deprecated. In a future release, we will remove the ability to use the tomcat/lib directory for driver files.

Deprecated Driver Classes

The repository includes the following, deprecated driver classes, for backwards compatibility. 

  • DB2
  • Debug JDBC
  • Google Big Query
  • Hadoop Hive
  • MySQL
  • Netezza
  • Sun ODBC Bridge
  • Teradata

These are drivers are read-only and do not connect to any database drivers. If you want to connect to one of these databases, we recommend you create a new driver class in which you can configure all the database drives needed.

If you want to connect a preconfigured driver class to the appropriate JDBC database driver files, download and save them to tomcat/webapps/phixflow/WEB-INF/lib. Be aware that the deprecated driver classes will be removed in a future release.

Please let us know if we could improve this page feedback@phixflow.com