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openSUSE:Step:15-SP2
hsqldb.26565
hsqldb-1.8.0-standard-sqltool.rc
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File hsqldb-1.8.0-standard-sqltool.rc of Package hsqldb.26565
# $Id: hsqldb-1.8.0-standard-sqltool.rc,v 1.1 2007/08/31 13:37:06 fnasser Exp $ # This is a sample SqlTool configuration file, a.k.a. rc file. # You can run SqlTool right now by copying this file to your home directory # and running # java -jar /path/to/hsqldb.jar mem # This will access the first urlid definition below in order to use a # personal Memory-Only database. # If you have the least concerns about security, then secure access to # your sqltool.rc file. # See the documentation for SqlTool for various ways to use this file. # A personal Memory-Only database. urlid mem url jdbc:hsqldb:mem:memdbid username sa password # This is for a hsqldb Server running with default settings on your local # computer (and for which you have not changed the password for "sa"). urlid db0-url url jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://localhost/firstdb username sa password ########################################################################### # Template for a urlid for an Oracle database. # You will need to put the oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver class into your # classpath. # In the great majority of cases, you want to use the file classes12.zip # (which you can get from the directory $ORACLE_HOME/jdbc/lib of any # Oracle installation compatible with your server). # Since you need to add to the classpath, you can't invoke SqlTool with # the jar switch, like "java -jar .../hsqldb.jar..." or # "java -jar .../hsqlsqltool.jar...". # Put both the HSQLDB jar and classes12.zip in your classpath (and export!) # and run something like "java org.hsqldb.util.SqlTool...". #urlid cardiff2 #url jdbc:oracle:thin:@aegir.admc.com:1522:TRAFFIC_SID #username blaine #password secretpassword #driver oracle.jdbc.OracleDriver ########################################################################### ########################################################################### # Template for a urlid for a Postgresql database. # You will need to put the org.postgresql.Driver class into your # classpath. # The postgresql jar will be named postgresql.jar (if you built Postgresql # from source), or something like pg73b1jdbc3.jar or jdbc7.2x-1.2.jar. # You can obtain it from a client or server Postgresql installation, or # download it from http://jdbc.postgresql.org/download.html. # Notice that the jar file names (other than "postgresql.jar") contain both # the target Postgresql server version and the client-side JDBC level (which # is determined by your client-side Java version, as explained at # http://jdbc.postgresql.org/download.html). # I recommend the latest production version for your JDBC version. The # later JDBC drivers work better even with older Postgresql servers. # (E.g. \dt won't list owners with an older driver). # N.b.: Suse Linux 9.1 users should download a new driver from the PG site, # since Suse distributes the 7.3 drivers with Postgresql 7.4 (why???). # Since you need to add to the classpath, you can't invoke SqlTool with # the jar switch, like "java -jar .../hsqldb.jar..." or # "java -jar .../hsqlsqltool.jar...". # Put both the HSQLDB jar and the Postgresql jar in your classpath (and # export!) and run something like "java org.hsqldb.util.SqlTool...". # N.b.: I notice that Postgresql is unusual in that it does not do an # implicit commit before DDL commands. If you get an error message # "... cannot run inside a transaction block", just run "commit;" and retry. #urlid commerce #url jdbc:postgresql://dbsvr2/commercedb #username blaine #password obscured #driver org.postgresql.Driver ########################################################################### ########################################################################### # Template for a TLS-encrypted HSQLDB Server. # Remember that the hostname in hsqls (and https) JDBC URLs must match the # CN of the server certificate (the port and instance alias that follows # are not part of the certificate at all). # You only need to set "truststore" if the server cert is not approved by # your system default truststore (which a commercial certificate probably # would be). #urlid tls #url jdbc:hsqldb:hsqls://db.admc.com:9001/lm2 #username blaine #password asecret #truststore /home/blaine/ca/db/db-trust.store ###########################################################################
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