Administrator’s Guide
Table Of Contents
- Preface Introducing FileMaker Pro 5.5 Unlimited
- Chapter 1 Installing the FileMaker Web Server Connector
- Chapter 2 Administering the Web Server Connector
- Chapter 3 Publishing your database on the Web
- Types of web publishing
- Using the FileMakerPro Web Companion
- Creating a custom home page
- Creating a custom home page for Instant Web Publishing
- Creating a custom web site using a database layout
- Web Companion support for Internet mediatypes
- Monitoring your site
- Exporting data to a static HTML page
- Testing your site without a networkconnection
- Opening password-protected databasesremotely
- Chapter 4 Custom web publishing using CDML
- About the CDML examples
- General steps for custom web publishing using CDML
- About CDML format files
- Generating FileMakerPro CGI requests using CDML
- Using the CDML Tool and templates
- Modified CDML tags
- About the CDML Reference database
- Creating error messages
- Using an encoding parameter with a CDML replacement tag
- Planning your web site
- Chapter 5 Using FileMakerPro XML to deliver your data
- About the XML examples
- General process for custom web publishing using XML
- Generating an XML document
- Using the FMPDSORESULT grammar
- Using the FileMakerPro Extended XMLgrammars
- About UTF-8 encoded data
- Generating FileMakerPro CGI requests for an XML document
- Using style sheets with your XMLdocument
- Comparing CSS, XSLT, and JavaScript
- Looking at the XML Inventory example
- Chapter 6 Using Java and JDBC to deliver your data
- About the JDBC examples
- About JDBC
- Using the FileMaker JDBC Driver
- SQL supported by the FileMaker JDBCDriver
- FileMakerPro support for Unicodecharacters
- About the FileMaker JDBC Driver interfaces and extensions
- Example 1: Looking at the FileMakerPro Explorer application
- Example 2: Creating the JBuilder Inventoryapplication
- Example 3: Creating the Visual Cafe Inventory application
- Using the FileMaker Java classes
- Appendix A Valid names used in CGI requests for FileMaker XML data
- Generating a –find, –findall, or –findany request
- Generating a –view request
- Generating a –new request
- Generating an –edit request
- Generating a –delete request
- Generating a –dbnames request
- Generating a –layoutnames request
- Generating a –scriptnames request
- Generating a –dbopen request
- Generating a –dbclose request
- Specifying parameters for the request
- –db (Database)
- –lay (Layout)
- –format (Format)
- –recid (Record ID)
- –modid (Modification ID)
- –lop (Logical operator)
- –op (Comparison operator)
- –max (Maximum records)
- –skip (Skip records)
- –sortfield (Sort field)
- –sortorder (Sort order)
- –script (Script)
- –script.prefind (Script before Find)
- –script.presort (Script before Sort)
- –styletype (Style type)
- –stylehref (Style href)
- –password (Database password)
- field name (Name of specific field)
- Appendix B FileMaker Pro values for error codes
- Appendix C Enabling the FileMaker Pro Web Companion in MacOS X
- Index
Using Java and JDBC to deliver your data 6-3
The Web Server Connector allows you to encrypt and decrypt your
data via HTTPS.
jdbc:fmpro:https://www.filemaker.com:80
Here is an example of registering the FileMaker JDBC Driver with
the JDBC driver manager and connecting to FileMaker Pro via the
Web Companion —where the open FileMaker Pro database is
named Employees.fp5 and the JDBC URL is
jdbc:fmpro:http://localhost:
import java.sql.*;
class FMPJDBCTest
{
public static void main(String[ ] args)
{
try
{
// register the FMPJDBC driver
Class.forName("com.fmi.jdbc.JdbcDriver");
// establish a connection to FileMaker Pro at a given IP
// address
Connection fmpConnection =
DriverManager.getConnection("jdbc:fmpro:
http://localhost", "some_user", "some_password");
Statement fmpStatement =
fmpConnection.createStatement();
// return a maximum of 50 records
fmpStatement.setMaxRows(50);
ResultSet resultSet = fmpStatement.execute("select \"last
name\", \"first name\" from \"employees.fp5\" where
department='engineering' order by \"last name\"");
System.out.println("Engineering Department");
while (resultSet.next())
System.out.println(resultSet.getString("last name") +
", " + resultSet.getString("first name"));
}
catch(ClassNotFoundException classNotFoundException)
{
System.out.printIn(“Could not load driver”);
}
catch(SQLException sqlException)
{
System.out.printIn(“JDBC Error:” +
sqlException.getMessage());
}
}
}
Note This example is not meant to be compiled.
Specifying driver properties in the URL subname
You can specify the escape, fetchsize, user, and password driver
properties in the subname of the JDBC URL. This is useful when
you’re using a RAD tool that doesn’t support spaces, periods, or
other non-letter characters.
jdbc:fmpro:http://17.184.21.234/properties?escape=%20.&
fetchsize=100&user=fred&password=test
Note These are the same properties that could be passed to the
connection when calling the DriverManager.getConnection method
via the Properties parameter.