BTW, if that still does not work for you, make sure your are using the
latest version of DBCP and of your JDBC Driver. Please report which
versions you are using. If you are still stuck, the only way we can
realistically help you here is if you provide a PR with a reproducible test
case using the H2 in memory database, see the existing tests for
inspiration. If you cannot reproduce the issue, then this might be specific
to your database of JDBC driver, in which case, we would still need a
standalone application that reproduces the issue.

Gary

On Thu, Jun 2, 2022, 08:22 Gary Gregory <garydgreg...@gmail.com> wrote:

> It might be simpler to avoid custom Java code. Is there a reason you are
> not using the log4j2-jdbc-dbcp2 module?
>
> For example
> https://github.com/apache/logging-log4j2/blob/release-2.x/log4j-jdbc-dbcp2/src/test/resources/log4j2-jdbc-dbcp2.xml
>
> Gary
>
> On Thu, Jun 2, 2022, 08:13 Sébastien Jachym <
> sebastien.jac...@agri-commerce.fr> wrote:
>
>> I'm logging with log4j2
>>
>> log4j2.xml :
>> <Configuration>
>>     <Appenders>
>>         <JDBC name="MySQLDatabase2" tableName="log4j2">
>>             <ConnectionFactory class="my.ConnectionFactory"
>> method="getConnection" />
>>             ...
>>         <AsyncRoot level="trace">
>>             <AppenderRef ref="MySQLDatabase2" />
>>
>> ConnectionFactory class :
>>     public static Connection getConnection() throws SQLException {
>>             dataSource = new org.apache.commons.dbcp2.BasicDataSource();
>>             dataSource.setUp ( url, user, pass, driver )
>>
>>             dataSource.setDefaultAutoCommit(false);
>>             dataSource.setAutoCommitOnReturn(false);
>>             dataSource.setRollbackOnReturn(false);
>>             dataSource.setValidationQuery("SELECT 1");
>>
>> //        Connection connection = dataSource.getConnection();
>> //        connection.setAutoCommit(true); // no change, first is SET
>> autocommit=(0|1) and log4j2 next is SET autocommit=0
>> //        return connection;
>>         return dataSource.getConnection();
>>
>> In code call :
>> org.apache.logging.log4j.Logger.trace("hello")
>>
>> Finally calling logger,
>> use JDBC Appender
>> and get a connection from the BasicDataSource pool.
>> And continu outside my code with the unwanted transactional statement.
>> For writing log in my database.
>>
>> -----Message d'origine-----
>> De : Gary Gregory <garydgreg...@gmail.com>
>> Envoyé : jeudi 2 juin 2022 11:23
>> À : Commons Users List <user@commons.apache.org>
>> Objet : Re: DBCP Database Connection Pools without transactionnal NO
>> autocommit
>>
>> Something is not clear to me: are you in control of calling JDBC or are
>> you
>> using Log4j's JDBC Appender or something else? You description is not
>> detailed enough for me to understand who does what.
>>
>> Gary
>>
>> On Wed, Jun 1, 2022, 19:49 Sébastien Jachym <
>> sebastien.jac...@agri-commerce.fr> wrote:
>>
>> > Hello,
>> > Thank you Gary for you reply, but it doesn’t work with configuring
>> > BasicDataSource with :
>> >    dataSource.setDefaultAutoCommit(false);
>> >    dataSource.setAutoCommitOnReturn(false);
>> >    dataSource.setRollbackOnReturn(false);
>> >
>> > There are changes, but always transactional with "SET autocommit" :
>> > SELECT @@session.transaction_isolation SELECT 1 -- ValidationQuery
>> > dans ConnectionFactory SET autocommit=0 SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=1 select
>> >
>> > date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,marke
>> > rSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis
>> > from log4j2 where 1=0
>> > SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=DEFAULT
>> > insert into log4j2
>> >
>> > (date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,mark
>> > erSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis)
>> > values (... the values ...)
>> > commit
>> >
>> > Also before returning the connection to my log4j2 Async Appenders
>> > whith ConnectionFactory, I force : connection.setAutoCommit(false);
>> > But result is same with transactional statements :
>> > SET autocommit=0 -- [ OR "SET autocommit=0" WITH
>> > connection.setAutoCommit(true); ] SET autocommit=0 SET
>> > SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=1 select
>> >
>> > date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,marke
>> > rSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis
>> > from log4j2 where 1=0
>> > SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=DEFAULT
>> > insert into log4j2
>> >
>> > (date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,mark
>> > erSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis)
>> > values ...
>> > commit
>> >
>> > Cheers.
>> >
>> >
>> > -----Message d'origine-----
>> > De : Gary Gregory <garydgreg...@gmail.com> Envoyé : mercredi 1 juin
>> > 2022 14:57 À : Commons Users List <user@commons.apache.org> Objet :
>> > Re: DBCP Database Connection Pools without transactionnal NO
>> > autocommit
>> >
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > Try calling Connection#setAutoCommit(false) once you get a Connection.
>> > You'll likely want to configure your data source with
>> > org.apache.commons.dbcp2.BasicDataSource.setAutoCommitOnReturn(false)
>> > to avoid resetting the auto-commit flag.
>> >
>> > Gary
>> >
>> > On Tue, May 31, 2022 at 7:46 PM Sébastien Jachym
>> > <sebastien.jac...@agri-commerce.fr> wrote:
>> > >
>> > > Hy, is a way to fully disabled transactional (autocommit) statement
>> > > in DBCP ?
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > Using Database Connection Pools with
>> > > org.apache.commons.dbcp2.BasicDataSource give me statements :
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > SET autocommit=1
>> > >
>> > > SET autocommit=0
>> > >
>> > > SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=1
>> > >
>> > > select
>> > > date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,mar
>> > > ke rSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis
>> > > from log4j2 where 1=0
>> > >
>> > > SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=DEFAULT
>> > >
>> > > insert into log4j2
>> > > (date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,ma
>> > > rk
>> > > erSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis)
>> > > values
>> > > ('2022-06-01','timertask','TRACE','WaitInitService','','45964','123','
>> > > null','','','','0')
>> > >
>> > > commit
>> > >
>> > > rollback
>> > >
>> > > SET autocommit=1
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > But it's for MySQL MyISAM table, and I didn't need transactions, I
>> > > whish only :
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > select
>> > > date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,mar
>> > > ke rSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis
>> > > from log4j2 where 1=0
>> > >
>> > > SET SQL_SELECT_LIMIT=DEFAULT
>> > >
>> > > insert into log4j2
>> > > (date,logger,level,message,exception,pid,idUtilisateur,version,ip,ma
>> > > rk
>> > > erSimpleName,sqlLastInsertId,sqlTimeMillis)
>> > > values
>> > > ('2022-06-01','timertask','TRACE','WaitInitService','','45964','123','
>> > > null','','','','0')
>> > >
>> > >
>> > >
>> > > Thanks for you replys.
>> >
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