Table of Contents
Building the Berkeley DB java classes, the examples and the native support library is integrated into the normal build process. See Configuring Berkeley DB and Building the Java API in the Berkeley DB Installation and Build Guide for more information.
We expect that you already installed the Java JDK or equivalent on your system. For the sake of discussion, we assume that it is in a directory called db-VERSION; for example, you downloaded a Berkeley DB archive, and you did not change the top-level directory name. The files related to Java are in three subdirectories of db-VERSION: java (the java source files), libdb_java (the C++ files that provide the "glue" between java and Berkeley DB) and examples/java (containing all examples code). The directory tree looks like this:
db-VERSION
|-- java
|   `-- src
|       `-- com
|           `-- sleepycat
|               |-- bind
|               |-- db
|               |   `-- ...
|               `-- util
|-- examples_java
|   `-- src
|       `-- db
|           `-- ...
`-- libdb_java
    `-- ...
        
        This naming conforms to the de facto standard for naming
        java packages. When the java code is built, it is placed into
        two jar files: db.jar, containing the db
        package, and dbexamples.jar, containing
        the examples.
    
        For your application to use Berkeley DB successfully, you
        must set your CLASSPATH environment
        variable to include the full pathname of the db jar files as
        well as the classes in your java distribution. On UNIX,
        CLASSPATH is a colon-separated list of
        directories and jar files; on Windows, it is separated by
        semicolons. On UNIX, the jar files are put in your build
        directory, and when you do the make install step, they are
        copied to the lib directory of your installation tree. On
        Windows, the jar files are placed in the Release or Debug
        subdirectory with your other objects.
    
The Berkeley DB Java classes are mostly implemented in native methods. Before you can use them, you need to make sure that the DLL or shared library containing the native methods can be found by your Java runtime. On Windows, you should set your PATH variable to include:
          db-VERSION\build_windows\Release
        
        
        On UNIX, you should set the
        LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable or
        local equivalent to include the Berkeley DB library
        installation directory. Of course, the standard install
        directory may have been changed for your site; see your system
        administrator for details.
    
        On other platforms, the path can be set on the command line
        as follows (assuming the shared library is in
        /usr/local/BerkeleyDB/lib:)
    
% java -Djava.library.path=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB/lib ...
Regardless, if you get the following exception when you run, you probably do not have the library search path configured correctly:
java.lang.UnsatisfiedLinkError
        Different Java interpreters provide different error messages
        if the CLASSPATH value is incorrect, a
        typical error is the following:
    
java.lang.NoClassDefFoundError
To ensure that everything is running correctly, you may want to try a simple test from the example programs in
          db-VERSION/examples/java/src/db
        
        
        For example, the following sample program will prompt for
        text input lines, which are then stored in a Btree database
        named access.db in your current
        directory:
    
% java db.AccessExample
Try giving it a few lines of input text and then end-of-file. Before it exits, you should see a list of the lines you entered display with data items. This is a simple check to make sure the fundamental configuration is working correctly.