WildFly DataSource

Teiid can be configured as a JDBC data source in a WildFly Server to be accessed from JNDI or injected into your JEE applications. Deploying Teiid as data source in WildFly is exactly same as deploying any other RDBMS resources like Oracle or DB2.

Defining as data source is not limited to WildFly, you can also deploy as data source in Glassfish, Tomcat, Websphere, Weblogic etc servers, however their configuration files are different than WildFly. Consult the respective documentation of the environment in which you are deploying.

A special case exists if the Teiid instance you are connecting to is in the same VM as the WildFly instance. If that matches you deployment, then follow the Local JDBC Connection instructions

Installation Steps

  1. If you are working with an AS instance that already has Teiid installed then required module / jar files are already installed. If the AS instance does not have Teiid installed, then you should create a module for the client jar. Under the path module/org/jboss/teiid/client add the client jar and a module.xml defined as:

Sample Teiid Client Module
<module xmlns="urn:jboss:module:1.1" name="org.jboss.teiid.client">
    <resources>
        <resource-root path="teiid-{version}-jdbc.jar"/>
    </resources>

    <dependencies>
        <module name="javax.api"/>
        <module name="javax.transaction.api"/>
    </dependencies>
</module>
Note
Prior to Teiid 8.12.3 a module dependency on sun.jdk was also required.
  1. Use the CLI or edit the standalone-teiid.xml or domain-teiid.xml file and add a datasource into the "datasources" subsystem.

Based on the type of deployment (XA, driver, or local), the contents of this will be different. See the following sections for more. The data source will then be accessible through the JNDI name specified in the below configuration.

DataSource Connection

Make sure you know the correct DatabaseName, ServerName, Port number and credentials that are specific to your deployment environment.

Sample XADataSource in the WildFly using the Teiid DataSource class org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDataSource
<datasources>
        <xa-datasource jndi-name="java:/teiidDS" pool-name="teiidDS" enabled="true" use-java-context="true" use-ccm="true">

            <xa-datasource-property name="PortNumber">31000</xa-datasource-property>
            <xa-datasource-property name="DatabaseName">{db-name}</xa-datasource-property>
            <xa-datasource-property name="ServerName">{host}</xa-datasource-property>

            <driver>teiid</driver>
            <xa-pool>
                <min-pool-size>10</min-pool-size>
                <max-pool-size>20</max-pool-size>
                <is-same-rm-override>true</is-same-rm-override>
                <prefill>false</prefill>
                <use-strict-min>false</use-strict-min>
                <flush-strategy>FailingConnectionOnly</flush-strategy>
                <no-tx-separate-pools/>
            </xa-pool>
            <security>
                <user-name>{user}</user-name>
                <password>{password}</password>
            </security>
        </xa-datasource>
        <drivers>
            <driver name="teiid" module="org.jboss.teiid.client">
                <driver-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDriver</driver-class>
                <xa-datasource-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDataSource</xa-datasource-class>
            </driver>
        </drivers>
    </datasources>

Driver based connection

You can also use Teiid’s JDBC driver class org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDriver to create a data source

<datasources>
        <datasource jndi-name="java:/teiidDS" pool-name="teiidDS">
            <connection-url>jdbc:teiid:{vdb}@mm://{host}:31000</connection-url>
            <driver>teiid</driver>
            <pool>
                <prefill>false</prefill>
                <use-strict-min>false</use-strict-min>
                <flush-strategy>FailingConnectionOnly</flush-strategy>
            </pool>
            <security>
                <user-name>{user}</user-name>
                <password>{password}</password>
            </security>
        </datasource>
        <drivers>
            <driver name="teiid" module="org.jboss.teiid.client">
                <driver-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDriver</driver-class>
                <xa-datasource-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDataSource</xa-datasource-class>
            </driver>
        </drivers>
    </datasources>

Local JDBC Connection

If you are deploying your client application on the same WildFly instance as the Teiid runtime is installed, then you will want to configure the connection to by-pass making a socket based JDBC connection. By using a slightly different data source configuration to make a "local" connection, the JDBC API will lookup a local Teiid runtime in the same VM.

Warning
Since DataSources start before Teiid VDBs are deployed, leave the min pool size of 0 for local connections. Otherwise errors may occur on the startup of the Teiid DataSource.  Also note that local connections specifying a VDB version will wait for their VDB to be loaded before allowing a connection. See loginTimeout and the org.teiid.clientVdbLoadTimeoutMillis system property.
Warning
Do not include any additional copy of Teiid jars in the application classload that is utilizing the local connection.  Even if the exact same version of the client jar is included in your application classloader, you will fail to connect to the local connection with a class cast exception.
Note
By default local connections use their calling thread to perform processing operations rather than using an engine thread while the calling thread is blocked. To disable this behavior set the connection property useCallingThreads=false. The default is true, and is recommended in transactional queries.
Local data source
<datasources>
        <datasource jndi-name="java:/teiidDS" pool-name="teiidDS">
            <connection-url>jdbc:teiid:{vdb}</connection-url>
            <driver>teiid-local</driver>
            <pool>
                <prefill>false</prefill>
                <use-strict-min>false</use-strict-min>
                <flush-strategy>FailingConnectionOnly</flush-strategy>
            </pool>
            <security>
                <user-name>{user}</user-name>
                <password>{password}</password>
            </security>
        </datasource>
        <drivers>
            <driver name="teiid-local" module="org.jboss.teiid">
                <driver-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDriver</driver-class>
                <xa-datasource-class>org.teiid.jdbc.TeiidDataSource</xa-datasource-class>
            </driver>
        </drivers>
    </datasources>

This is essentially the same as the XA configuration, but "ServerName" and "PortNumber" are not specified. Local connections have additional features such as using PassthroughAuthentication

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