The bean data source type is a key extension because it allows you to make use of any custom or exotic data that you might need to report on. Bean data sources serve as a bridge between a Spring-defined bean and a JasperReport. The Spring bean is responsible for providing the data or parameters that fill the report.
To use a bean data source, you must first configure the underlying Spring bean and make it available in the server’s web application context. For example, you would add a bean definition to one of the WEB-INF/applicationContext*.xml files.
The bean must resolve to a ReportDataSourceService instance, either directly or by way of a factory no-argument method. You can use any Spring instantiation method (for example, a constructor or factory) and bean scope (for example, singleton or prototype) for the data source service bean.
The ReportDataSourceService instance is responsible for supplying data source parameters to the JasperReport. Custom ReportDataSourceService implementations can follow two approaches:
| • | If the implementation can provide the data to be used to fill a report, it needs to wrap the data into a suitable JRDataSource implementation and pass the data using the REPORT_DATA_SOURCE report parameter. |
| • | If the data comes from the report query by way of a JasperReports query executor, the data source service must set values for the connection parameters defined by the query executor. The connection parameters are usually obtained from the properties of the data source service instance. |
For example, you could implement a Hibernate data source service that would be injected in a session factory. The factory would create a Hibernate session that would be passed as a value for the HIBERNATE_SESSION parameter. The JasperReports Hibernate query executor then uses the parameter to run the HQL report query.
The ReportDataSourceService interface contains two methods: setReportParameterValues and closeConnection. The former provides data and connection parameter values; the latter is required to close and release any resources or connections created during the call to setReportParameterValues.
Once the data source service bean is available through Spring, you can add the bean data source to the repository.
To create a bean data source:
| 1. | Log on as an administrator. |
| 2. | Click View > Repository, expand the folder tree, and right-click a folder to select Add Resource > Data Source from the context menu. Alternatively, you can select Create > Data Source from the main menu on any page and specify a folder location later. If you installed the sample data, the suggested folder is Data Sources. The New Data Source page appears, as shown in the figure below. |
| 3. | In the Type field, select Bean Data Source. The information on the page changes to reflect what’s needed to define a bean data source. |
| 4. | Enter the bean name. If the data source service is to be instantiated through a factory method of the Spring bean, you should also enter the name of the method. |
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Bean Data Source Page |
| 5. | Click Test Connection to validate the data source. If the validation fails, ensure that the values you entered are correct and that the bean is in the classpath. |
| 6. | When the test is successful, click Save. The Save dialog appears. |
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Saving a Bean Data Connection |
| 7. | Enter the data source name and, optionally, a description. the Resource ID appears based on the name you enter. |
| 8. | Expand the folder tree and select the location for your data source, then click Save. The data source appears in the repository. |
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