Java idiomatic client for Cloud Spanner.
If you are using Maven with BOM, add this to your pom.xml file:
<dependencyManagement>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>libraries-bom</artifactId>
<version>26.48.0</version>
<type>pom</type>
<scope>import</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
</dependencyManagement>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-spanner</artifactId>
</dependency>
If you are using Maven without the BOM, add this to your dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.google.cloud</groupId>
<artifactId>google-cloud-spanner</artifactId>
<version>6.79.0</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle 5.x or later, add this to your dependencies:
implementation platform('com.google.cloud:libraries-bom:26.48.0')
implementation 'com.google.cloud:google-cloud-spanner'
If you are using Gradle without BOM, add this to your dependencies:
implementation 'com.google.cloud:google-cloud-spanner:6.79.0'
If you are using SBT, add this to your dependencies:
libraryDependencies += "com.google.cloud" % "google-cloud-spanner" % "6.79.0"
See the Authentication section in the base directory's README.
The client application making API calls must be granted authorization scopes required for the desired Cloud Spanner APIs, and the authenticated principal must have the IAM role(s) required to access GCP resources using the Cloud Spanner API calls.
You will need a Google Cloud Platform Console project with the Cloud Spanner API enabled.
You will need to enable billing to use Google Cloud Spanner.
Follow these instructions to get your project set up. You will also need to set up the local development environment by
installing the Google Cloud Command Line Interface and running the following commands in command line:
gcloud auth login
and gcloud config set project [YOUR PROJECT ID]
.
You'll need to obtain the google-cloud-spanner
library. See the Quickstart section
to add google-cloud-spanner
as a dependency in your code.
Cloud Spanner is a fully managed, mission-critical, relational database service that offers transactional consistency at global scale, \nschemas, SQL (ANSI 2011 with extensions), and automatic, synchronous replication \nfor high availability.\n\nBe sure to activate the Cloud Spanner API on the Developer's Console to\nuse Cloud Spanner from your project.
See the Cloud Spanner client library docs to learn how to use this Cloud Spanner Client Library.
Here is a code snippet showing a simple usage example. Add the following imports at the top of your file:
import com.google.cloud.spanner.DatabaseClient;
import com.google.cloud.spanner.DatabaseId;
import com.google.cloud.spanner.ResultSet;
import com.google.cloud.spanner.Spanner;
import com.google.cloud.spanner.SpannerOptions;
import com.google.cloud.spanner.Statement;
Then, to make a query to Spanner, use the following code:
// Instantiates a client
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder().build();
Spanner spanner = options.getService();
String instance = "my-instance";
String database = "my-database";
try {
// Creates a database client
DatabaseClient dbClient = spanner.getDatabaseClient(
DatabaseId.of(options.getProjectId(), instance, database));
// Queries the database
try (ResultSet resultSet = dbClient.singleUse().executeQuery(Statement.of("SELECT 1"))) {
// Prints the results
while (resultSet.next()) {
System.out.printf("%d\n", resultSet.getLong(0));
}
}
} finally {
// Closes the client which will free up the resources used
spanner.close();
}
In DatabaseSelect.java we put together all the code shown above in a single program.
The Cloud Spanner client maintains a session pool, as sessions are expensive to create and are intended to be long-lived. The client automatically takes a session from the pool and uses this executing queries and transactions. See Session Pool and Channel Pool Configuration for in-depth background information about sessions and gRPC channels and how these are handled in the Cloud Spanner Java client.
-
spanner/max_in_use_sessions
: This returns the maximum number of sessions that have been in use during the last maintenance window interval, so as to provide an indication of the amount of activity currently in the database. -
spanner/max_allowed_sessions
: This shows the maximum number of sessions allowed. -
spanner/num_sessions_in_pool
: This metric allows users to see instance-level and database-level data for the total number of sessions in the pool at this very moment. -
spanner/num_acquired_sessions
: This metric allows users to see the total number of acquired sessions. -
spanner/num_released_sessions
: This metric allows users to see the total number of released (destroyed) sessions. -
spanner/get_session_timeouts
: This gives you an indication of the total number of get session timed-out instead of being granted (the thread that requested the session is placed in a wait queue where it waits until a session is released into the pool by another thread) due to pool exhaustion since the server process started. -
spanner/gfe_latency
: This metric shows latency between Google's network receiving an RPC and reading back the first byte of the response. -
spanner/gfe_header_missing_count
: This metric shows the number of RPC responses received without the server-timing header, most likely indicating that the RPC never reached Google's network.
Cloud Spanner client supports OpenTelemetry Metrics, which gives insight into the client internals and aids in debugging/troubleshooting production issues. OpenTelemetry metrics will provide you with enough data to enable you to spot, and investigate the cause of any unusual deviations from normal behavior.
All Cloud Spanner Metrics are prefixed with spanner/
and uses cloud.google.com/java
as Instrumentation Scope. The
metrics will be tagged with:
database
: the target database name.instance_id
: the instance id of the target Spanner instance.client_id
: the user defined database client id.
By default, the functionality is disabled. You need to add OpenTelemetry dependencies, enable OpenTelemetry metrics and must configure the OpenTelemetry with appropriate exporters at the startup of your application:
If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-sdk</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-sdk-metrics</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-exporter-otlp</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-sdk:{opentelemetry.version}'
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-sdk-metrics:{opentelemetry.version}'
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-exporter-oltp:{opentelemetry.version}'
By default, all metrics are disabled. To enable metrics and configure the OpenTelemetry follow below:
// Enable OpenTelemetry metrics before injecting OpenTelemetry object.
SpannerOptions.enableOpenTelemetryMetrics();
SdkMeterProvider sdkMeterProvider = SdkMeterProvider.builder()
// Use Otlp exporter or any other exporter of your choice.
.registerMetricReader(PeriodicMetricReader.builder(OtlpGrpcMetricExporter.builder().build())
.build())
.build();
OpenTelemetry openTelemetry = OpenTelemetrySdk.builder()
.setMeterProvider(sdkMeterProvider)
.build()
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
// Inject OpenTelemetry object via Spanner Options or register OpenTelemetry object as Global
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.build();
Spanner spanner = options.getService();
The OpenTelemetry traces that are generated by the Java client include any request and transaction
tags that have been set. The traces can also include the SQL statements that are executed and the
name of the thread that executes the statement. Enable this with the enableExtendedTracing
option:
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.setEnableExtendedTracing(true)
.build();
This option can also be enabled by setting the environment variable
SPANNER_ENABLE_EXTENDED_TRACING=true
.
You can enable tracing of each API call that the Spanner client executes with the enableApiTracing
option. These traces also include any retry attempts for an API call:
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.setEnableApiTracing(true)
.build();
This option can also be enabled by setting the environment variable
SPANNER_ENABLE_API_TRACING=true
.
Note: The attribute keys that are used for additional information about retry attempts and the number of requests might change in a future release.
Note: OpenCensus project is deprecated. See Sunsetting OpenCensus. We recommend migrating to OpenTelemetry, the successor project.
Cloud Spanner client supports Opencensus Metrics, which gives insight into the client internals and aids in debugging/troubleshooting production issues. OpenCensus metrics will provide you with enough data to enable you to spot, and investigate the cause of any unusual deviations from normal behavior.
All Cloud Spanner Metrics are prefixed with cloud.google.com/java/spanner
The metrics are tagged with:
database
: the target database name.instance_id
: the instance id of the target Spanner instance.client_id
: the user defined database client id.library_version
: the version of the library that you're using.
By default, the functionality is disabled. You need to include opencensus-impl dependency to collect the data and exporter dependency to export to backend.
Click here for more information.
If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opencensus</groupId>
<artifactId>opencensus-impl</artifactId>
<version>0.30.0</version>
<scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opencensus</groupId>
<artifactId>opencensus-exporter-stats-stackdriver</artifactId>
<version>0.30.0</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'io.opencensus:opencensus-impl:0.30.0'
compile 'io.opencensus:opencensus-exporter-stats-stackdriver:0.30.0'
At the start of your application configure the exporter:
import io.opencensus.exporter.stats.stackdriver.StackdriverStatsExporter;
// Enable OpenCensus exporters to export metrics to Stackdriver Monitoring.
// Exporters use Application Default Credentials to authenticate.
// See https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/application-default-credentials
// for more details.
// The minimum reporting period for Stackdriver is 1 minute.
StackdriverStatsExporter.createAndRegister();
By default, all session metrics are enabled. To enable RPC views, use either of the following method:
// Register views for GFE metrics, including gfe_latency and gfe_header_missing_count.
SpannerRpcViews.registerGfeLatencyAndHeaderMissingCountViews();
// Register GFE Latency view.
SpannerRpcViews.registerGfeLatencyView();
// Register GFE Header Missing Count view.
SpannerRpcViews.registerGfeHeaderMissingCountView();
Cloud Spanner client supports OpenTelemetry Traces, which gives insight into the client internals and aids in debugging/troubleshooting production issues.
By default, the functionality is disabled. You need to add OpenTelemetry dependencies, enable OpenTelemetry traces and must configure the OpenTelemetry with appropriate exporters at the startup of your application.
If you are using Maven, add this to your pom.xml file
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-sdk</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-sdk-trace</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentelemetry</groupId>
<artifactId>opentelemetry-exporter-otlp</artifactId>
<version>{opentelemetry.version}</version>
</dependency>
If you are using Gradle, add this to your dependencies
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-sdk:{opentelemetry.version}'
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-sdk-trace:{opentelemetry.version}'
compile 'io.opentelemetry:opentelemetry-exporter-oltp:{opentelemetry.version}'
Note: Enabling OpenTelemetry traces will automatically disable OpenCensus traces.
// Enable OpenTelemetry traces
SpannerOptions.enableOpenTelemetryTraces();
// Create a new tracer provider
SdkTracerProvider sdkTracerProvider = SdkTracerProvider.builder()
// Use Otlp exporter or any other exporter of your choice.
.addSpanProcessor(SimpleSpanProcessor.builder(OtlpGrpcSpanExporter
.builder().build()).build())
.build();
OpenTelemetry openTelemetry = OpenTelemetrySdk.builder()
.setTracerProvider(sdkTracerProvider)
.build()
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
// Inject OpenTelemetry object via Spanner Options or register OpenTelmetry object as Global
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.build();
Spanner spanner = options.getService();
The OpenTelemetry traces that are generated by the Java client include any request and transaction
tags that have been set. The traces can also include the SQL statements that are executed and the
name of the thread that executes the statement. Enable this with the enableExtendedTracing
option:
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.setEnableExtendedTracing(true)
.build();
This option can also be enabled by setting the environment variable
SPANNER_ENABLE_EXTENDED_TRACING=true
.
You can enable tracing of each API call that the Spanner client executes with the enableApiTracing
option. These traces also include any retry attempts for an API call:
SpannerOptions options = SpannerOptions.newBuilder()
.setOpenTelemetry(openTelemetry)
.setEnableApiTracing(true)
.build();
This option can also be enabled by setting the environment variable
SPANNER_ENABLE_API_TRACING=true
.
Note: The attribute keys that are used for additional information about retry attempts and the number of requests might change in a future release.
Using the OpenTelemetry OpenCensus Bridge, you can immediately begin exporting your metrics and traces with OpenTelemetry
Disable OpenCensus metrics for Spanner by including the following code if you still possess OpenCensus dependencies and exporter.
SpannerOptions.disableOpenCensusMetrics();
Enabling OpenTelemetry traces for Spanner will automatically disable OpenCensus traces.
SpannerOptions.enableOpenTelemetryTraces();
Remove any OpenCensus-related code and dependencies from your codebase if all your dependencies are ready to move to OpenTelemetry.
- Remove the OpenCensus Exporters which were configured here
- Remove SpannerRPCViews reference which were configured here
- Remove the OpenCensus dependencies which were added here
Update your dashboards and alerts to reflect below changes
- Metrics name :
cloud.google.com/java
prefix has been removed from OpenTelemery metrics and instead has been added as Instrumenation Scope. - Metrics namespace : OpenTelmetry exporters uses
workload.googleapis.com
namespace opposed tocustom.googleapis.com
with OpenCensus.
Samples are in the samples/
directory.
Sample | Source Code | Try it |
---|---|---|
Add And Drop Database Role | source code | |
Add Json Column Sample | source code | |
Add Jsonb Column Sample | source code | |
Add Numeric Column Sample | source code | |
Add Proto Column Sample | source code | |
Alter Sequence Sample | source code | |
Alter Table With Foreign Key Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Async Dml Example | source code | |
Async Query Example | source code | |
Async Query To List Async Example | source code | |
Async Read Example | source code | |
Async Read Only Transaction Example | source code | |
Async Read Row Example | source code | |
Async Read Using Index Example | source code | |
Async Runner Example | source code | |
Async Transaction Manager Example | source code | |
Batch Sample | source code | |
Batch Write At Least Once Sample | source code | |
Copy Backup Sample | source code | |
Create Backup With Encryption Key | source code | |
Create Database With Default Leader Sample | source code | |
Create Database With Encryption Key | source code | |
Create Database With Version Retention Period Sample | source code | |
Create Full Backup Schedule Sample | source code | |
Create Incremental Backup Schedule Sample | source code | |
Create Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Create Instance Example | source code | |
Create Instance Partition Sample | source code | |
Create Instance With Autoscaling Config Example | source code | |
Create Instance With Processing Units Example | source code | |
Create Sequence Sample | source code | |
Create Table With Foreign Key Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Custom Timeout And Retry Settings Example | source code | |
Delete Backup Schedule Sample | source code | |
Delete Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Delete Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
Directed Read Sample | source code | |
Drop Foreign Key Constraint Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Drop Sequence Sample | source code | |
Enable Fine Grained Access | source code | |
Get Backup Schedule Sample | source code | |
Get Commit Stats Sample | source code | |
Get Database Ddl Sample | source code | |
Get Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Insert Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
List Backup Schedules Sample | source code | |
List Database Roles | source code | |
List Databases Sample | source code | |
List Instance Config Operations Sample | source code | |
List Instance Configs Sample | source code | |
Pg Alter Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Async Query To List Async Example | source code | |
Pg Async Runner Example | source code | |
Pg Async Transaction Manager Example | source code | |
Pg Batch Dml Sample | source code | |
Pg Case Sensitivity Sample | source code | |
Pg Create Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Delete Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
Pg Drop Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Insert Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
Pg Interleaved Table Sample | source code | |
Pg Partitioned Dml Sample | source code | |
Pg Query With Numeric Parameter Sample | source code | |
Pg Spanner Sample | source code | |
Pg Update Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
Query Information Schema Database Options Sample | source code | |
Query With Json Parameter Sample | source code | |
Query With Jsonb Parameter Sample | source code | |
Query With Numeric Parameter Sample | source code | |
Query With Proto Parameter Sample | source code | |
Quickstart Sample | source code | |
Read Data With Database Role | source code | |
Restore Backup With Encryption Key | source code | |
Set Max Commit Delay Sample | source code | |
Singer Proto | source code | |
Spanner Graph Sample | source code | |
Spanner Sample | source code | |
Statement Timeout Example | source code | |
Tag Sample | source code | |
Tracing Sample | source code | |
Transaction Timeout Example | source code | |
Update Backup Schedule Sample | source code | |
Update Database Sample | source code | |
Update Database With Default Leader Sample | source code | |
Update Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Update Instance Example | source code | |
Update Json Data Sample | source code | |
Update Jsonb Data Sample | source code | |
Update Numeric Data Sample | source code | |
Update Proto Data Sample | source code | |
Update Proto Data Sample Using Dml | source code | |
Update Using Dml Returning Sample | source code | |
Add And Drop Database Role | source code | |
Add Json Column Sample | source code | |
Add Jsonb Column Sample | source code | |
Add Numeric Column Sample | source code | |
Alter Sequence Sample | source code | |
Alter Table With Foreign Key Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Copy Backup Sample | source code | |
Create Backup With Encryption Key | source code | |
Create Database With Default Leader Sample | source code | |
Create Database With Encryption Key | source code | |
Create Database With Version Retention Period Sample | source code | |
Create Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Create Instance Example | source code | |
Create Instance With Autoscaling Config Example | source code | |
Create Instance With Processing Units Example | source code | |
Create Sequence Sample | source code | |
Create Table With Foreign Key Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Delete Instance Config Sample | source code | |
Drop Foreign Key Constraint Delete Cascade Sample | source code | |
Drop Sequence Sample | source code | |
Enable Fine Grained Access | source code | |
Get Database Ddl Sample | source code | |
Get Instance Config Sample | source code | |
List Database Roles | source code | |
List Databases Sample | source code | |
List Instance Config Operations Sample | source code | |
List Instance Configs Sample | source code | |
Pg Alter Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Case Sensitivity Sample | source code | |
Pg Create Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Drop Sequence Sample | source code | |
Pg Interleaved Table Sample | source code | |
Pg Spanner Sample | source code | |
Restore Backup With Encryption Key | source code | |
Spanner Sample | source code | |
Update Database Sample | source code | |
Update Database With Default Leader Sample | source code | |
Update Instance Config Sample | source code |
To get help, follow the instructions in the shared Troubleshooting document.
Cloud Spanner uses gRPC for the transport layer.
Java 8 or above is required for using this client.
Google's Java client libraries, Google Cloud Client Libraries and Google Cloud API Libraries, follow the Oracle Java SE support roadmap (see the Oracle Java SE Product Releases section).
In general, new feature development occurs with support for the lowest Java LTS version covered by Oracle's Premier Support (which typically lasts 5 years from initial General Availability). If the minimum required JVM for a given library is changed, it is accompanied by a semver major release.
Java 11 and (in September 2021) Java 17 are the best choices for new development.
Google tests its client libraries with all current LTS versions covered by Oracle's Extended Support (which typically lasts 8 years from initial General Availability).
Google's client libraries support legacy versions of Java runtimes with long term stable libraries that don't receive feature updates on a best efforts basis as it may not be possible to backport all patches.
Google provides updates on a best efforts basis to apps that continue to use Java 7, though apps might need to upgrade to current versions of the library that supports their JVM.
The latest versions and the supported Java versions are identified on
the individual GitHub repository github.com/GoogleAPIs/java-SERVICENAME
and on google-cloud-java.
This library follows Semantic Versioning.
Contributions to this library are always welcome and highly encouraged.
See CONTRIBUTING for more information how to get started.
Please note that this project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By participating in this project you agree to abide by its terms. See Code of Conduct for more information.
Apache 2.0 - See LICENSE for more information.
Java Version | Status |
---|---|
Java 8 | |
Java 8 OSX | |
Java 8 Windows | |
Java 11 |
Java is a registered trademark of Oracle and/or its affiliates.