forceDestroy() is no longer meaningful, as a set of pools is now
directly associated with a DataSource, and not potentially shared.
(This simplification was made possible by canonicalization of
JNDI-looked-up DataSources within a virtual machine.) Just use
DataSources.destroy().
the force_destroy argument is now meaningless, as pools are no longer
potentially shared between multiple DataSources.
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
all implementations are now both Referenceable and Serializable.
use create()
the force_destroy argument is now meaningless, as pools are no longer
potentially shared between multiple DataSources.
use getNumBusyConnectionsDefaultUser()
use getNumConnectionsDefaultUser()
use getNumIdleConnectionsDefaultUser()
use getNumUnclosedOrphanedConnectionsDefaultUser()