Both the Environment and Database classes provide methods that are useful for manipulating databases. These methods are:
Database.getDatabaseName()
Returns the database's name.
String dbName = myDatabase.getDatabaseName();
Database.rename()
Renames the specified database. If no value is given for the database parameter, then the entire file referenced by this method is renamed.
Never rename a database that has handles opened for it. Never rename a file that contains databases with opened handles.
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
...
myDatabase.close();
try {
myDatabase.rename("mydb.db", // Database file to rename
null, // Database to rename. Not used so
// the entire file is renamed.
"newdb.db", // New name to use.
null); // DatabaseConfig object.
// None provided.
} catch (FileNotFoundException fnfe) {
// Exception handling goes here
}
Environment.truncateDatabase()
Deletes every record in the database and optionally returns the number of records that were deleted. Note that it is much less expensive to truncate a database without counting the number of records deleted than it is to truncate and count.
int numDiscarded =
myEnv.truncate(null, // txn handle
myDatabase.getDatabaseName(), // database name
true); // If true, then the
// number of records
// deleted are counted.
System.out.println("Discarded " + numDiscarded +
" records from database " +
myDatabase.getDatabaseName());