This repository holds the official Java Driver for Neo4j.
It works with both single instance and clustered databases.
Network communication is handled using Bolt Protocol.
Starting with 5.0, the Neo4j Drivers will be moving to a monthly release cadence. A minor version will be released on the last Friday of each month so as to maintain versioning consistency with the core product (Neo4j DBMS) which has also moved to a monthly cadence.
As a policy, patch versions will not be released except on rare occasions. Bug fixes and updates will go into the latest minor version and users should upgrade to that. Driver upgrades within a major version will never contain breaking API changes.
Driver Series | Supported Java Runtime versions | Status | Changelog |
---|---|---|---|
5.x | 17 | Primary development branch. | link |
4.4 | 8, 11 | Maintenance. | link |
The compatibility with Neo4j Server versions is documented in the Neo4j Knowledge Base.
The preview feature is a new feature that is a candidate for a future GA status.
It enables users to try the feature out and maintainers to refine and update it.
The preview features are not considered to be experimental, temporary or unstable.
However, they may change more rapidly, without following the usual deprecation cycle.
Most preview features are expected to be granted the GA status unless some unexpected conditions arise.
Due to the increased flexibility of the preview status, user feedback is encouraged so that it can be considered before the GA status.
Every feature gets a dedicated GitHub Discussion where feedback may be shared.
This section provides general information for engineers who are building Neo4j-backed applications.
The driver is distributed exclusively via Maven.
To use the driver in your Maven project, include the following within your pom.xml
file:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.neo4j.driver</groupId>
<artifactId>neo4j-java-driver</artifactId>
<version>x.y.z</version>
</dependency>
Here, x.y.z
will need to be replaced with the appropriate driver version.
It is generally recommended to use the latest driver version wherever possible.
This ensures access to new features and recent bug fixes.
All available versions of this driver can be found at
Maven Central or
Releases.
Both neo4j-java-driver
and neo4j-java-driver-all
artifacts have org.neo4j.driver
module name.
Starting from version 5.0 the neo4j-java-driver
includes an explicit module declaration (module-info.java).
The neo4j-java-driver-all
includes an explicit module declaration (module-info.java) starting from version 5.7.
To run a simple query, the following can be used:
var authToken = AuthTokens.basic("neo4j", "password");
try (var driver = GraphDatabase.driver("bolt://localhost:7687", authToken)) {
var result = driver.executableQuery("CREATE (n)").execute();
System.out.println(result.summary().counters().nodesCreated());
}
For full applications, a single Driver
object should be created with application-wide scope and lifetime.
This allows full utilization of the driver connection pool.
The connection pool reduces network overhead added by sharing TCP connections between subsequent transactions.
Network connections are acquired on demand from the pool when running Cypher queries, and returned back to connection pool after query execution finishes.
As a result of this design, it is expensive to create and close a Driver
object.
Session
objects, on the other hand, are very cheap to use.
Driver
objects are thread-safe, but Session
and Transaction
objects should only be used by a single thread.
Check out our Wiki for detailed and most up-to-date manuals, driver API documentations, changelogs, etc.
If you encounter any bugs while using this driver, please follow the instructions in our Contribution Guide when raising an issue at Issues.
When reporting, please mention the versions of the driver and server, as well as the server topology (single instance, causal cluster, etc). Also include any error stacktraces and a code snippet to reproduce the error if possible, as well as anything else that you think might be helpful.
This section targets users who would like to compile the driver source code on their own machine for the purpose of, for example, contributing a PR. Before contributing to this project, please take a few minutes to read our Contribution Guide.
For the 5.x Driver Series, the source code must compile on Java 17.
For the 4.x Driver Series, the compilation requires Java 8.
The source code here reflects the current development status of a new driver version.
To use the driver in a project, please use the released driver via Maven Central or check out the code with git tags of corresponding versions instead.
The following command may be used to unit test and install artifacts without running integration tests:
mvn clean install -DskipITs -P skip-testkit
Integration tests have the following prerequisites:
- Docker
Testkit
Testkit that is a tooling that is used to run integration tests for all official Neo4j drivers. It can be executed using Docker during Maven build and in such case does not require additional setup. See the instructions below for more details.
There are 2 ways of running Testkit tests:
- Using the
testkit-tests
module of this project. - Manually cloning Testkit and running it directly.
The testkit-tests
module will automatically check out Testkit and run it during Maven build.
Prerequisites:
- Docker
/var/run/docker.sock
available to be passed through to running containers. This is required because Testkit needs access to Docker in order to launch additional containers.- The driver project location must be sharable with Docker containers as Testkit container needs to have access to it.
Make sure to run build for the whole project and not just for testkit-tests
module. Sample commands:
mvn clean verify
- runs all tests.mvn clean verify -DskipTests
- skips all tests.mvn clean verify -DtestkitArgs='--tests STUB_TESTS'
- runs all project tests and Testkit stub tests.mvn clean verify -DskipTests -P testkit-tests
- skips all project tests and runs Testkit tests.mvn clean verify -DskipTests -DtestkitArgs='--tests STUB_TESTS'
- skips all project tests and runs Testkit stub tests.mvn clean verify -DskipITs -DtestkitArgs='--tests STUB_TESTS'
- skips all integration tests and runs Testkit stub tests.mvn clean verify -DskipTests -DtestkitArgs='--run-only-selected tests.neo4j.test_session_run.TestSessionRun.test_can_return_path --configs 4.4-enterprise-neo4j'
- skips all project tests and runs selected Testkit test on specific configuration.
If you interrupt Maven build, you have to remove Testkit containers manually.
Prerequisites:
- Docker
- Python3
- Git
Clone Testkit and run as follows:
git clone [email protected]:neo4j/neo4j-java-driver.git
git clone [email protected]:neo4j-drivers/testkit.git
cd testkit
TEST_DRIVER_NAME=java \
TEST_DRIVER_REPO=`realpath ../neo4j-java-driver` \
TEST_DOCKER_RMI=true \
python3 main.py --tests UNIT_TESTS --configs 4.3-enterprise
To run additional Testkit test, specify TESTKIT_TESTS
:
TEST_DRIVER_NAME=java \
TEST_DRIVER_REPO=`realpath ../neo4j-java-driver` \
TEST_DOCKER_RMI=true \
python3 main.py --tests TESTKIT_TESTS UNIT_TESTS --configs 4.3-enterprise
On Windows or in the absence of a Bash-compatible environment, the required steps are probably different.
A simple mvn clean install
will require admin rights on Windows, because our integration tests require admin privileges to install and start a service.
If all of this fails and you only want to try out a local development version of the driver, you could skip all tests like this:
mvn clean install -DskipTests