I would like to avoid having column names as strings in the code. Is there any other way to accomplish this?:
String query = "SELECT c.foo1.columnA, c.foo1.foo2.columnB FROM Table c";
session.createQuery(query).list();
I'm able to iterate over a column as string like c.foo1.foo2.columnB by splitting and getting the ClassMetadata, the property Type and other Hibernate functions until I reach the last element. However, I can't think a way to get a column string from Java beans, iterating through properties too.
Not sure what is the intention. Couple of thoughts
If you are worried about possibility of property names being wrong, current day IDEs does a good job by validating the property names in JPA queries
Object reflection can give you the property names. But not necessarily all properties are mapped to columns. You can look at this and use it along with bean property names via reflection.
Hope that helps.
There is no way to achieve what you are looking for. But, if your concern is correctness of these queries and worry that the problem will not be known until the execution hits this, you could use NamedQuery
#Entity
#NamedQuery(
name="findAllEmployeesByFirstName",
queryString="SELECT OBJECT(emp) FROM Employee emp WHERE emp.firstName = 'John'"
)
public class Employee implements Serializable {
...
}
Usage
List employees = em.createNamedQuery("findAllEmployeesByFirstName").getResultList();
The benefit is that queries defined in NamedQuery annotations are compiled to actual SQL at start up time. So incorrect field references(typo etc) will cause a start up error and the application will not start.
Another option will be as mentioned in the other answer to trust in a good IDE to refactor all occurrences properly when you rename fields (Idea does a great job at this, so would any other IDE)
EDIT: I do not think there is any performance degradation with named queries. Rather it may appear to be faster as compiled queries are cached(very subjective)
Finally, its better to use the actual query as-is as mentioned in comments. It is far more readable and debug in its context. If you are concerned about correctness, unit-test the heck out of it and be confident.
Is there a way to tell JPA / EclipseLink to ignore enums it encounters in the database that aren't defined in the java enum?
Instead of getting this exception: No conversion value provided for the value...
There doesn't seem to be a way to add an enum to the DB, promote a new version of the code, while keeping another old instance of the code running on the same database.
EclipseLink uses an EnumTypeConverter to convert Enums, which is a subclass of ObjectTypeConverter.
If you use an #ObjectTypeConverter directly, you can set a defaultObjectValue to default values from the database that are not mapped. You could also use your own Converter, or set the defaultValue in the EnumTypeConverter through a DescriptorCustomizer.
I have some long name classes which I store in the database using Hibernate.
I've noticed that hibernate creates the dtype column (for inheritance support) as character varying(31).
Since the class name is longer than 31 characters the insert fails.
What is the best way to resolve it?
Since I have lots of classes I prefer some global setting over adding annotation to each class.
Alternative to JB Nizets answer is by specifying
#DiscriminatorColumn(length=100)
would provide a column that is long enough.
Use #DiscriminatorValue("some_short_name") to all your subclasses. I don't think there is any other solution.
JPQL queries can return custom result objects with the NEW operator:
SELECT NEW myPackage.MyVO(e.fieldX, e.relationshipX.fieldY)
FROM MyEntity AS e
This is very useful to feed VOs. The problem is, you have to create constructors that exactly match the number of arguments, order and types of your query projection. This starts to get messy when you use a lot of projections for the same VO... Either you have one big constructor in your VO and resort to a lot of NULL literals on your query, or your VO must have a lot of different constructors.
So my question is: Is there a way in JPQL to set result object fields through mutators instead of constructors?
To people with .NET background, I'm looking to a equivalent of LINQ + object initializers.
DataNucleus JPA certainly supports two ways of instantiating result objects using no non-standard annotations or calls, primarily driven by the fact that it also supports JDO and that has the requirement for it :-
Result type with argumented constructor (as you say)
Result type with default constructor, and with setters
Such as
TypedQuery<MyResultType> q = em.createQuery("SELECT x AS field1, y AS field2 FROM ...", MyResultType.class);
where MyResultType has setters "setField1", "setField2".
Short Answer No you can not use mutators in JPQL.
While I do not know LINQ I can not see this getting done without creating mess .
Now I am sure you know that Classes can have mutlple constructors . So why not create constructors where you will not have too feed in null.
Depending upon what you need and which JPA implementation you are using , most providers do provide non standard ways around it .e.g. Hibernate has #formula which in some cases be used instead to using a constructor.
I you are using JPA2 then criteria queries might be a better choice and can take care of these kind of things.
In somecases you might prefer using #PostLoad .
Either way you need to know this converstion in not happening in SQL so you are not really offloading any work to SQL . Which we generally prefer i.e. make SQL do as much work as possible in single hit.
Yes these are my generalizations and concrete solutions or requirements may not fit.
In legacy database tables we have numbered columns like C1, C2, C3, C100 or M1, M2, M3, M100.
This columns represent BLOB data.
It is not possible to change anything it this database.
By using JPA Embeddable we map all of the columns to single fields. And then during embedding we override names by using 100 override annotations.
Recently we have switched to Hibernate and I've found things like UserCollectionType and CompositeUserType. But I hadn't found any use cases that are close to mine.
Is it possible to implement some user type by using Hibernate to be able to map a bundle of columns to a collection without additional querying?
Edit:
As you probably noticed the names of columns can differ from table to table. I want to create one type like "LegacyArray" with no need to specify all of the #Columns each time I use this type.
But instead I'd use
#Type(type = "LegacyArrayUserType",
parameters =
{
#Parameter(name = "prefix", value = "A"),
#Parameter(name = "size", value = "128")
})
List<Integer> legacyA;
#Type(type = "LegacyArrayUserType",
parameters =
{
#Parameter(name = "prefix", value = "B"),
#Parameter(name = "size", value = "64")
})
List<Integer> legacyB;
I can think of a couple of ways that I would do this.
1. Create views for the collection information that simulates a normalized table structure, and map it to Hibernate as a collection:
Assuming your existing table is called primaryentity, I would create a view that's similar to the following:
-- untested SQL...
create view childentity as
(select primaryentity_id, c1 from primaryentity union
select primaryentity_id, c2 from primaryentity union
select primaryentity_id, c3 from primaryentity union
--...
select primaryentity_id, c100 from primaryentity)
Now from Hibernate's perspective, childentity is just a normalized table that has a foreign key to primarykey. Mapping this should be pretty straight forward, and is covered here:
http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/stable/core/reference/en/html/collections.html
The benefits of this approach:
From Hibernate's point of view, the tables are normalized, it's a fairly simple mapping
No updates to your existing tables
The drawbacks:
Data is read-only, I don't think your view can be defined in an updatable manner (I could be wrong)
Requires change to the database, you may need to create lots of views
Alternately, if your DBA won't even let you add a view to the database, or if you need to perform updates:
2. Use Hibernate's dynamic model mapping facility to map your C1, C2, C3 properties to a Map, and have some code you your DAO layer do the appropriate conversation between the Map and the Collection property:
I have never done this myself, but I believe Hibernate does allow you to map tables to HashMaps. I'm not sure how dynamically Hibernate allows you to do this (i.e., Can you get away with simply specifying the table name, and having Hibernate automatically map all the columns?), but it's another way I can think of doing this.
If going with this approach though, be sure to use the data access object pattern, and ensure that the internal implementation (use of HashMaps) is hidden from the client code. Also be sure to check before writing to the database that the size of your collection does not exceed the number of available columns.
The benefits of this approach:
No change to the database at all
Data is updatable
O/R Mapping is relatively simple
The drawbacks:
Lots of plumbing in the DAO layer to map the appropriate types
Uses experimental Hibernate features that may change in the future
Personally, I think that design sounds like it breaks first normal form for relational databases. What happens if you need C101 or M101? Change your schema again? I think it's very intrusive.
If you add Hibernate to the mix it's even worse. Adding C101 or M101 means having to alter your Java objects, your Hibernate mappings, everything.
If you have 1:m relationships with C and M tables, you'd be able handle the cases I just cited by adding additional rows. Your Java objects contain Collection<C> or Collection<M>. Your Hibernate mappings are one-to-many that don't change.
Maybe the reason that you don't see any Hibernate examples to match your case because it's a design that's not recommended.
If you must, maybe you should look at Hibernate Component Mapping.
UPDATE: The fact that this is legacy is duly noted. My point in bringing up first normal form is as much for others who might find this question in the future as it is for the person who posted the question. I would not want to answer the question in such a way that it silently asserted this design as "good".
Pointing out Hibernate component mapping is pertinent because knowing the name of what you're looking for can be the key when you're searching. Hibernate allows an object model to be finer grained than the relational model it maps. You are free to model a denormalized schema (e.g., Name and Address objects as part of a larger Person object). That's just the name they give such a technique. It might help find other examples as well.
Sorry if I'm misunderstanding your problem here, I don't know much about Hibernate. But couldn't you just concatenate during selection from database to get something like what you want?
Like:
SELECT whatever
, C1||C2||C3||C4||...||C100 AS CDATA
, M1||M2||M3||M4||...||M100 AS MDATA
FROM ...
WHERE ...
(Of course, the concatenation operator differs between RDBMSs.)
[EDIT] I suggest to use a CompositeUserType. Here is an example. There is also a good example on page 228f in the book "Java Persistence With Hibernate".
That allows you to handle the many columns as a single object in Java.
The mapping looks like this:
#org.hibernate.annotations.Columns(columns = {
#Column(name="C1"),
#Column(name="C2"),
#Column(name="C3"),
...
})
private List<Integer> c;
Hibernate will load all columns at once during the normal query.
In your case, you must copy the int values from the list into a fixed number of columns in nullSafeSet. Pseudocode:
for (int i=1; i<numColumns; i++)
if (i < list.size())
resultSet.setInt(index+i, list.get(i));
else
resultSet.setNull(index+i, Hibernate.INTEGER.sqlType());
In nullSafeGet you must create a list and stop adding elements when a column is NULL. For additional safety, I suggest to create your own list implementation which doesn't allow to grow beyond the number of columns (inherit from ArrayList and override ensureCapacity()).
[EDIT2] If you don't want to type all the #Column annotations, use a code generator for them. That can be as simple as script which you give a name and a number and it prints #Column(...) to System.out. After the script ran, just cut&paste the data into the source.
The only other solution would be to access the internal Hibernate API to build that information at runtime but that API is internal, so a lot of stuff is private. You can use Java reflection and setAccessible(true) but that code probably won't survive the next update of Hibernate.
You can use UserTypes to map a given number of columns to any type you wish. This could be a collection if (for example) for collections are always bounded in size by a known number of items.
It's been a while (> 3 years) since I used Hibernate so I'm pretty rusty but I recall it being very easy to do; your BespokeUserType class gets passed the ResultSet to hydrate your object from it.
I too have never used Hibernate.
I suggest writing a small program in an interpreted language (such as Python) in which you can execute a string as if it were a command. You could construct a statement which takes the tedious work out of doing what you want to do manually.