Hibernate.orgCommunity Documentation
Object/relational mappings are usually defined in an XML document. The mapping document is designed to be readable and hand-editable. The mapping language is Java-centric, meaning that mappings are constructed around persistent class declarations and not table declarations.
Please note that even though many Hibernate users choose to write the XML by hand, a number of tools exist to generate the mapping document. These include XDoclet, Middlegen and AndroMDA.
Here is an example mapping:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD 3.0//EN"
"http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-mapping package="eg">
<class name="Cat"
table="cats"
discriminator-value="C">
<id name="id">
<generator class="native"/>
</id>
<discriminator column="subclass"
type="character"/>
<property name="weight"/>
<property name="birthdate"
type="date"
not-null="true"
update="false"/>
<property name="color"
type="eg.types.ColorUserType"
not-null="true"
update="false"/>
<property name="sex"
not-null="true"
update="false"/>
<property name="litterId"
column="litterId"
update="false"/>
<many-to-one name="mother"
column="mother_id"
update="false"/>
<set name="kittens"
inverse="true"
order-by="litter_id">
<key column="mother_id"/>
<one-to-many class="Cat"/>
</set>
<subclass name="DomesticCat"
discriminator-value="D">
<property name="name"
type="string"/>
</subclass>
</class>
<class name="Dog">
<!-- mapping for Dog could go here -->
</class>
</hibernate-mapping
>
We will now discuss the content of the mapping document. We will only describe, however, the document elements and attributes that are used by Hibernate at runtime. The mapping document also contains some extra optional attributes and elements that affect the database schemas exported by the schema export tool (for example, the not-null
attribute).
All XML mappings should declare the doctype shown. The actual DTD can be found at the URL above, in the directory hibernate-x.x.x/src/org/hibernate
, or in hibernate3.jar
. Hibernate will always look for the DTD in its classpath first. If you experience lookups of the DTD using an Internet connection, check the DTD declaration against the contents of your classpath.
Hibernate will first attempt to resolve DTDs in its classpath. It does this is by registering a custom org.xml.sax.EntityResolver
implementation with the SAXReader it uses to read in the xml files. This custom EntityResolver
recognizes two different systemId namespaces:
a hibernate namespace
is recognized whenever the resolver encounters a systemId starting with http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/
. The resolver attempts to resolve these entities via the classloader which loaded the Hibernate classes.
a user namespace
is recognized whenever the resolver encounters a systemId using a classpath://
URL protocol. The resolver will attempt to resolve these entities via (1) the current thread context classloader and (2) the classloader which loaded the Hibernate classes.
The following is an example of utilizing user namespacing:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC '-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD 3.0//EN' 'http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd' [
<!ENTITY version "3.5.6-Final">
<!ENTITY today "September 15, 2010">
<!ENTITY types SYSTEM "classpath://your/domain/types.xml">
]>
<hibernate-mapping package="your.domain">
<class name="MyEntity">
<id name="id" type="my-custom-id-type">
...
</id>
<class>
&types;
</hibernate-mapping>
Where types.xml
is a resource in the your.domain
package and contains a custom typedef.
This element has several optional attributes. The schema
and catalog
attributes specify that tables referred to in this mapping belong to the named schema and/or catalog. If they are specified, tablenames will be qualified by the given schema and catalog names. If they are missing, tablenames will be unqualified. The default-cascade
attribute specifies what cascade style should be assumed for properties and collections that do not specify a cascade
attribute. By default, the auto-import
attribute allows you to use unqualified class names in the query language.
<hibernate-mapping schema="schemaName" catal
og="catalogName" defau
lt-cascade="cascade_style" defau
lt-access="field|property|ClassName" defau
lt-lazy="true|false" auto-
import="true|false" packa
ge="package.name" />
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If you have two persistent classes with the same unqualified name, you should set auto-import="false"
. An exception will result if you attempt to assign two classes to the same "imported" name.
The hibernate-mapping
element allows you to nest several persistent <class>
mappings, as shown above. It is, however, good practice (and expected by some tools) to map only a single persistent class, or a single class hierarchy, in one mapping file and name it after the persistent superclass. For example, Cat.hbm.xml
, Dog.hbm.xml
, or if using inheritance, Animal.hbm.xml
.
You can declare a persistent class using the class
element. For example:
<class name="ClassName" table=
"tableName" discri
minator-value="discriminator_value" mutabl
e="true|false" schema
="owner" catalo
g="catalog" proxy=
"ProxyInterface" dynami
c-update="true|false" dynami
c-insert="true|false" select
-before-update="true|false" polymo
rphism="implicit|explicit" where=
"arbitrary sql where condition" persis
ter="PersisterClass" batch-
size="N" optimi
stic-lock="none|version|dirty|all" lazy="(16)true|false" entity(17)-name="EntityName" check=(18)"arbitrary sql check condition" rowid=(19)"rowid" subsel(20)ect="SQL expression" abstra(21)ct="true|false" node="element-name" />
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(16) |
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(17) |
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(18) |
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(19) |
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It is acceptable for the named persistent class to be an interface. You can declare implementing classes of that interface using the <subclass>
element. You can persist any static inner class. Specify the class name using the standard form i.e. e.g.Foo$Bar
.
Immutable classes, mutable="false"
, cannot be updated or deleted by the application. This allows Hibernate to make some minor performance optimizations.
The optional proxy
attribute enables lazy initialization of persistent instances of the class. Hibernate will initially return CGLIB proxies that implement the named interface. The persistent object will load when a method of the proxy is invoked. See "Initializing collections and proxies" below.
Implicit polymorphism means that instances of the class will be returned by a query that names any superclass or implemented interface or class, and that instances of any subclass of the class will be returned by a query that names the class itself. Explicit polymorphism means that class instances will be returned only by queries that explicitly name that class. Queries that name the class will return only instances of subclasses mapped inside this <class>
declaration as a <subclass>
or <joined-subclass>
. For most purposes, the default polymorphism="implicit"
is appropriate. Explicit polymorphism is useful when two different classes are mapped to the same table This allows a "lightweight" class that contains a subset of the table columns.
The persister
attribute lets you customize the persistence strategy used for the class. You can, for example, specify your own subclass of org.hibernate.persister.EntityPersister
, or you can even provide a completely new implementation of the interface org.hibernate.persister.ClassPersister
that implements, for example, persistence via stored procedure calls, serialization to flat files or LDAP. See org.hibernate.test.CustomPersister
for a simple example of "persistence" to a Hashtable
.
The dynamic-update
and dynamic-insert
settings are not inherited by subclasses, so they can also be specified on the <subclass>
or <joined-subclass>
elements. Although these settings can increase performance in some cases, they can actually decrease performance in others.
Use of select-before-update
will usually decrease performance. It is useful to prevent a database update trigger being called unnecessarily if you reattach a graph of detached instances to a Session
.
Wenn Sie dynamic-update
aktivieren, haben Sie die Wahl zwischen verschiedenen Strategien für das optimistische Sperren:
version
: check the version/timestamp columns
all
: check all columns
dirty
: check the changed columns, allowing some concurrent updates
none
: do not use optimistic locking
It is strongly recommended that you use version/timestamp columns for optimistic locking with Hibernate. This strategy optimizes performance and correctly handles modifications made to detached instances (i.e. when Session.merge()
is used).
There is no difference between a view and a base table for a Hibernate mapping. This is transparent at the database level, although some DBMS do not support views properly, especially with updates. Sometimes you want to use a view, but you cannot create one in the database (i.e. with a legacy schema). In this case, you can map an immutable and read-only entity to a given SQL subselect expression:
<class name="Summary">
<subselect>
select item.name, max(bid.amount), count(*)
from item
join bid on bid.item_id = item.id
group by item.name
</subselect>
<synchronize table="item"/>
<synchronize table="bid"/>
<id name="name"/>
...
</class
>
Declare the tables to synchronize this entity with, ensuring that auto-flush happens correctly and that queries against the derived entity do not return stale data. The <subselect>
is available both as an attribute and a nested mapping element.
Gemappte Klassen müssen die Spalte des Primärschlüssels der Datenbanktabelle deklarieren. Die meisten Klassen werden außerdem eine Property nach Art von JavaBeans besitzen, die den eindeutigen Bezeichner einer Instanz enthält. Das <id>
-Element definiert das Mapping von der Property zur Spalte des Primärschlüssels.
<id name="propertyName" type="
typename" column
="column_name" unsave
d-value="null|any|none|undefined|id_value" access
="field|property|ClassName"> node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." <generator class="generatorClass"/> </id >
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Falls das name
-Attribut fehlt, wird davon ausgegangen, dass die Klasse keine Bezeichner-Property besitzt.
Das unsaved-value
-Attribut wird in Hibernate3 fast nie benötigt.
There is an alternative <composite-id>
declaration that allows access to legacy data with composite keys. Its use is strongly discouraged for anything else.
Das optionale <generator>
-Unterelement benennt eine Java-Klasse, die zur Generierung eindeutiger Bezeichner für Instanzen der persistenten Klasse verwendet werden. Falls Parameter zur Konfiguration oder Initialisierung der Generatorinstanz benötigt werden, werden Sie unter Verwendung des <param>
-Elements weitergeleitet.
<id name="id" type="long" column="cat_id">
<generator class="org.hibernate.id.TableHiLoGenerator">
<param name="table"
>uid_table</param>
<param name="column"
>next_hi_value_column</param>
</generator>
</id
>
All generators implement the interface org.hibernate.id.IdentifierGenerator
. This is a very simple interface. Some applications can choose to provide their own specialized implementations, however, Hibernate provides a range of built-in implementations. The shortcut names for the built-in generators are as follows:
increment
generiert Bezeichner des Typs long
, short
oder int
, die nur eindeutig sind, wenn kein anderer Vorgang Daten derselben Tabelle hinzufügt. Nicht in einem Cluster zu verwenden.
identity
unterstützt die Identitätsspalten in DB2, MySQL, MS SQL Server, Sybase und HypersonicSQL. Der zurückgesendete Bezeichner ist vom Typ long
, short
oder int
.
sequence
verwendet eine Sequenz in DB2, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SAP DB, McKoi oder einen Generator in Interbase. Der zurückgeschickte Bezeichner ist vom Typ long
, short
oder int
hilo
verwendet einen hi/lo Algorithmus um effizient Bezeichner des Typs long
, short
oder int
zu generieren, bei gegebener Tabelle und Spalte (Standardeinstellung lautet hibernate_unique_key
bzw. next_hi
) als Quelle der hi-Werte. Der hi/lo-Algorithmus generiert Bezeichner, die für eine bestimmte Datenbank eindeutig sind.
seqhilo
verwendet einen hi/lo-Algorithmus um effizient Bezeichner des Typs long
, short
oder int
zu generieren, bei einer vorgegebenen und benannten Datenbanksequenz.
uuid
uses a 128-bit UUID algorithm to generate identifiers of type string that are unique within a network (the IP address is used). The UUID is encoded as a string of 32 hexadecimal digits in length.
guid
verwendet einen von der Datenbank generierten GUID-String auf dem MS SQL Server und MySQL.
native
selects identity
, sequence
or hilo
depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.
assigned
lets the application assign an identifier to the object before save()
is called. This is the default strategy if no <generator>
element is specified.
select
retrieves a primary key, assigned by a database trigger, by selecting the row by some unique key and retrieving the primary key value.
foreign
uses the identifier of another associated object. It is usually used in conjunction with a <one-to-one>
primary key association.
sequence-identity
a specialized sequence generation strategy that utilizes a database sequence for the actual value generation, but combines this with JDBC3 getGeneratedKeys to return the generated identifier value as part of the insert statement execution. This strategy is only supported on Oracle 10g drivers targeted for JDK 1.4. Comments on these insert statements are disabled due to a bug in the Oracle drivers.
The hilo
and seqhilo
generators provide two alternate implementations of the hi/lo algorithm. The first implementation requires a "special" database table to hold the next available "hi" value. Where supported, the second uses an Oracle-style sequence.
<id name="id" type="long" column="cat_id">
<generator class="hilo">
<param name="table"
>hi_value</param>
<param name="column"
>next_value</param>
<param name="max_lo"
>100</param>
</generator>
</id
>
<id name="id" type="long" column="cat_id">
<generator class="seqhilo">
<param name="sequence"
>hi_value</param>
<param name="max_lo"
>100</param>
</generator>
</id
>
Unfortunately, you cannot use hilo
when supplying your own Connection
to Hibernate. When Hibernate uses an application server datasource to obtain connections enlisted with JTA, you must configure the hibernate.transaction.manager_lookup_class
.
The UUID contains: IP address, startup time of the JVM that is accurate to a quarter second, system time and a counter value that is unique within the JVM. It is not possible to obtain a MAC address or memory address from Java code, so this is the best option without using JNI.
For databases that support identity columns (DB2, MySQL, Sybase, MS SQL), you can use identity
key generation. For databases that support sequences (DB2, Oracle, PostgreSQL, Interbase, McKoi, SAP DB) you can use sequence
style key generation. Both of these strategies require two SQL queries to insert a new object. For example:
<id name="id" type="long" column="person_id">
<generator class="sequence">
<param name="sequence"
>person_id_sequence</param>
</generator>
</id
>
<id name="id" type="long" column="person_id" unsaved-value="0">
<generator class="identity"/>
</id
>
For cross-platform development, the native
strategy will, depending on the capabilities of the underlying database, choose from the identity
, sequence
and hilo
strategies.
If you want the application to assign identifiers, as opposed to having Hibernate generate them, you can use the assigned
generator. This special generator uses the identifier value already assigned to the object's identifier property. The generator is used when the primary key is a natural key instead of a surrogate key. This is the default behavior if you do not specify a <generator>
element.
The assigned
generator makes Hibernate use unsaved-value="undefined"
. This forces Hibernate to go to the database to determine if an instance is transient or detached, unless there is a version or timestamp property, or you define Interceptor.isUnsaved()
.
Hibernate does not generate DDL with triggers. It is for legacy schemas only.
<id name="id" type="long" column="person_id">
<generator class="select">
<param name="key"
>socialSecurityNumber</param>
</generator>
</id
>
In the above example, there is a unique valued property named socialSecurityNumber
. It is defined by the class, as a natural key and a surrogate key named person_id
, whose value is generated by a trigger.
Starting with release 3.2.3, there are 2 new generators which represent a re-thinking of 2 different aspects of identifier generation. The first aspect is database portability; the second is optimization Optimization means that you do not have to query the database for every request for a new identifier value. These two new generators are intended to take the place of some of the named generators described above, starting in 3.3.x. However, they are included in the current releases and can be referenced by FQN.
The first of these new generators is org.hibernate.id.enhanced.SequenceStyleGenerator
which is intended, firstly, as a replacement for the sequence
generator and, secondly, as a better portability generator than native
. This is because native
generally chooses between identity
and sequence
which have largely different semantics that can cause subtle issues in applications eyeing portability. org.hibernate.id.enhanced.SequenceStyleGenerator
, however, achieves portability in a different manner. It chooses between a table or a sequence in the database to store its incrementing values, depending on the capabilities of the dialect being used. The difference between this and native
is that table-based and sequence-based storage have the same exact semantic. In fact, sequences are exactly what Hibernate tries to emulate with its table-based generators. This generator has a number of configuration parameters:
sequence_name
(optional, defaults to hibernate_sequence
): the name of the sequence or table to be used.
initial_value
(optional, defaults to 1
): the initial value to be retrieved from the sequence/table. In sequence creation terms, this is analogous to the clause typically named "STARTS WITH".
increment_size
(optional - defaults to 1
): the value by which subsequent calls to the sequence/table should differ. In sequence creation terms, this is analogous to the clause typically named "INCREMENT BY".
force_table_use
(optional - defaults to false
): should we force the use of a table as the backing structure even though the dialect might support sequence?
value_column
(optional - defaults to next_val
): only relevant for table structures, it is the name of the column on the table which is used to hold the value.
optimizer
(optional - defaults to none
): See Abschnitt 5.1.6, „Identifier generator optimization“
The second of these new generators is org.hibernate.id.enhanced.TableGenerator
, which is intended, firstly, as a replacement for the table
generator, even though it actually functions much more like org.hibernate.id.MultipleHiLoPerTableGenerator
, and secondly, as a re-implementation of org.hibernate.id.MultipleHiLoPerTableGenerator
that utilizes the notion of pluggable optimizers. Essentially this generator defines a table capable of holding a number of different increment values simultaneously by using multiple distinctly keyed rows. This generator has a number of configuration parameters:
table_name
(optional - defaults to hibernate_sequences
): the name of the table to be used.
value_column_name
(optional - defaults to next_val
): the name of the column on the table that is used to hold the value.
segment_column_name
(optional - defaults to sequence_name
): the name of the column on the table that is used to hold the "segment key". This is the value which identifies which increment value to use.
segment_value
(optional - defaults to default
): The "segment key" value for the segment from which we want to pull increment values for this generator.
segment_value_length
(optional - defaults to 255
): Used for schema generation; the column size to create this segment key column.
initial_value
(optional - defaults to 1
): The initial value to be retrieved from the table.
increment_size
(optional - defaults to 1
): The value by which subsequent calls to the table should differ.
optimizer
(optional - defaults to ): See Abschnitt 5.1.6, „Identifier generator optimization“
For identifier generators that store values in the database, it is inefficient for them to hit the database on each and every call to generate a new identifier value. Instead, you can group a bunch of them in memory and only hit the database when you have exhausted your in-memory value group. This is the role of the pluggable optimizers. Currently only the two enhanced generators (Abschnitt 5.1.5, „Enhanced identifier generators“ support this operation.
none
(generally this is the default if no optimizer was specified): this will not perform any optimizations and hit the database for each and every request.
hilo
: applies a hi/lo algorithm around the database retrieved values. The values from the database for this optimizer are expected to be sequential. The values retrieved from the database structure for this optimizer indicates the "group number". The increment_size
is multiplied by that value in memory to define a group "hi value".
pooled
: as with the case of hilo
, this optimizer attempts to minimize the number of hits to the database. Here, however, we simply store the starting value for the "next group" into the database structure rather than a sequential value in combination with an in-memory grouping algorithm. Here, increment_size
refers to the values coming from the database.
<composite-id
name="propertyName"
class="ClassName"
mapped="true|false"
access="field|property|ClassName">
node="element-name|."
<key-property name="propertyName" type="typename" column="column_name"/>
<key-many-to-one name="propertyName" class="ClassName" column="column_name"/>
......
</composite-id
>
A table with a composite key can be mapped with multiple properties of the class as identifier properties. The <composite-id>
element accepts <key-property>
property mappings and <key-many-to-one>
mappings as child elements.
<composite-id>
<key-property name="medicareNumber"/>
<key-property name="dependent"/>
</composite-id
>
The persistent class must override equals()
and hashCode()
to implement composite identifier equality. It must also implement Serializable
.
Unfortunately, this approach means that a persistent object is its own identifier. There is no convenient "handle" other than the object itself. You must instantiate an instance of the persistent class itself and populate its identifier properties before you can load()
the persistent state associated with a composite key. We call this approach an embedded composite identifier, and discourage it for serious applications.
Eine zweite Vorgehensweise trägt den Namen gemappter zusammengesetzter Bezeichner (sog. "mapped composite identifier"), wobei die innerhalb des <composite-id>
-Elements genannten Bezeichner-Properties sowohl an der persistenten Klasse als auch einer separaten Bezeichnerklasse dupliziert werden.
<composite-id class="MedicareId" mapped="true">
<key-property name="medicareNumber"/>
<key-property name="dependent"/>
</composite-id
>
In this example, both the composite identifier class, MedicareId
, and the entity class itself have properties named medicareNumber
and dependent
. The identifier class must override equals()
and hashCode()
and implement Serializable
. The main disadvantage of this approach is code duplication.
Die folgenden Attribute werden verwendet, um einen gemappten zusammengesetzten Bezeichner zu bestimmen:
mapped
(optional - defaults to false
): indicates that a mapped composite identifier is used, and that the contained property mappings refer to both the entity class and the composite identifier class.
class
(optional - but required for a mapped composite identifier): the class used as a composite identifier.
We will describe a third, even more convenient approach, where the composite identifier is implemented as a component class in Abschnitt 8.4, „Komponenten als zusammengesetzte Bezeichner“. The attributes described below apply only to this alternative approach:
name
(optional - required for this approach): a property of component type that holds the composite identifier. Please see chapter 9 for more information.
access
(optional - defaults to property
): the strategy Hibernate uses for accessing the property value.
class
(optional - defaults to the property type determined by reflection): the component class used as a composite identifier. Please see the next section for more information.
The third approach, an identifier component, is recommended for almost all applications.
The <discriminator>
element is required for polymorphic persistence using the table-per-class-hierarchy mapping strategy. It declares a discriminator column of the table. The discriminator column contains marker values that tell the persistence layer what subclass to instantiate for a particular row. A restricted set of types can be used: string
, character
, integer
, byte
, short
, boolean
, yes_no
, true_false
.
<discriminator column="discriminator_column" type="
discriminator_type" force=
"true|false" insert
="true|false" formul
a="arbitrary sql expression" />
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Die tatsächlichen Werte der Diskriminatorspalte werden durch das discriminator-value
-Attribut der <class>
und <subclass>
-Elemente spezifiziert.
The force
attribute is only useful if the table contains rows with "extra" discriminator values that are not mapped to a persistent class. This will not usually be the case.
The formula
attribute allows you to declare an arbitrary SQL expression that will be used to evaluate the type of a row. For example:
<discriminator
formula="case when CLASS_TYPE in ('a', 'b', 'c') then 0 else 1 end"
type="integer"/>
The <version>
element is optional and indicates that the table contains versioned data. This is particularly useful if you plan to use long transactions. See below for more information:
<version column="version_column" name="
propertyName" type="
typename" access
="field|property|ClassName" unsave
d-value="null|negative|undefined" genera
ted="never|always" insert
="true|false" node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." />
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Version numbers can be of Hibernate type long
, integer
, short
, timestamp
or calendar
.
A version or timestamp property should never be null for a detached instance. Hibernate will detect any instance with a null version or timestamp as transient, irrespective of what other unsaved-value
strategies are specified. Declaring a nullable version or timestamp property is an easy way to avoid problems with transitive reattachment in Hibernate. It is especially useful for people using assigned identifiers or composite keys.
The optional <timestamp>
element indicates that the table contains timestamped data. This provides an alternative to versioning. Timestamps are a less safe implementation of optimistic locking. However, sometimes the application might use the timestamps in other ways.
<timestamp column="timestamp_column" name="
propertyName" access
="field|property|ClassName" unsave
d-value="null|undefined" source
="vm|db" genera
ted="never|always" node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." />
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<Timestamp>
is equivalent to <version type="timestamp">
. And <timestamp source="db">
is equivalent to <version type="dbtimestamp">
The <property>
element declares a persistent JavaBean style property of the class.
<property name="propertyName" column
="column_name" type="
typename" update
="true|false" insert
="true|false" formul
a="arbitrary SQL expression" access
="field|property|ClassName" lazy="
true|false" unique
="true|false" not-nu
ll="true|false" optimi
stic-lock="true|false" genera
ted="never|insert|always" node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." index="index_name" unique_key="unique_key_id" length="L" precision="P" scale="S" />
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typename könnte sein:
The name of a Hibernate basic type: integer, string, character, date, timestamp, float, binary, serializable, object, blob
etc.
The name of a Java class with a default basic type: int, float, char, java.lang.String, java.util.Date, java.lang.Integer, java.sql.Clob
etc.
Der Name einer serialisierbaren Java-Klasse.
The class name of a custom type: com.illflow.type.MyCustomType
etc.
If you do not specify a type, Hibernate will use reflection upon the named property and guess the correct Hibernate type. Hibernate will attempt to interpret the name of the return class of the property getter using, in order, rules 2, 3, and 4. In certain cases you will need the type
attribute. For example, to distinguish between Hibernate.DATE
and Hibernate.TIMESTAMP
, or to specify a custom type.
The access
attribute allows you to control how Hibernate accesses the property at runtime. By default, Hibernate will call the property get/set pair. If you specify access="field"
, Hibernate will bypass the get/set pair and access the field directly using reflection. You can specify your own strategy for property access by naming a class that implements the interface org.hibernate.property.PropertyAccessor
.
A powerful feature is derived properties. These properties are by definition read-only. The property value is computed at load time. You declare the computation as an SQL expression. This then translates to a SELECT
clause subquery in the SQL query that loads an instance:
<property name="totalPrice"
formula="( SELECT SUM (li.quantity*p.price) FROM LineItem li, Product p
WHERE li.productId = p.productId
AND li.customerId = customerId
AND li.orderNumber = orderNumber )"/>
You can reference the entity table by not declaring an alias on a particular column. This would be customerId
in the given example. You can also use the nested <formula>
mapping element if you do not want to use the attribute.
An ordinary association to another persistent class is declared using a many-to-one
element. The relational model is a many-to-one association; a foreign key in one table is referencing the primary key column(s) of the target table.
<many-to-one name="propertyName" column
="column_name" class=
"ClassName" cascad
e="cascade_style" fetch=
"join|select" update
="true|false" insert
="true|false" proper
ty-ref="propertyNameFromAssociatedClass" access
="field|property|ClassName" unique
="true|false" not-nu
ll="true|false" optimi
stic-lock="true|false" lazy="
proxy|no-proxy|false" not-fo
und="ignore|exception" entity
-name="EntityName" formul
a="arbitrary SQL expression" node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." embed-xml="true|false" index="index_name" unique_key="unique_key_id" foreign-key="foreign_key_name" />
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Setting a value of the cascade
attribute to any meaningful value other than none
will propagate certain operations to the associated object. The meaningful values are divided into three categories. First, basic operations, which include: persist, merge, delete, save-update, evict, replicate, lock and refresh
; second, special values: delete-orphan
; and third, all
comma-separated combinations of operation names: cascade="persist,merge,evict"
or cascade="all,delete-orphan"
. See Abschnitt 10.11, „Transitive Persistenz“ for a full explanation. Note that single valued, many-to-one and one-to-one, associations do not support orphan delete.
Here is an example of a typical many-to-one
declaration:
<many-to-one name="product" class="Product" column="PRODUCT_ID"/>
The property-ref
attribute should only be used for mapping legacy data where a foreign key refers to a unique key of the associated table other than the primary key. This is a complicated and confusing relational model. For example, if the Product
class had a unique serial number that is not the primary key. The unique
attribute controls Hibernate's DDL generation with the SchemaExport tool.
<property name="serialNumber" unique="true" type="string" column="SERIAL_NUMBER"/>
Dann könnte das Mapping für OrderItem
folgendes verwenden:
<many-to-one name="product" property-ref="serialNumber" column="PRODUCT_SERIAL_NUMBER"/>
This is not encouraged, however.
Wenn der eindeutige Schlüssel, auf den verwiesen wird, mehrere Properties der zugehörigen Entity enthält, so sollten die Properties, auf die verwiesen wird, in einem benannten <properties>
-Element gemappt werden.
If the referenced unique key is the property of a component, you can specify a property path:
<many-to-one name="owner" property-ref="identity.ssn" column="OWNER_SSN"/>
Eine "One-to-One"-Assoziation mit einer anderen persistenten Klasse wird unter Verwendung eines one-to-one
-Elements deklariert.
<one-to-one name="propertyName" class=
"ClassName" cascad
e="cascade_style" constr
ained="true|false" fetch=
"join|select" proper
ty-ref="propertyNameFromAssociatedClass" access
="field|property|ClassName" formul
a="any SQL expression" lazy="
proxy|no-proxy|false" entity
-name="EntityName" node="element-name|@attribute-name|element/@attribute|." embed-xml="true|false" foreign-key="foreign_key_name" />
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There are two varieties of one-to-one associations:
Assoziationen des Primärschlüssels
Assoziationen eines eindeutigen Fremdschlüssels
Primary key associations do not need an extra table column. If two rows are related by the association, then the two table rows share the same primary key value. To relate two objects by a primary key association, ensure that they are assigned the same identifier value.
For a primary key association, add the following mappings to Employee
and Person
respectively:
<one-to-one name="person" class="Person"/>
<one-to-one name="employee" class="Employee" constrained="true"/>
Ensure that the primary keys of the related rows in the PERSON and EMPLOYEE tables are equal. You use a special Hibernate identifier generation strategy called foreign
:
<class name="person" table="PERSON">
<id name="id" column="PERSON_ID">
<generator class="foreign">
<param name="property"
>employee</param>
</generator>
</id>
...
<one-to-one name="employee"
class="Employee"
constrained="true"/>
</class
>
A newly saved instance of Person
is assigned the same primary key value as the Employee
instance referred with the employee
property of that Person
.
Alternatively, a foreign key with a unique constraint, from Employee
to Person
, can be expressed as:
<many-to-one name="person" class="Person" column="PERSON_ID" unique="true"/>
This association can be made bidirectional by adding the following to the Person
mapping:
<one-to-one name="employee" class="Employee" property-ref="person"/>
<natural-id mutable="true|false"/>
<property ... />
<many-to-one ... />
......
</natural-id
>
Although we recommend the use of surrogate keys as primary keys, you should try to identify natural keys for all entities. A natural key is a property or combination of properties that is unique and non-null. It is also immutable. Map the properties of the natural key inside the <natural-id>
element. Hibernate will generate the necessary unique key and nullability constraints and, as a result, your mapping will be more self-documenting.
It is recommended that you implement equals()
and hashCode()
to compare the natural key properties of the entity.
This mapping is not intended for use with entities that have natural primary keys.
mutable
(optional - defaults to false
): by default, natural identifier properties are assumed to be immutable (constant).
The <component>
element maps properties of a child object to columns of the table of a parent class. Components can, in turn, declare their own properties, components or collections. See the "Component" examples below:
<component name="propertyName" class=
"className" insert
="true|false" update
="true|false" access
="field|property|ClassName" lazy="
true|false" optimi
stic-lock="true|false" unique
="true|false" node="element-name|." > <property ...../> <many-to-one .... /> ........ </component >
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Die untergeordneten <property>
-Tags mappen Properties der untergeordneten Klasse zu den Spalten der Tabelle.
Das <component>
-Element ermöglicht ein <parent>
-Subelement, das eine Property der Komponentenklasse als Rückreferenz zur enthaltenden Entity mappt.
The <dynamic-component>
element allows a Map
to be mapped as a component, where the property names refer to keys of the map. See Abschnitt 8.5, „Dynamische Komponenten“ for more information.
The <properties>
element allows the definition of a named, logical grouping of the properties of a class. The most important use of the construct is that it allows a combination of properties to be the target of a property-ref
. It is also a convenient way to define a multi-column unique constraint. For example:
<properties name="logicalName" insert
="true|false" update
="true|false" optimi
stic-lock="true|false" unique
="true|false" > <property ...../> <many-to-one .... /> ........ </properties >
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Nehmen wir etwa das folgende <properties>
-Mapping:
<class name="Person">
<id name="personNumber"/>
...
<properties name="name"
unique="true" update="false">
<property name="firstName"/>
<property name="initial"/>
<property name="lastName"/>
</properties>
</class
>
You might have some legacy data association that refers to this unique key of the Person
table, instead of to the primary key:
<many-to-one name="person"
class="Person" property-ref="name">
<column name="firstName"/>
<column name="initial"/>
<column name="lastName"/>
</many-to-one
>
The use of this outside the context of mapping legacy data is not recommended.
Polymorphic persistence requires the declaration of each subclass of the root persistent class. For the table-per-class-hierarchy mapping strategy, the <subclass>
declaration is used. For example:
<subclass name="ClassName" discri
minator-value="discriminator_value" proxy=
"ProxyInterface" lazy="
true|false" dynamic-update="true|false" dynamic-insert="true|false" entity-name="EntityName" node="element-name" extends="SuperclassName"> <property .... /> ..... </subclass >
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Each subclass declares its own persistent properties and subclasses. <version>
and <id>
properties are assumed to be inherited from the root class. Each subclass in a hierarchy must define a unique discriminator-value
. If this is not specified, the fully qualified Java class name is used.
For information about inheritance mappings see Kapitel 9, Inheritance mapping.
Each subclass can also be mapped to its own table. This is called the table-per-subclass mapping strategy. An inherited state is retrieved by joining with the table of the superclass. To do this you use the <joined-subclass>
element. For example:
<joined-subclass name="ClassName" table=
"tablename" proxy=
"ProxyInterface" lazy="
true|false" dynamic-update="true|false" dynamic-insert="true|false" schema="schema" catalog="catalog" extends="SuperclassName" persister="ClassName" subselect="SQL expression" entity-name="EntityName" node="element-name"> <key .... > <property .... /> ..... </joined-subclass >
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A discriminator column is not required for this mapping strategy. Each subclass must, however, declare a table column holding the object identifier using the <key>
element. The mapping at the start of the chapter would then be re-written as:
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://hibernate.sourceforge.net/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-mapping package="eg">
<class name="Cat" table="CATS">
<id name="id" column="uid" type="long">
<generator class="hilo"/>
</id>
<property name="birthdate" type="date"/>
<property name="color" not-null="true"/>
<property name="sex" not-null="true"/>
<property name="weight"/>
<many-to-one name="mate"/>
<set name="kittens">
<key column="MOTHER"/>
<one-to-many class="Cat"/>
</set>
<joined-subclass name="DomesticCat" table="DOMESTIC_CATS">
<key column="CAT"/>
<property name="name" type="string"/>
</joined-subclass>
</class>
<class name="eg.Dog">
<!-- mapping for Dog could go here -->
</class>
</hibernate-mapping
>
For information about inheritance mappings see Kapitel 9, Inheritance mapping.
A third option is to map only the concrete classes of an inheritance hierarchy to tables. This is called the table-per-concrete-class strategy. Each table defines all persistent states of the class, including the inherited state. In Hibernate, it is not necessary to explicitly map such inheritance hierarchies. You can map each class with a separate <class>
declaration. However, if you wish use polymorphic associations (e.g. an association to the superclass of your hierarchy), you need to use the <union-subclass>
mapping. For example:
<union-subclass name="ClassName" table=
"tablename" proxy=
"ProxyInterface" lazy="
true|false" dynamic-update="true|false" dynamic-insert="true|false" schema="schema" catalog="catalog" extends="SuperclassName" abstract="true|false" persister="ClassName" subselect="SQL expression" entity-name="EntityName" node="element-name"> <property .... /> ..... </union-subclass >
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Für diese Mapping-Strategie ist keine Diskriminatorspalte oder Schlüsselspalte erforderlich.
For information about inheritance mappings see Kapitel 9, Inheritance mapping.
Using the <join>
element, it is possible to map properties of one class to several tables that have a one-to-one relationship. For example:
<join table="tablename" schema
="owner" catalo
g="catalog" fetch=
"join|select" invers
e="true|false" option
al="true|false"> <key ... /> <property ... /> ... </join >
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For example, address information for a person can be mapped to a separate table while preserving value type semantics for all properties:
<class name="Person"
table="PERSON">
<id name="id" column="PERSON_ID"
>...</id>
<join table="ADDRESS">
<key column="ADDRESS_ID"/>
<property name="address"/>
<property name="zip"/>
<property name="country"/>
</join>
...
This feature is often only useful for legacy data models. We recommend fewer tables than classes and a fine-grained domain model. However, it is useful for switching between inheritance mapping strategies in a single hierarchy, as explained later.
The <key>
element has featured a few times within this guide. It appears anywhere the parent mapping element defines a join to a new table that references the primary key of the original table. It also defines the foreign key in the joined table:
<key column="columnname" on-del
ete="noaction|cascade" proper
ty-ref="propertyName" not-nu
ll="true|false" update
="true|false" unique
="true|false" />
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For systems where delete performance is important, we recommend that all keys should be defined on-delete="cascade"
. Hibernate uses a database-level ON CASCADE DELETE
constraint, instead of many individual DELETE
statements. Be aware that this feature bypasses Hibernate's usual optimistic locking strategy for versioned data.
The not-null
and update
attributes are useful when mapping a unidirectional one-to-many association. If you map a unidirectional one-to-many association to a non-nullable foreign key, you must declare the key column using <key not-null="true">
.
Mapping elements which accept a column
attribute will alternatively accept a <column>
subelement. Likewise, <formula>
is an alternative to the formula
attribute. For example:
<column
name="column_name"
length="N"
precision="N"
scale="N"
not-null="true|false"
unique="true|false"
unique-key="multicolumn_unique_key_name"
index="index_name"
sql-type="sql_type_name"
check="SQL expression"
default="SQL expression"
read="SQL expression"
write="SQL expression"/>
<formula
>SQL expression</formula
>
Most of the attributes on column
provide a means of tailoring the DDL during automatic schema generation. The read
and write
attributes allow you to specify custom SQL that Hibernate will use to access the column's value. For more on this, see the discussion of column read and write expressions.
The column
and formula
elements can even be combined within the same property or association mapping to express, for example, exotic join conditions.
<many-to-one name="homeAddress" class="Address"
insert="false" update="false">
<column name="person_id" not-null="true" length="10"/>
<formula
>'MAILING'</formula>
</many-to-one
>
If your application has two persistent classes with the same name, and you do not want to specify the fully qualified package name in Hibernate queries, classes can be "imported" explicitly, rather than relying upon auto-import="true"
. You can also import classes and interfaces that are not explicitly mapped:
<import class="java.lang.Object" rename="Universe"/>
<import class="ClassName" rename
="ShortName" />
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There is one more type of property mapping. The <any>
mapping element defines a polymorphic association to classes from multiple tables. This type of mapping requires more than one column. The first column contains the type of the associated entity. The remaining columns contain the identifier. It is impossible to specify a foreign key constraint for this kind of association. This is not the usual way of mapping polymorphic associations and you should use this only in special cases. For example, for audit logs, user session data, etc.
The meta-type
attribute allows the application to specify a custom type that maps database column values to persistent classes that have identifier properties of the type specified by id-type
. You must specify the mapping from values of the meta-type to class names.
<any name="being" id-type="long" meta-type="string">
<meta-value value="TBL_ANIMAL" class="Animal"/>
<meta-value value="TBL_HUMAN" class="Human"/>
<meta-value value="TBL_ALIEN" class="Alien"/>
<column name="table_name"/>
<column name="id"/>
</any
>
<any name="propertyName" id-typ
e="idtypename" meta-t
ype="metatypename" cascad
e="cascade_style" access
="field|property|ClassName" optimi
stic-lock="true|false" > <meta-value ... /> <meta-value ... /> ..... <column .... /> <column .... /> ..... </any >
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In relation to the persistence service, Java language-level objects are classified into two groups:
An entity exists independently of any other objects holding references to the entity. Contrast this with the usual Java model, where an unreferenced object is garbage collected. Entities must be explicitly saved and deleted. Saves and deletions, however, can be cascaded from a parent entity to its children. This is different from the ODMG model of object persistence by reachability and corresponds more closely to how application objects are usually used in large systems. Entities support circular and shared references. They can also be versioned.
An entity's persistent state consists of references to other entities and instances of value types. Values are primitives: collections (not what is inside a collection), components and certain immutable objects. Unlike entities, values in particular collections and components, are persisted and deleted by reachability. Since value objects and primitives are persisted and deleted along with their containing entity, they cannot be independently versioned. Values have no independent identity, so they cannot be shared by two entities or collections.
Until now, we have been using the term "persistent class" to refer to entities. We will continue to do that. Not all user-defined classes with a persistent state, however, are entities. A component is a user-defined class with value semantics. A Java property of type java.lang.String
also has value semantics. Given this definition, all types (classes) provided by the JDK have value type semantics in Java, while user-defined types can be mapped with entity or value type semantics. This decision is up to the application developer. An entity class in a domain model will normally have shared references to a single instance of that class, while composition or aggregation usually translates to a value type.
We will revisit both concepts throughout this reference guide.
The challenge is to map the Java type system, and the developers' definition of entities and value types, to the SQL/database type system. The bridge between both systems is provided by Hibernate. For entities, <class>
, <subclass>
and so on are used. For value types we use <property>
, <component>
etc., that usually have a type
attribute. The value of this attribute is the name of a Hibernate mapping type. Hibernate provides a range of mappings for standard JDK value types out of the box. You can write your own mapping types and implement your own custom conversion strategies.
With the exception of collections, all built-in Hibernate types support null semantics.
The built-in basic mapping types can be roughly categorized into the following:
integer, long, short, float, double, character, byte, boolean, yes_no, true_false
Typen-Mappings von Java-"Primitives" oder "Wrapper-Klassen" zu passenden (Anbieter-spezifischen) SQL-Spaltentypen. boolean, yes_no
und true_false
sind alternative Verschlüsselungen für einen Java boolean
oder java.lang.Boolean
.
string
Ein "Type-Mapping" von java.lang.String
zu VARCHAR
(oder Oracle VARCHAR2
).
date, time, timestamp
Type-Mappings von java.util.Date
und dessen Subklassen zu SQL-Typen DATE
, TIME
und TIMESTAMP
(oder äquivalent).
calendar, calendar_date
Type-Mappings von java.util.Calendar
zu SQL-Typen TIMESTAMP
und DATE
(oder äquivalent).
big_decimal, big_integer
Type-Mappings von java.math.BigDecimal
und java.math.BigInteger
zu NUMERIC
(oder Oracle NUMBER
).
locale, timezone, currency
Type-Mappings von java.util.Locale
, java.util.TimeZone
und java.util.Currency
zuVARCHAR
(oder Oracle VARCHAR2
). Instanzen von Locale
und Currency
werden zu ihren ISO-Codes gemappt. Instanzen von TimeZone
werden zu ihrer ID
gemappt.
class
Ein Type-Mapping von java.lang.Class
zu VARCHAR
(oder Oracle VARCHAR2
). Eine Class
wird zu ihrem vollständigen Namen gemappt.
binary
Mappt Byte-Arrays zum zugehörigen SQL-Binärtyp.
text
Mappt lange Java-Strings zum SQL CLOB
oder TEXT
-Typ.
serializable
Maps serializable Java types to an appropriate SQL binary type. You can also indicate the Hibernate type serializable
with the name of a serializable Java class or interface that does not default to a basic type.
clob, blob
Type mappings for the JDBC classes java.sql.Clob
and java.sql.Blob
. These types can be inconvenient for some applications, since the blob or clob object cannot be reused outside of a transaction. Driver support is patchy and inconsistent.
imm_date, imm_time, imm_timestamp, imm_calendar, imm_calendar_date, imm_serializable, imm_binary
Type mappings for what are considered mutable Java types. This is where Hibernate makes certain optimizations appropriate only for immutable Java types, and the application treats the object as immutable. For example, you should not call Date.setTime()
for an instance mapped as imm_timestamp
. To change the value of the property, and have that change made persistent, the application must assign a new, nonidentical, object to the property.
Unique identifiers of entities and collections can be of any basic type except binary
, blob
and clob
. Composite identifiers are also allowed. See below for more information.
Die grundlegenden Wertetypen haben entsprechende Type
-Konstanten, die auf org.hibernate.Hibernate
definiert sind. So repräsentiert Hibernate.STRING
zum Beispiel den string
-Typ.
It is relatively easy for developers to create their own value types. For example, you might want to persist properties of type java.lang.BigInteger
to VARCHAR
columns. Hibernate does not provide a built-in type for this. Custom types are not limited to mapping a property, or collection element, to a single table column. So, for example, you might have a Java property getName()
/setName()
of type java.lang.String
that is persisted to the columns FIRST_NAME
, INITIAL
, SURNAME
.
To implement a custom type, implement either org.hibernate.UserType
or org.hibernate.CompositeUserType
and declare properties using the fully qualified classname of the type. View org.hibernate.test.DoubleStringType
to see the kind of things that are possible.
<property name="twoStrings" type="org.hibernate.test.DoubleStringType">
<column name="first_string"/>
<column name="second_string"/>
</property
>
Beachten Sie die Verwendung von <column>
-Tags beim Mappen einer Property zu mehreren Spalten.
Die CompositeUserType
, EnhancedUserType
, UserCollectionType
und UserVersionType
Interfaces unterstützen auch speziellere Einsatzmöglichkeiten.
You can even supply parameters to a UserType
in the mapping file. To do this, your UserType
must implement the org.hibernate.usertype.ParameterizedType
interface. To supply parameters to your custom type, you can use the <type>
element in your mapping files.
<property name="priority">
<type name="com.mycompany.usertypes.DefaultValueIntegerType">
<param name="default"
>0</param>
</type>
</property
>
Der UserType
kann jetzt den Wert für den Parameter mit Namen default
von dem an ihn geleiteten Properties
-Objekt abrufen.
If you regularly use a certain UserType
, it is useful to define a shorter name for it. You can do this using the <typedef>
element. Typedefs assign a name to a custom type, and can also contain a list of default parameter values if the type is parameterized.
<typedef class="com.mycompany.usertypes.DefaultValueIntegerType" name="default_zero">
<param name="default"
>0</param>
</typedef
>
<property name="priority" type="default_zero"/>
Es ist auch möglich, die in einer "typedef" bereitgestellten Parameter von Fall zu Fall unter Verwendung der Typ-Parameter des Property-Mappings außer Kraft zu setzen.
Even though Hibernate's rich range of built-in types and support for components means you will rarely need to use a custom type, it is considered good practice to use custom types for non-entity classes that occur frequently in your application. For example, a MonetaryAmount
class is a good candidate for a CompositeUserType
, even though it could be mapped as a component. One reason for this is abstraction. With a custom type, your mapping documents would be protected against changes to the way monetary values are represented.
It is possible to provide more than one mapping for a particular persistent class. In this case, you must specify an entity name to disambiguate between instances of the two mapped entities. By default, the entity name is the same as the class name. Hibernate lets you specify the entity name when working with persistent objects, when writing queries, or when mapping associations to the named entity.
<class name="Contract" table="Contracts" entity-name="CurrentContract"> ... <set name="history" inverse="true" order-by="effectiveEndDate desc"> <key column="currentContractId"/> <one-to-many entity-name="HistoricalContract"/> </set> </class> <class name="Contract" table="ContractHistory" entity-name="HistoricalContract"> ... <many-to-one name="currentContract" column="currentContractId" entity-name="CurrentContract"/> </class >
Associations are now specified using entity-name
instead of class
.
You can force Hibernate to quote an identifier in the generated SQL by enclosing the table or column name in backticks in the mapping document. Hibernate will use the correct quotation style for the SQL Dialect
. This is usually double quotes, but the SQL Server uses brackets and MySQL uses backticks.
<class name="LineItem" table="`Line Item`">
<id name="id" column="`Item Id`"/><generator class="assigned"/></id>
<property name="itemNumber" column="`Item #`"/>
...
</class
>
XML does not suit all users so there are some alternative ways to define O/R mapping metadata in Hibernate.
Many Hibernate users prefer to embed mapping information directly in sourcecode using XDoclet @hibernate.tags
. We do not cover this approach in this reference guide since it is considered part of XDoclet. However, we include the following example of the Cat
class with XDoclet mappings:
package eg;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.Date;
/**
* @hibernate.class
* table="CATS"
*/
public class Cat {
private Long id; // identifier
private Date birthdate;
private Cat mother;
private Set kittens
private Color color;
private char sex;
private float weight;
/*
* @hibernate.id
* generator-class="native"
* column="CAT_ID"
*/
public Long getId() {
return id;
}
private void setId(Long id) {
this.id=id;
}
/**
* @hibernate.many-to-one
* column="PARENT_ID"
*/
public Cat getMother() {
return mother;
}
void setMother(Cat mother) {
this.mother = mother;
}
/**
* @hibernate.property
* column="BIRTH_DATE"
*/
public Date getBirthdate() {
return birthdate;
}
void setBirthdate(Date date) {
birthdate = date;
}
/**
* @hibernate.property
* column="WEIGHT"
*/
public float getWeight() {
return weight;
}
void setWeight(float weight) {
this.weight = weight;
}
/**
* @hibernate.property
* column="COLOR"
* not-null="true"
*/
public Color getColor() {
return color;
}
void setColor(Color color) {
this.color = color;
}
/**
* @hibernate.set
* inverse="true"
* order-by="BIRTH_DATE"
* @hibernate.collection-key
* column="PARENT_ID"
* @hibernate.collection-one-to-many
*/
public Set getKittens() {
return kittens;
}
void setKittens(Set kittens) {
this.kittens = kittens;
}
// addKitten not needed by Hibernate
public void addKitten(Cat kitten) {
kittens.add(kitten);
}
/**
* @hibernate.property
* column="SEX"
* not-null="true"
* update="false"
*/
public char getSex() {
return sex;
}
void setSex(char sex) {
this.sex=sex;
}
}
See the Hibernate website for more examples of XDoclet and Hibernate.
JDK 5.0 introduced XDoclet-style annotations at the language level that are type-safe and checked at compile time. This mechanism is more powerful than XDoclet annotations and better supported by tools and IDEs. IntelliJ IDEA, for example, supports auto-completion and syntax highlighting of JDK 5.0 annotations. The new revision of the EJB specification (JSR-220) uses JDK 5.0 annotations as the primary metadata mechanism for entity beans. Hibernate3 implements the EntityManager
of JSR-220 (the persistence API). Support for mapping metadata is available via the Hibernate Annotations package as a separate download. Both EJB3 (JSR-220) and Hibernate3 metadata is supported.
Nachfolgend sehen Sie ein Beispiel für eine als EJB Entity-Bean annotierte POJO-Klasse:
@Entity(access = AccessType.FIELD)
public class Customer implements Serializable {
@Id;
Long id;
String firstName;
String lastName;
Date birthday;
@Transient
Integer age;
@Embedded
private Address homeAddress;
@OneToMany(cascade=CascadeType.ALL)
@JoinColumn(name="CUSTOMER_ID")
Set<Order
> orders;
// Getter/setter and business methods
}
Support for JDK 5.0 Annotations (and JSR-220) is currently under development. Please refer to the Hibernate Annotations module for more details.
Generated properties are properties that have their values generated by the database. Typically, Hibernate applications needed to refresh
objects that contain any properties for which the database was generating values. Marking properties as generated, however, lets the application delegate this responsibility to Hibernate. When Hibernate issues an SQL INSERT or UPDATE for an entity that has defined generated properties, it immediately issues a select afterwards to retrieve the generated values.
Properties marked as generated must additionally be non-insertable and non-updateable. Only versions, timestamps, and simple properties, can be marked as generated.
never
(the default): the given property value is not generated within the database.
insert
: the given property value is generated on insert, but is not regenerated on subsequent updates. Properties like created-date fall into this category. Even though version and timestamp properties can be marked as generated, this option is not available.
always
: the property value is generated both on insert and on update.
Hibernate allows you to customize the SQL it uses to read and write the values of columns mapped to simple properties. For example, if your database provides a set of data encryption functions, you can invoke them for individual columns like this:
<!-- XML : generated by JHighlight v1.0 (http://jhighlight.dev.java.net) --> <span class="xml_tag_symbols"><</span><span class="xml_tag_name">property</span><span class="xml_plain"> </span><span class="xml_attribute_name">name</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">=</span><span class="xml_attribute_value">"creditCardNumber"</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">></span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br /> <span class="xml_plain"> </span><span class="xml_tag_symbols"><</span><span class="xml_tag_name">column</span><span class="xml_plain"> </span><br /> <span class="xml_plain"> </span><span class="xml_attribute_name">name</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">=</span><span class="xml_attribute_value">"credit_card_num"</span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br /> <span class="xml_plain"> </span><span class="xml_attribute_name">read</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">=</span><span class="xml_attribute_value">"decrypt(credit_card_num)"</span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br /> <span class="xml_plain"> </span><span class="xml_attribute_name">write</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">=</span><span class="xml_attribute_value">"encrypt(?)"</span><span class="xml_tag_symbols">/></span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br /> <span class="xml_tag_symbols"></</span><span class="xml_tag_name">property</span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br /> <span class="xml_tag_symbols">></span><span class="xml_plain"></span><br />
Hibernate applies the custom expressions automatically whenever the property is referenced in a query. This functionality is similar to a derived-property formula
with two differences:
The property is backed by one or more columns that are exported as part of automatic schema generation.
The property is read-write, not read-only.
The write
expression, if specified, must contain exactly one '?' placeholder for the value.
Auxiliary database objects allow for the CREATE and DROP of arbitrary database objects. In conjunction with Hibernate's schema evolution tools, they have the ability to fully define a user schema within the Hibernate mapping files. Although designed specifically for creating and dropping things like triggers or stored procedures, any SQL command that can be run via a java.sql.Statement.execute()
method is valid (for example, ALTERs, INSERTS, etc.). There are essentially two modes for defining auxiliary database objects:
The first mode is to explicitly list the CREATE and DROP commands in the mapping file:
<hibernate-mapping>
...
<database-object>
<create
>CREATE TRIGGER my_trigger ...</create>
<drop
>DROP TRIGGER my_trigger</drop>
</database-object>
</hibernate-mapping
>
The second mode is to supply a custom class that constructs the CREATE and DROP commands. This custom class must implement the org.hibernate.mapping.AuxiliaryDatabaseObject
interface.
<hibernate-mapping>
...
<database-object>
<definition class="MyTriggerDefinition"/>
</database-object>
</hibernate-mapping
>
Additionally, these database objects can be optionally scoped so that they only apply when certain dialects are used.
<hibernate-mapping>
...
<database-object>
<definition class="MyTriggerDefinition"/>
<dialect-scope name="org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle9iDialect"/>
<dialect-scope name="org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle10gDialect"/>
</database-object>
</hibernate-mapping
>
Copyright © 2004 Red Hat, Inc.