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Capítulo 7. Mapeos de colección

7.1. Colecciones persistentes
7.2. How to map collections
7.2.1. Claves foráneas de colección
7.2.2. Colecciones indexadas
7.2.3. Collections of basic types and embeddable objects
7.3. Mapeos de colección avanzados
7.3.1. Colecciones ordenadas
7.3.2. Asociaciones bidireccionales
7.3.3. Asociaciones bidireccionales con colecciones indexadas
7.3.4. Asociaciones ternarias
7.3.5. Using an <idbag>
7.4. Ejemplos de colección

Naturally Hibernate also allows to persist collections. These persistent collections can contain almost any other Hibernate type, including: basic types, custom types, components and references to other entities. The distinction between value and reference semantics is in this context very important. An object in a collection might be handled with "value" semantics (its life cycle fully depends on the collection owner), or it might be a reference to another entity with its own life cycle. In the latter case, only the "link" between the two objects is considered to be a state held by the collection.

As a requirement persistent collection-valued fields must be declared as an interface type (see Ejemplo 7.2, “Collection mapping using @OneToMany and @JoinColumn”). The actual interface might be java.util.Set, java.util.Collection, java.util.List, java.util.Map, java.util.SortedSet, java.util.SortedMap or anything you like ("anything you like" means you will have to write an implementation of org.hibernate.usertype.UserCollectionType).

Notice how in Ejemplo 7.2, “Collection mapping using @OneToMany and @JoinColumn” the instance variable parts was initialized with an instance of HashSet. This is the best way to initialize collection valued properties of newly instantiated (non-persistent) instances. When you make the instance persistent, by calling persist(), Hibernate will actually replace the HashSet with an instance of Hibernate's own implementation of Set. Be aware of the following error:


Las colecciones persistentes inyectadas por Hibernate se comportan como HashMap, HashSet, TreeMap, TreeSet o ArrayList, dependiendo del tipo de interfaz.

Las instancias de colecciones tienen el comportamiento usual de los tipos de valor. Son automáticamente persistidas al ser referenciadas por un objeto persistente y se borran automáticamente al desreferenciarse. Si una colección se pasa de un objeto persistente a otro, puede que sus elementos se muevan de una tabla a otra. Dos entidades no pueden compartir una referencia a la misma instancia de colección. Debido al modelo relacional subyacente, las propiedades valuadas en colección no soportan la semántica de valor nulo. Hibernate no distingue entre una referencia de colección nula y una colección vacía.

Using annotations you can map Collections, Lists, Maps and Sets of associated entities using @OneToMany and @ManyToMany. For collections of a basic or embeddable type use @ElementCollection. In the simplest case a collection mapping looks like this:


Product describes a unidirectional relationship with Part using the join column PART_ID. In this unidirectional one to many scenario you can also use a join table as seen in Ejemplo 7.3, “Collection mapping using @OneToMany and @JoinTable”.


Without describing any physical mapping (no @JoinColumn or @JoinTable), a unidirectional one to many with join table is used. The table name is the concatenation of the owner table name, _, and the other side table name. The foreign key name(s) referencing the owner table is the concatenation of the owner table, _, and the owner primary key column(s) name. The foreign key name(s) referencing the other side is the concatenation of the owner property name, _, and the other side primary key column(s) name. A unique constraint is added to the foreign key referencing the other side table to reflect the one to many.

Lets have a look now how collections are mapped using Hibernate mapping files. In this case the first step is to chose the right mapping element. It depends on the type of interface. For example, a <set> element is used for mapping properties of type Set.


In Ejemplo 7.4, “Mapping a Set using <set>” a one-to-many association links the Product and Part entities. This association requires the existence of a foreign key column and possibly an index column to the Part table. This mapping loses certain semantics of normal Java collections:

  • Una instancia de la clase entidad contenida no puede pertenecer a más de una instancia de la colección.

  • Una instancia de la clase entidad contenida no puede aparecer en más de un valor del índice de colección.

Looking closer at the used <one-to-many> tag we see that it has the following options.


El elemento <one-to-many> no necesita declarar ninguna columna. Ni es necesario especificar el nombre de table en ningún sitio.

Apart from the <set> tag as shown in Ejemplo 7.4, “Mapping a Set using <set>”, there is also <list>, <map>, <bag>, <array> and <primitive-array> mapping elements. The <map> element is representative:

Ejemplo 7.6. Elements of the <map> mapping

<map
    name="prop(1)ertyName"
    table="tab(2)le_name"
    schema="sc(3)hema_name"
    lazy="true(4)|extra|false"
    inverse="t(5)rue|false"
    cascade="a(6)ll|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan|delete-orphan"
    sort="unso(7)rted|natural|comparatorClass"
    order-by="(8)column_name asc|desc"
    where="arb(9)itrary sql where condition"
    fetch="joi(10)n|select|subselect"
    batch-size(11)="N"
    access="fi(12)eld|property|ClassName"
    optimistic(13)-lock="true|false"
    mutable="t(14)rue|false"
    node="element-name|."
    embed-xml="true|false"
>

    <key .... />
    <map-key .... />
    <element .... />
</map>

1

name: el nombre de la propiedad de colección

2

table (opcional - por defecto es el nombre de la propiedad): el nombre de la tabla de colección. No se utiliza para asociaciones uno-a-muchos.

3

schema (opcional): el nombre de un esquema de tablas para sobrescribir el esquema declarado en el elemento raíz

4

lazy (opcional - por defecto es true): deshabilita la recuperación perezosa y especifica que la asociación siempre es recuperada tempranamente. También se puede utilizar para activar una recuperación "extra-perezoza", en donde la mayoría de las operaciones no inicializan la colección. Esto es apropiado para colecciones grandes.

5

inverse (opcional - por defecto es false): marca esta colección como el extremo "inverso" de una asociación bidireccional.

6

cascade (opcional - por defecto es none): habilita operaciones en cascada para entidades hijas.

7

sort (opcional): especifica una colección con ordenamiento natural, o una clase comparadora dada.

8

order-by (optional): specifies a table column or columns that define the iteration order of the Map, Set or bag, together with an optional asc or desc.

9

where (opcional): especifica una condición WHERE de SQL arbitraria que se utiliza al recuperar o quitar la colección. Esto es útil si la colección debe contener sólamente un subconjunto de los datos disponibles.

10

fetch (opcional, por defecto es select): Elige entre la recuperación por unión externa (outer-join), la recuperación por selección secuencial y la recuperación por subselección secuencial.

11

batch-size (opcional, por defecto es 1): especifica un "tamaño de lote" para recuperar perezosamente instancias de esta colección.

12

access (opcional - por defecto es property): La estrategia que Hibernate utiliza para acceder al valor de la propiedad de colección.

13

optimistic-lock (opcional - por defecto es true): Especifica que los cambios de estado de la colección causan incrementos de la versión de la entidad dueña. Para asociaciones uno a muchos, es posible que quiera deshabilitar esta opción.

14

mutable (opcional - por defectos es true): Un valor false especifica que los elementos de la colección nunca cambian. En algunos casos, esto permite una pequeña optimización de rendimiento.


After exploring the basic mapping of collections in the preceding paragraphs we will now focus details like physical mapping considerations, indexed collections and collections of value types.

In the following paragraphs we have a closer at the indexed collections List and Map how the their index can be mapped in Hibernate.

Lists can be mapped in two different ways:

To order lists in memory, add @javax.persistence.OrderBy to your property. This annotation takes as parameter a list of comma separated properties (of the target entity) and orders the collection accordingly (eg firstname asc, age desc), if the string is empty, the collection will be ordered by the primary key of the target entity.


To store the index value in a dedicated column, use the @javax.persistence.OrderColumn annotation on your property. This annotations describes the column name and attributes of the column keeping the index value. This column is hosted on the table containing the association foreign key. If the column name is not specified, the default is the name of the referencing property, followed by underscore, followed by ORDER (in the following example, it would be orders_ORDER).


Nota

We recommend you to convert the legacy @org.hibernate.annotations.IndexColumn usages to @OrderColumn unless you are making use of the base property. The base property lets you define the index value of the first element (aka as base index). The usual value is 0 or 1. The default is 0 like in Java.

Looking again at the Hibernate mapping file equivalent, the index of an array or list is always of type integer and is mapped using the <list-index> element. The mapped column contains sequential integers that are numbered from zero by default.


Si su tabla no tiene una columna índice y todavía desea utilizar List como tipo de propiedad, puede mapear la propiedad como un <bag> de Hibernate. Un bag (bolsa) no retiene su orden al ser recuperado de la base de datos, pero puede ser ordenado o clasificado de manera opcional.

The question with Maps is where the key value is stored. There are everal options. Maps can borrow their keys from one of the associated entity properties or have dedicated columns to store an explicit key.

To use one of the target entity property as a key of the map, use @MapKey(name="myProperty"), where myProperty is a property name in the target entity. When using @MapKey without the name attribuate, the target entity primary key is used. The map key uses the same column as the property pointed out. There is no additional column defined to hold the map key, because the map key represent a target property. Be aware that once loaded, the key is no longer kept in sync with the property. In other words, if you change the property value, the key will not change automatically in your Java model.


Alternatively the map key is mapped to a dedicated column or columns. In order to customize the mapping use one of the following annotations:

  • @MapKeyColumn if the map key is a basic type. If you don't specify the column name, the name of the property followed by underscore followed by KEY is used (for example orders_KEY).

  • @MapKeyEnumerated / @MapKeyTemporal if the map key type is respectively an enum or a Date.

  • @MapKeyJoinColumn/@MapKeyJoinColumns if the map key type is another entity.

  • @AttributeOverride/@AttributeOverrides when the map key is a embeddable object. Use key. as a prefix for your embeddable object property names.

You can also use @MapKeyClass to define the type of the key if you don't use generics.

Ejemplo 7.11. Map key as basic type using @MapKeyColumn

@Entity

public class Customer {
   @Id @GeneratedValue public Integer getId() { return id; }
   public void setId(Integer id) { this.id = id; }
   private Integer id;
   @OneToMany @JoinTable(name="Cust_Order")
   @MapKeyColumn(name="orders_number")
   public Map<String,Order> getOrders() { return orders; }
   public void setOrders(Map<String,Order> orders) { this.orders = orders; }
   private Map<String,Order> orders;
}
@Entity
public class Order {
   @Id @GeneratedValue public Integer getId() { return id; }
   public void setId(Integer id) { this.id = id; }
   private Integer id;
   public String getNumber() { return number; }
   public void setNumber(String number) { this.number = number; }
   private String number;
   @ManyToOne
   public Customer getCustomer() { return customer; }
   public void setCustomer(Customer customer) { this.customer = customer; }
   private Customer number;
}
-- Table schema
|-------------| |----------| |---------------|
| Order       | | Customer | | Cust_Order    |
|-------------| |----------| |---------------|
| id          | | id       | | customer_id   |
| number      | |----------| | order_id      |
| customer_id |              | orders_number |
|-------------|              |---------------|

Nota

We recommend you to migrate from @org.hibernate.annotations.MapKey / @org.hibernate.annotation.MapKeyManyToMany to the new standard approach described above

Using Hibernate mapping files there exists equivalent concepts to the descibed annotations. You have to use <map-key>, <map-key-many-to-many> and <composite-map-key>. <map-key> is used for any basic type, <map-key-many-to-many> for an entity reference and <composite-map-key> for a composite type.



In some situations you don't need to associate two entities but simply create a collection of basic types or embeddable objects. Use the @ElementCollection for this case.


The collection table holding the collection data is set using the @CollectionTable annotation. If omitted the collection table name defaults to the concatenation of the name of the containing entity and the name of the collection attribute, separated by an underscore. In our example, it would be User_nicknames.

The column holding the basic type is set using the @Column annotation. If omitted, the column name defaults to the property name: in our example, it would be nicknames.

But you are not limited to basic types, the collection type can be any embeddable object. To override the columns of the embeddable object in the collection table, use the @AttributeOverride annotation.


Such an embeddable object cannot contains a collection itself.

Nota

in @AttributeOverride, you must use the value. prefix to override properties of the embeddable object used in the map value and the key. prefix to override properties of the embeddable object used in the map key.

@Entity

public class User {
   @ElementCollection
   @AttributeOverrides({
      @AttributeOverride(name="key.street1", column=@Column(name="fld_street")),
      @AttributeOverride(name="value.stars", column=@Column(name="fld_note"))
   })
   public Map<Address,Rating> getFavHomes() { ... }

Nota

We recommend you to migrate from @org.hibernate.annotations.CollectionOfElements to the new @ElementCollection annotation.

Using the mapping file approach a collection of values is mapped using the <element> tag. For example:


Hibernate supports collections implementing java.util.SortedMap and java.util.SortedSet. With annotations you declare a sort comparator using @Sort. You chose between the comparator types unsorted, natural or custom. If you want to use your own comparator implementation, you'll also have to specify the implementation class using the comparator attribute. Note that you need to use either a SortedSet or a SortedMap interface.


Using Hibernate mapping files you specify a comparator in the mapping file with <sort>:


Los valores permitidos del atributo sort son unsorted, natural y el nombre de una clase que implemente java.util.Comparator.

Sugerencia

Las colecciones ordenadas realmente se comportan como java.util.TreeSet o java.util.TreeMap.

If you want the database itself to order the collection elements, use the order-by attribute of set, bag or map mappings. This solution is implemented using LinkedHashSet or LinkedHashMap and performs the ordering in the SQL query and not in the memory.


Nota

El valor del atributo order-by es una ordenación SQL, no una ordenación HQL.

Las asociaciones pueden incluso ser ordenadas por algún criterio arbitrario en tiempo de ejecución utilizando un filter() de colección:


Una asociación bidireccional permite la navegación desde ambos "extremos" de la asociación. Se soportan dos tipos de asociación bidireccional:

Often there exists a many to one association which is the owner side of a bidirectional relationship. The corresponding one to many association is in this case annotated by @OneToMany(mappedBy=...)


Troop has a bidirectional one to many relationship with Soldier through the troop property. You don't have to (must not) define any physical mapping in the mappedBy side.

To map a bidirectional one to many, with the one-to-many side as the owning side, you have to remove the mappedBy element and set the many to one @JoinColumn as insertable and updatable to false. This solution is not optimized and will produce additional UPDATE statements.


How does the mappping of a bidirectional mapping look like in Hibernate mapping xml? There you define a bidirectional one-to-many association by mapping a one-to-many association to the same table column(s) as a many-to-one association and declaring the many-valued end inverse="true".


Mapear un extremo de una asociación con inverse="true" no afecta la operación de cascadas ay que éstos son conceptos ortogonales.

A many-to-many association is defined logically using the @ManyToMany annotation. You also have to describe the association table and the join conditions using the @JoinTable annotation. If the association is bidirectional, one side has to be the owner and one side has to be the inverse end (ie. it will be ignored when updating the relationship values in the association table):


In this example @JoinTable defines a name, an array of join columns, and an array of inverse join columns. The latter ones are the columns of the association table which refer to the Employee primary key (the "other side"). As seen previously, the other side don't have to (must not) describe the physical mapping: a simple mappedBy argument containing the owner side property name bind the two.

As any other annotations, most values are guessed in a many to many relationship. Without describing any physical mapping in a unidirectional many to many the following rules applied. The table name is the concatenation of the owner table name, _ and the other side table name. The foreign key name(s) referencing the owner table is the concatenation of the owner table name, _ and the owner primary key column(s). The foreign key name(s) referencing the other side is the concatenation of the owner property name, _, and the other side primary key column(s). These are the same rules used for a unidirectional one to many relationship.


A Store_City is used as the join table. The Store_id column is a foreign key to the Store table. The implantedIn_id column is a foreign key to the City table.

Without describing any physical mapping in a bidirectional many to many the following rules applied. The table name is the concatenation of the owner table name, _ and the other side table name. The foreign key name(s) referencing the owner table is the concatenation of the other side property name, _, and the owner primary key column(s). The foreign key name(s) referencing the other side is the concatenation of the owner property name, _, and the other side primary key column(s). These are the same rules used for a unidirectional one to many relationship.


A Store_Customer is used as the join table. The stores_id column is a foreign key to the Store table. The customers_id column is a foreign key to the Customer table.

Using Hibernate mapping files you can map a bidirectional many-to-many association by mapping two many-to-many associations to the same database table and declaring one end as inverse.

Nota

You cannot select an indexed collection.

Ejemplo 7.27, “Many to many association using Hibernate mapping files” shows a bidirectional many-to-many association that illustrates how each category can have many items and each item can be in many categories:


Los cambios realizados sólamente al extremo inverso de la asociación no son persistidos. Esto significa que Hibernate tiene dos representaciones en memoria para cada asociación bidireccional: un enlace de A a B y otro enlace de B a A. Esto es más fácil de entender si piensa en el modelo de objetos de Java y cómo creamos una relación muchos-a-muchos en Java:


El lado no-inverso se utiliza para guardar la representación en memoria a la base de datos.

There are some additional considerations for bidirectional mappings with indexed collections (where one end is represented as a <list> or <map>) when using Hibernate mapping files. If there is a property of the child class that maps to the index column you can use inverse="true" on the collection mapping:


Si no existe tal propiedad en la clase hija, no podemos considerar la asociación como verdaderamente bidireccional. Es decir, hay información en un extremo de la asociación que no está disponible en el otro extremo. En este caso, no puede mapear la colección con inverse="true". En cambio, puede usar el siguiente mapeo:


Note que en este mapeo, el extremo de la asociación valuado en colección es responsable de las actualizaciones de la clave foránea.

The majority of the many-to-many associations and collections of values shown previously all map to tables with composite keys, even though it has been suggested that entities should have synthetic identifiers (surrogate keys). A pure association table does not seem to benefit much from a surrogate key, although a collection of composite values might. For this reason Hibernate provides a feature that allows you to map many-to-many associations and collections of values to a table with a surrogate key.

El elemento <idbag> le permite mapear una List (o Collection) con semántica de bag. Por ejemplo:


<idbag name="lovers" table="LOVERS">
    <collection-id column="ID" type="long">
        <generator class="sequence"/>
    </collection-id>
    <key column="PERSON1"/>
    <many-to-many column="PERSON2" class="Person" fetch="join"/>
</idbag>

Un <idbag> tiene un generador de id sintético, al igual que una clase de entidad. Se asigna una clave delegada diferente a cada fila de la colección. Sin embargo, Hibernate no proporciona ningún mecanismo para descubrir el valor de la clave delegada de una fila en particular.

El rendimiento de actualización de un <idbag> es mucho mejor que el de un <bag> normal. Hibernate puede localizar filas individuales eficientemente y actualizarlas o borrarlas individualmente, al igual que si fuese una lista, mapa o conjunto.

En la implementación actual, la estrategia de generación de identificador native no se encuentra soportada para identificadores de colecciones <idbag>.

Esta sección cubre los ejemplos de colección.

La siguiente clase tiene una colección de instancias Child:


Si cada hijo tiene como mucho un padre, el mapeo más natural es una asociación uno-a-muchos:



Esto mapea a las siguientes definiciones de tabla:


Si el padre es requerido, utilice una asociación bidireccional uno-a-muchos:



Observe la restricción NOT NULL:


Alternatively, if this association must be unidirectional you can enforce the NOT NULL constraint.



On the other hand, if a child has multiple parents, a many-to-many association is appropriate.



Definiciones de tabla:


For more examples and a complete explanation of a parent/child relationship mapping, see Capítulo 24, Ejemplo: Padre/Hijo for more information. Even more complex association mappings are covered in the next chapter.