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Capítulo 18. Mapeo XML

18.1. Trabajando con datos XML
18.1.1. Especificando los mapeos de XML y de clase juntos
18.1.2. Especificando sólo un mapeo XML
18.2. Mapeo de metadatos XML
18.3. Manipulando datos XML

XML Mapping is an experimental feature in Hibernate 3.0 and is currently under active development.

Hibernate allows you to work with persistent XML data in much the same way you work with persistent POJOs. A parsed XML tree can be thought of as another way of representing the relational data at the object level, instead of POJOs.

Hibernate soporta dom4j como API para manipular árboles XML. Puedes escribir consultas que traigan árboles dom4j de la base de datos y tener cualquier modificación que hagas al árbol sincronizada automáticamente a la base de datos. Puedes incluso tomar un documento XML, analizarlo usando dom4j, y escribirlo a la base de datos con cualquiera de las operaciones básicas de Hibernate: persist(), saveOrUpdate(), merge(), delete(), replicate() (la fusión no está aún soportada).

Esta funcionalidad tiene muchas aplicaciones incluyendo la importación/exportación de datos, externalización de datos de entidad vía JMS o SOAP y reportes basados en XSLT.

A single mapping can be used to simultaneously map properties of a class and nodes of an XML document to the database, or, if there is no class to map, it can be used to map just the XML.

A range of Hibernate mapping elements accept the node attribute. This lets you specify the name of an XML attribute or element that holds the property or entity data. The format of the node attribute must be one of the following:

For collections and single valued associations, there is an additional embed-xml attribute. If embed-xml="true", the default, the XML tree for the associated entity (or collection of value type) will be embedded directly in the XML tree for the entity that owns the association. Otherwise, if embed-xml="false", then only the referenced identifier value will appear in the XML for single point associations and collections will not appear at all.

Do not leave embed-xml="true" for too many associations, since XML does not deal well with circularity.

<class name="Customer" 
        table="CUSTOMER" 
        node="customer">
        
    <id name="id" 
            column="CUST_ID" 
            node="@id"/>
            
    <map name="accounts" 
            node="." 
            embed-xml="true">
        <key column="CUSTOMER_ID" 
                not-null="true"/>
        <map-key column="SHORT_DESC" 
                node="@short-desc" 
                type="string"/>
        <one-to-many entity-name="Account"
                embed-xml="false" 
                node="account"/>
    </map>
    
    <component name="name" 
            node="name">
        <property name="firstName" 
                node="first-name"/>
        <property name="initial" 
                node="initial"/>
        <property name="lastName" 
                node="last-name"/>
    </component>
    
    ...
    
</class
>

In this case, the collection of account ids is embedded, but not the actual account data. The following HQL query:

from Customer c left join fetch c.accounts where c.lastName like :lastName

would return datasets such as this:

<customer id="123456789">
    <account short-desc="Savings"
>987632567</account>
    <account short-desc="Credit Card"
>985612323</account>
    <name>
        <first-name
>Gavin</first-name>
        <initial
>A</initial>
        <last-name
>King</last-name>
    </name>
    ...
</customer
>

Si estableces embed-xml="true" en el mapeo <one-to-many>, los datos podrían verse así:

<customer id="123456789">
    <account id="987632567" short-desc="Savings">
        <customer id="123456789"/>
        <balance
>100.29</balance>
    </account>
    <account id="985612323" short-desc="Credit Card">
        <customer id="123456789"/>
        <balance
>-2370.34</balance>
    </account>
    <name>
        <first-name
>Gavin</first-name>
        <initial
>A</initial>
        <last-name
>King</last-name>
    </name>
    ...
</customer
>

You can also re-read and update XML documents in the application. You can do this by obtaining a dom4j session:

Document doc = ....;
       
Session session = factory.openSession();
Session dom4jSession = session.getSession(EntityMode.DOM4J);
Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();

List results = dom4jSession
    .createQuery("from Customer c left join fetch c.accounts where c.lastName like :lastName")
    .list();
for ( int i=0; i<results.size(); i++ ) {
    //add the customer data to the XML document
    Element customer = (Element) results.get(i);
    doc.add(customer);
}

tx.commit();
session.close();
Session session = factory.openSession();
Session dom4jSession = session.getSession(EntityMode.DOM4J);
Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();

Element cust = (Element) dom4jSession.get("Customer", customerId);
for ( int i=0; i<results.size(); i++ ) {
    Element customer = (Element) results.get(i);
    //change the customer name in the XML and database
    Element name = customer.element("name");
    name.element("first-name").setText(firstName);
    name.element("initial").setText(initial);
    name.element("last-name").setText(lastName);
}

tx.commit();
session.close();

When implementing XML-based data import/export, it is useful to combine this feature with Hibernate's replicate() operation.