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Hibernate Notes

Hibernate is an open-source Object/Relational Mapping (ORM) framework for Java that simplifies database interactions by mapping Java classes to database tables. It addresses common issues associated with JDBC, such as complexity and database independence, by allowing developers to work with objects instead of SQL queries. The framework supports various databases and provides features like transaction management and automatic key generation, making it a powerful tool for developing database-driven applications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views77 pages

Hibernate Notes

Hibernate is an open-source Object/Relational Mapping (ORM) framework for Java that simplifies database interactions by mapping Java classes to database tables. It addresses common issues associated with JDBC, such as complexity and database independence, by allowing developers to work with objects instead of SQL queries. The framework supports various databases and provides features like transaction management and automatic key generation, making it a powerful tool for developing database-driven applications.

Uploaded by

Riya Yohannan
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Hibernate

Hibernate is a high-performance Object/Relational persistence and query service, which is


licensed under the open source GNU Lesser General Public License (LGPL) and is free to
download. Hibernate not only takes care of the mapping from Java classes to database tables
(and from Java data types to SQL data types), but also provides data query and retrieval
facilities. This tutorial will teach you how to use Hibernate to develop your database based
web applications in simple and easy steps.

Hibernate - ORM Overview

What is JDBC?

JDBC stands for Java Database Connectivity. It provides a set of Java API for accessing the
relational databases from Java program. These Java APIs enables Java programs to execute
SQL statements and interact with any SQL compliant database.

JDBC provides a flexible architecture to write a database independent application that can
run on different platforms and interact with different DBMS without any modification.

Pros and Cons of JDBC

Pros of JDBC Cons of JDBC

Complex if it is used in large projects


Clean and simple SQL processing
Large programming overhead
Good performance with large data
No encapsulation
Very good for small applications
Hard to implement MVC concept
Simple syntax so easy to learn
Query is DBMS specific

Why Object Relational Mapping (ORM)?

When we work with an object-oriented system, there is a mismatch between the object model
and the relational database. RDBMSs represent data in a tabular format whereas object-
oriented languages, such as Java or C# represent it as an interconnected graph of objects.

Consider the following Java Class with proper constructors and associated public function −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String first_name;
private String last_name;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}
public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {
this.first_name = fname;
this.last_name = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}
}

Consider the above objects are to be stored and retrieved into the following RDBMS table −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

First problem, what if we need to modify the design of our database after having developed a
few pages or our application? Second, loading and storing objects in a relational database
exposes us to the following five mismatch problems −

Sr.No. Mismatch & Description

Granularity
1 Sometimes you will have an object model, which has more classes than
the number of corresponding tables in the database.

Inheritance
2 RDBMSs do not define anything similar to Inheritance, which is a natural
paradigm in object-oriented programming languages.

Identity
An RDBMS defines exactly one notion of 'sameness': the primary key.
3
Java, however, defines both object identity (a==b) and object equality
(a.equals(b)).

4 Associations
Object-oriented languages represent associations using object references
whereas an RDBMS represents an association as a foreign key column.

Navigation
5 The ways you access objects in Java and in RDBMS are fundamentally
different.

The Object-Relational Mapping (ORM) is the solution to handle all the above impedance
mismatches.

What is ORM?

ORM stands for Object-Relational Mapping (ORM) is a programming technique for


converting data between relational databases and object oriented programming languages
such as Java, C#, etc.

An ORM system has the following advantages over plain JDBC −

Sr.No. Advantages

1 Let’s business code access objects rather than DB tables.

2 Hides details of SQL queries from OO logic.

3 Based on JDBC 'under the hood.'

4 No need to deal with the database implementation.

5 Entities based on business concepts rather than database structure.

6 Transaction management and automatic key generation.

7 Fast development of application.

An ORM solution consists of the following four entities −

Sr.No. Solutions

An API to perform basic CRUD operations on objects of persistent


1
classes.

A language or API to specify queries that refer to classes and properties


2
of classes.

3 A configurable facility for specifying mapping metadata.

A technique to interact with transactional objects to perform dirty


4
checking, lazy association fetching, and other optimization functions.
Java ORM Frameworks

There are several persistent frameworks and ORM options in Java. A persistent framework is
an ORM service that stores and retrieves objects into a relational database.

• Enterprise JavaBeans Entity Beans


• Java Data Objects
• Castor
• TopLink
• Spring DAO
• Hibernate
• And many more
Hibernate - Overview

Hibernate is an Object-Relational Mapping (ORM) solution for JAVA. It is an open source


persistent framework created by Gavin King in 2001. It is a powerful, high performance
Object-Relational Persistence and Query service for any Java Application.

Hibernate maps Java classes to database tables and from Java data types to SQL data types
and relieves the developer from 95% of common data persistence related programming tasks.

Hibernate sits between traditional Java objects and database server to handle all the works in
persisting those objects based on the appropriate O/R mechanisms and patterns.

Hibernate Advantages

• Hibernate takes care of mapping Java classes to database tables using XML files and
without writing any line of code.
• Provides simple APIs for storing and retrieving Java objects directly to and from the
database.
• If there is change in the database or in any table, then you need to change the XML file
properties only.
• Abstracts away the unfamiliar SQL types and provides a way to work around familiar
Java Objects.
• Hibernate does not require an application server to operate.
• Manipulates Complex associations of objects of your database.
• Minimizes database access with smart fetching strategies.
• Provides simple querying of data.
Supported Databases

Hibernate supports almost all the major RDBMS. Following is a list of few of the database
engines supported by Hibernate −

• HSQL Database Engine


• DB2/NT
• MySQL
• PostgreSQL
• FrontBase
• Oracle
• Microsoft SQL Server Database
• Sybase SQL Server
• Informix Dynamic Server

Supported Technologies

Hibernate supports a variety of other technologies, including −

• XDoclet Spring
• J2EE
• Eclipse plug-ins
• Maven
Hibernate - Architecture

Hibernate has a layered architecture which helps the user to operate without having to know
the underlying APIs. Hibernate makes use of the database and configuration data to provide
persistence services (and persistent objects) to the application.

Following is a very high level view of the Hibernate Application Architecture.


Following is a detailed view of the Hibernate Application Architecture with its important
core classes.
Hibernate uses various existing Java APIs, like JDBC, Java Transaction API(JTA), and Java
Naming and Directory Interface (JNDI). JDBC provides a rudimentary level of abstraction of
functionality common to relational databases, allowing almost any database with a JDBC
driver to be supported by Hibernate. JNDI and JTA allow Hibernate to be integrated with
J2EE application servers.

Following section gives brief description of each of the class objects involved in Hibernate
Application Architecture.

Configuration Object

The Configuration object is the first Hibernate object you create in any Hibernate application.
It is usually created only once during application initialization. It represents a configuration
or properties file required by the Hibernate.

The Configuration object provides two keys components −

• Database Connection − This is handled through one or more configuration files


supported by Hibernate. These files are hibernate.properties and hibernate.cfg.xml.
• Class Mapping Setup − This component creates the connection between the Java
classes and database tables.
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SessionFactory Object

Configuration object is used to create a SessionFactory object which in turn configures


Hibernate for the application using the supplied configuration file and allows for a Session
object to be instantiated. The SessionFactory is a thread safe object and used by all the
threads of an application.

The SessionFactory is a heavyweight object; it is usually created during application start up


and kept for later use. You would need one SessionFactory object per database using a
separate configuration file. So, if you are using multiple databases, then you would have to
create multiple SessionFactory objects.

Session Object

A Session is used to get a physical connection with a database. The Session object is
lightweight and designed to be instantiated each time an interaction is needed with the
database. Persistent objects are saved and retrieved through a Session object.

The session objects should not be kept open for a long time because they are not usually
thread safe and they should be created and destroyed them as needed.

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Transaction Object

A Transaction represents a unit of work with the database and most of the RDBMS supports
transaction functionality. Transactions in Hibernate are handled by an underlying transaction
manager and transaction (from JDBC or JTA).

This is an optional object and Hibernate applications may choose not to use this interface,
instead managing transactions in their own application code.

Query Object

Query objects use SQL or Hibernate Query Language (HQL) string to retrieve data from the
database and create objects. A Query instance is used to bind query parameters, limit the
number of results returned by the query, and finally to execute the query.

Criteria Object

Criteria objects are used to create and execute object oriented criteria queries to retrieve
objects.

Hibernate - Configuration
Hibernate requires to know in advance — where to find the mapping information that defines
how your Java classes relate to the database tables. Hibernate also requires a set of
configuration settings related to database and other related parameters. All such information
is usually supplied as a standard Java properties file called hibernate.properties, or as an
XML file named hibernate.cfg.xml.

I will consider XML formatted file hibernate.cfg.xml to specify required Hibernate


properties in my examples. Most of the properties take their default values and it is not
required to specify them in the property file unless it is really required. This file is kept in the
root directory of your application's classpath.

Hibernate Properties

Following is the list of important properties, you will be required to configure for a databases
in a standalone situation −

Sr.No. Properties & Description

hibernate.dialect
1 This property makes Hibernate generate the appropriate SQL for the
chosen database.

hibernate.connection.driver_class
2
The JDBC driver class.

hibernate.connection.url
3
The JDBC URL to the database instance.

hibernate.connection.username
4
The database username.

hibernate.connection.password
5
The database password.

hibernate.connection.pool_size
6 Limits the number of connections waiting in the Hibernate database
connection pool.

hibernate.connection.autocommit
7
Allows autocommit mode to be used for the JDBC connection.

If you are using a database along with an application server and JNDI, then you would have
to configure the following properties −

Sr.No. Properties & Description

hibernate.connection.datasource
1 The JNDI name defined in the application server context, which you are
using for the application.
hibernate.jndi.class
2
The InitialContext class for JNDI.

hibernate.jndi.<JNDIpropertyname>
3
Passes any JNDI property you like to the JNDI InitialContext.

hibernate.jndi.url
4
Provides the URL for JNDI.

hibernate.connection.username
5
The database username.

hibernate.connection.password
6
The database password.

Hibernate with MySQL Database

MySQL is one of the most popular open-source database systems available today. Let us
create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file and place it in the root of your application's
classpath. You will have to make sure that you have testdb database available in your
MySQL database and you have a user test available to access the database.

The XML configuration file must conform to the Hibernate 3 Configuration DTD, which is
available at http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration SYSTEM
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-configuration>
<session-factory>

<property name = "hibernate.dialect">


org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.driver_class">


com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
</property>

<!-- Assume test is the database name -->

<property name = "hibernate.connection.url">


jdbc:mysql://localhost/test
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.username">


root
</property>
<property name = "hibernate.connection.password">
root123
</property>

<!-- List of XML mapping files -->


<mapping resource = "Employee.hbm.xml"/>

</session-factory>
</hibernate-configuration>

The above configuration file includes <mapping> tags, which are related to
hibernatemapping file and we will see in next chapter what exactly a hibernate mapping file
is and how and why do we use it?

Following is the list of various important databases dialect property type −

Sr.No. Database & Dialect Property

DB2
1
org.hibernate.dialect.DB2Dialect

HSQLDB
2
org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect

HypersonicSQL
3
org.hibernate.dialect.HSQLDialect

Informix
4
org.hibernate.dialect.InformixDialect

Ingres
5
org.hibernate.dialect.IngresDialect

Interbase
6
org.hibernate.dialect.InterbaseDialect

Microsoft SQL Server 2000


7
org.hibernate.dialect.SQLServerDialect

Microsoft SQL Server 2005


8
org.hibernate.dialect.SQLServer2005Dialect

Microsoft SQL Server 2008


9
org.hibernate.dialect.SQLServer2008Dialect

MySQL
10
org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect

Oracle (any version)


11
org.hibernate.dialect.OracleDialect
Oracle 11g
12
org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle10gDialect

Oracle 10g
13
org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle10gDialect

Oracle 9i
14
org.hibernate.dialect.Oracle9iDialect

PostgreSQL
15
org.hibernate.dialect.PostgreSQLDialect

Progress
16
org.hibernate.dialect.ProgressDialect

SAP DB
17
org.hibernate.dialect.SAPDBDialect

Sybase
18
org.hibernate.dialect.SybaseDialect

Sybase Anywhere
19
org.hibernate.dialect.SybaseAnywhereDialect
Hibernate - Sessions

A Session is used to get a physical connection with a database. The Session object is
lightweight and designed to be instantiated each time an interaction is needed with the
database. Persistent objects are saved and retrieved through a Session object.

The session objects should not be kept open for a long time because they are not usually
thread safe and they should be created and destroyed them as needed. The main function of
the Session is to offer, create, read, and delete operations for instances of mapped entity
classes.

Instances may exist in one of the following three states at a given point in time −

• transient − A new instance of a persistent class, which is not associated with a Session
and has no representation in the database and no identifier value is considered transient
by Hibernate.
• persistent − You can make a transient instance persistent by associating it with a
Session. A persistent instance has a representation in the database, an identifier value
and is associated with a Session.
• detached − Once we close the Hibernate Session, the persistent instance will become
a detached instance.

A Session instance is serializable if its persistent classes are serializable. A typical transaction
should use the following idiom −

Session session = factory.openSession();


Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
// do some work
...
tx.commit();
}

catch (Exception e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}

If the Session throws an exception, the transaction must be rolled back and the session must
be discarded.

Session Interface Methods

There are number of methods provided by the Session interface, but I'm going to list down a
few important methods only, which we will use in this tutorial. You can check Hibernate
documentation for a complete list of methods associated with Session and SessionFactory.

Sr.No. Session Methods & Description

Transaction beginTransaction()
1
Begin a unit of work and return the associated Transaction object.

void cancelQuery()
2
Cancel the execution of the current query.

void clear()
3
Completely clear the session.

Connection close()
4
End the session by releasing the JDBC connection and cleaning up.

Criteria createCriteria(Class persistentClass)


5 Create a new Criteria instance, for the given entity class, or a superclass
of an entity class.

Criteria createCriteria(String entityName)


6
Create a new Criteria instance, for the given entity name.

Serializable getIdentifier(Object object)


7 Return the identifier value of the given entity as associated with this
session.
Query createFilter(Object collection, String queryString)
8
Create a new instance of Query for the given collection and filter string.

Query createQuery(String queryString)


9
Create a new instance of Query for the given HQL query string.

SQLQuery createSQLQuery(String queryString)


10
Create a new instance of SQLQuery for the given SQL query string.

void delete(Object object)


11
Remove a persistent instance from the datastore.

void delete(String entityName, Object object)


12
Remove a persistent instance from the datastore.

Session get(String entityName, Serializable id)


13 Return the persistent instance of the given named entity with the given
identifier, or null if there is no such persistent instance.

SessionFactory getSessionFactory()
14
Get the session factory which created this session.

void refresh(Object object)


15
Re-read the state of the given instance from the underlying database.

Transaction getTransaction()
16
Get the Transaction instance associated with this session.

boolean isConnected()
17
Check if the session is currently connected.

boolean isDirty()
18 Does this session contain any changes which must be synchronized with
the database?

boolean isOpen()
19
Check if the session is still open.

Serializable save(Object object)


20
Persist the given transient instance, first assigning a generated identifier.

void saveOrUpdate(Object object)


21
Either save(Object) or update(Object) the given instance.

void update(Object object)


22 Update the persistent instance with the identifier of the given detached
instance.

void update(String entityName, Object object)


23 Update the persistent instance with the identifier of the given detached
instance.
Hibernate - Persistent Class

The entire concept of Hibernate is to take the values from Java class attributes and persist
them to a database table. A mapping document helps Hibernate in determining how to pull
the values from the classes and map them with table and associated fields.

Java classes whose objects or instances will be stored in database tables are called persistent
classes in Hibernate. Hibernate works best if these classes follow some simple rules, also
known as the Plain Old Java Object (POJO) programming model.

There are following main rules of persistent classes, however, none of these rules are hard
requirements −

• All Java classes that will be persisted need a default constructor.


• All classes should contain an ID in order to allow easy identification of your objects
within Hibernate and the database. This property maps to the primary key column of a
database table.
• All attributes that will be persisted should be declared private and
have getXXX and setXXX methods defined in the JavaBean style.
• A central feature of Hibernate, proxies, depends upon the persistent class being either
non-final, or the implementation of an interface that declares all public methods.
• All classes that do not extend or implement some specialized classes and interfaces
required by the EJB framework.

The POJO name is used to emphasize that a given object is an ordinary Java Object, not a
special object, and in particular not an Enterprise JavaBean.

Simple POJO Example

Based on the few rules mentioned above, we can define a POJO class as follows −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}
public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {
this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Hibernate - Mapping Files

An Object/relational mappings are usually defined in an XML document. This mapping file
instructs Hibernate — how to map the defined class or classes to the database tables?

Though many Hibernate users choose to write the XML by hand, but a number of tools exist
to generate the mapping document. These include XDoclet, Middlegen and AndroMDA for
the advanced Hibernate users.

Let us consider our previously defined POJO class whose objects will persist in the table
defined in next section.

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

There would be one table corresponding to each object you are willing to provide persistence.
Consider above objects need to be stored and retrieved into the following RDBMS table −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Based on the two above entities, we can define following mapping file, which instructs
Hibernate how to map the defined class or classes to the database tables.
<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

You should save the mapping document in a file with the format <classname>.hbm.xml. We
saved our mapping document in the file Employee.hbm.xml.

Let us see understand a little detail about the mapping elements used in the mapping file −

• The mapping document is an XML document having <hibernate-mapping> as the


root element, which contains all the <class> elements.
• The <class> elements are used to define specific mappings from a Java classes to the
database tables. The Java class name is specified using the name attribute of the class
element and the database table name is specified using the table attribute.
• The <meta> element is optional element and can be used to create the class description.
• The <id> element maps the unique ID attribute in class to the primary key of the
database table. The name attribute of the id element refers to the property in the class
and the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute
holds the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL
data type.
• The <generator> element within the id element is used to generate the primary key
values automatically. The class attribute of the generator element is set to native to let
hibernate pick up either identity, sequence, or hilo algorithm to create primary key
depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.
• The <property> element is used to map a Java class property to a column in the
database table. The name attribute of the element refers to the property in the class and
the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute holds
the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL data
type.
There are other attributes and elements available, which will be used in a mapping document
and I would try to cover as many as possible while discussing other Hibernate related topics.

Hibernate - Mapping Types

When you prepare a Hibernate mapping document, you find that you map the Java data types
into RDBMS data types. The types declared and used in the mapping files are not Java data
types; they are not SQL database types either. These types are called Hibernate mapping
types, which can translate from Java to SQL data types and vice versa.

This chapter lists down all the basic, date and time, large object, and various other builtin
mapping types.

Primitive Types

Mapping type Java type ANSI SQL Type

integer int or java.lang.Integer INTEGER

long long or java.lang.Long BIGINT

short short or java.lang.Short SMALLINT

float float or java.lang.Float FLOAT

double double or java.lang.Double DOUBLE

big_decimal java.math.BigDecimal NUMERIC

character java.lang.String CHAR(1)

string java.lang.String VARCHAR

byte byte or java.lang.Byte TINYINT

boolean boolean or java.lang.Boolean BIT

yes/no boolean or java.lang.Boolean CHAR(1) ('Y' or 'N')

true/false boolean or java.lang.Boolean CHAR(1) ('T' or 'F')


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Date and Time Types

Mapping type Java type ANSI SQL Type

date java.util.Date or java.sql.Date DATE

time java.util.Date or java.sql.Time TIME


timestamp java.util.Date or java.sql.Timestamp TIMESTAMP

calendar java.util.Calendar TIMESTAMP

calendar_date java.util.Calendar DATE

Binary and Large Object Types

Mapping type Java type ANSI SQL Type

binary byte[] VARBINARY (or BLOB)

text java.lang.String CLOB

any Java class that implements


serializable VARBINARY (or BLOB)
java.io.Serializable

clob java.sql.Clob CLOB

blob java.sql.Blob BLOB

JDK-related Types

Mapping type Java type ANSI SQL Type

class java.lang.Class VARCHAR

locale java.util.Locale VARCHAR

timezone java.util.TimeZone VARCHAR

currency java.util.Currency VARCHAR


Hibernate - Examples

Let us now take an example to understand how we can use Hibernate to provide Java
persistence in a standalone application. We will go through the different steps involved in
creating a Java Application using Hibernate technology.

Create POJO Classes

The first step in creating an application is to build the Java POJO class or classes, depending
on the application that will be persisted to the database. Let us consider our Employee class
with getXXX and setXXX methods to make it JavaBeans compliant class.

A POJO (Plain Old Java Object) is a Java object that doesn't extend or implement some
specialized classes and interfaces respectively required by the EJB framework. All normal
Java objects are POJO.
When you design a class to be persisted by Hibernate, it is important to provide JavaBeans
compliant code as well as one attribute, which would work as index like id attribute in the
Employee class.

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}
public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {
this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}
Create Database Tables

Second step would be creating tables in your database. There would be one table
corresponding to each object, you are willing to provide persistence. Consider above objects
need to be stored and retrieved into the following RDBMS table −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Create Mapping Configuration File

This step is to create a mapping file that instructs Hibernate how to map the defined class or
classes to the database tables.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

You should save the mapping document in a file with the format <classname>.hbm.xml. We
saved our mapping document in the file Employee.hbm.xml. Let us see little detail about the
mapping document −

• The mapping document is an XML document having <hibernate-mapping> as the root


element which contains all the <class> elements.
• The <class> elements are used to define specific mappings from a Java classes to the
database tables. The Java class name is specified using the name attribute of the class
element and the database table name is specified using the table attribute.
• The <meta> element is optional element and can be used to create the class description.
• The <id> element maps the unique ID attribute in class to the primary key of the
database table. The name attribute of the id element refers to the property in the class
and the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute
holds the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL
data type.
• The <generator> element within the id element is used to generate the primary key
values automatically. The class attribute of the generator element is set to native to let
hibernate pick up either identity, sequence or hilo algorithm to create primary key
depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.
• The <property> element is used to map a Java class property to a column in the
database table. The name attribute of the element refers to the property in the class and
the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute holds
the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL data
type.

There are other attributes and elements available, which will be used in a mapping document
and I would try to cover as many as possible while discussing other Hibernate related topics.

Create Application Class

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application.
We will use this application to save few Employee's records and then we will apply CRUD
operations on those records.

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Iterator;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {


private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();


/* Add few employee records in database */
Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Zara", "Ali", 1000);
Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Daisy", "Das", 5000);
Integer empID3 = ME.addEmployee("John", "Paul", 10000);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Update employee's records */


ME.updateEmployee(empID1, 5000);

/* Delete an employee from the database */


ME.deleteEmployee(empID2);

/* List down new list of the employees */


ME.listEmployees();
}

/* Method to CREATE an employee in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}

/* Method to READ all the employees */


public void listEmployees( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
List employees = session.createQuery("FROM Employee").list();
for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){
Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to UPDATE salary for an employee */


public void updateEmployee(Integer EmployeeID, int salary ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
employee.setSalary( salary );
session.update(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to DELETE an employee from the records */


public void deleteEmployee(Integer EmployeeID){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
session.delete(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}
Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

Hibernate - O/R Mappings

So far, we have seen very basic O/R mapping using hibernate, but there are three most
important mapping topics, which we have to learn in detail.

These are −

• Mapping of collections,
• Mapping of associations between entity classes, and
• Component Mappings.

Collections Mappings

If an entity or class has collection of values for a particular variable, then we can map those
values using any one of the collection interfaces available in java. Hibernate can persist
instances of java.util.Map, java.util.Set, java.util.SortedMap, java.util.SortedSet,
java.util.List, and any array of persistent entities or values.

Sr.No. Collection type & Mapping Description

java.util.Set
1 This is mapped with a <set> element and initialized with
java.util.HashSet

java.util.SortedSet
This is mapped with a <set> element and initialized with
2
java.util.TreeSet. The sort attribute can be set to either a comparator or
natural ordering.

java.util.List
3 This is mapped with a <list> element and initialized with
java.util.ArrayList

java.util.Collection
4 This is mapped with a <bag> or <ibag> element and initialized with
java.util.ArrayList

5 java.util.Map
This is mapped with a <map> element and initialized with
java.util.HashMap

java.util.SortedMap
This is mapped with a <map> element and initialized with
6
java.util.TreeMap. The sort attribute can be set to either a comparator or
natural ordering.

Arrays are supported by Hibernate with <primitive-array> for Java primitive value types and
<array> for everything else. However, they are rarely used, so I am not going to discuss them
in this tutorial.

If you want to map a user defined collection interfaces, which is not directly supported by
Hibernate, you need to tell Hibernate about the semantics of your custom collections, which
is not very easy and not recommend to be used.

Association Mappings

The mapping of associations between entity classes and the relationships between tables is
the soul of ORM. Following are the four ways in which the cardinality of the relationship
between the objects can be expressed. An association mapping can be unidirectional as well
as bidirectional.

Sr.No. Mapping type & Description

Many-to-One
1
Mapping many-to-one relationship using Hibernate

One-to-One
2
Mapping one-to-one relationship using Hibernate

One-to-Many
3
Mapping one-to-many relationship using Hibernate

Many-to-Many
4
Mapping many-to-many relationship using Hibernate

Component Mappings

It is very much possible that an Entity class can have a reference to another class as a
member variable. If the referred class does not have its own life cycle and completely
depends on the life cycle of the owning entity class, then the referred class hence therefore is
called as the Component class.

The mapping of Collection of Components is also possible in a similar way just as the
mapping of regular Collections with minor configuration differences. We will see these two
mappings in detail with examples.
Sr.No. Mapping type & Description

Component Mappings
1 Mapping for a class having a reference to another class as a member
variable.
Hibernate - Component Mappings

A Component mapping is a mapping for a class having a reference to another class as a


member variable. We have seen such mapping while having two tables and using <set>
element in the mapping file. Now we will use <component> element in the mapping file and
a single table would be used to keep the attributes contained inside the class variable.

Define RDBMS Tables

Consider a situation where we need to store our employee records in EMPLOYEE table
which will have following structure −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Further, assume each employee will have an address, so let us add address specific fields in
the same table as follows −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
street_name VARCHAR(40) default NULL,
city_name VARCHAR(40) default NULL,
state_name VARCHAR(40) default NULL,
zipcode VARCHAR(10) default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Define POJO Classes

Let us implement our POJO class Employee, which will be used to persist the objects related
to EMPLOYEE table.

import java.util.*;
public class Employee implements java.io.Serializable {
private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;
private Address address;

public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary, Address address ) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
this.address = address;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}

public Address getAddress() {


return address;
}

public void setAddress( Address address ) {


this.address = address;
}
}

We need to define another POJO class corresponding to ADDRESS entity having address
related fields.

import java.util.*;

public class Address{


private int id;
private String street;
private String city;
private String state;
private String zipcode;

public Address() {}

public Address(String street, String city, String state, String zipcode) {


this.street = street;
this.city = city;
this.state = state;
this.zipcode = zipcode;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getStreet() {


return street;
}

public void setStreet( String street ) {


this.street = street;
}

public String getCity() {


return city;
}

public void setCity( String city ) {


this.city = city;
}

public String getState() {


return state;
}

public void setState( String state ) {


this.state = state;
}

public String getZipcode() {


return zipcode;
}

public void setZipcode( String zipcode ) {


this.zipcode = zipcode;
}

Define Hibernate Mapping File

Let us develop our mapping file, which instructs Hibernate how to map the defined classes to
the database tables. The <component> element will be used to define the rule for all the fields
associated with ADDRESS table.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<component name = "address" class="Address">


<property name = "street" column = "street_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "city" column = "city_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "state" column = "state_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "zipcode" column = "zipcode" type = "string"/>
</component>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

You should save the mapping document in a file with the format <classname>.hbm.xml. We
saved our mapping document in the file Employee.hbm.xml. You are already familiar with
most of the mapping detail, but let us see all the elements of mapping file once again −

• The mapping document is an XML document having <hibernate-mapping> as the


root element which contains two <class> elements corresponding to each class.
• The <class> elements are used to define specific mappings from a Java classes to the
database tables. The Java class name is specified using the name attribute of the class
element and the database table name is specified using the table attribute.
• The <meta> element is optional element and can be used to create the class description.
• The <id> element maps the unique ID attribute in class to the primary key of the
database table. The name attribute of the id element refers to the property in the class
and the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute
holds the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL
data type.
• The <generator> element within the id element is used to generate the primary key
values automatically. The class attribute of the generator element is set to native to let
hibernate pick up either identity, sequence or hilo algorithm to create primary key
depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.
• The <property> element is used to map a Java class property to a column in the
database table. The name attribute of the element refers to the property in the class and
the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute holds
the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL data
type.
• The <component> element sets the existence of different attributes of Address class
inside Employee classes.

Create Application Class

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application.
We will use this application to save few Employee's records along with their certificates and
then we will apply CRUD operations on those records.

import java.util.*;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {


private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Let us have one address object */


Address address1 = ME.addAddress("Kondapur","Hyderabad","AP","532");

/* Add employee records in the database */


Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Manoj", "Kumar", 4000, address1);

/* Let us have another address object */


Address address2 = ME.addAddress("Saharanpur","Ambehta","UP","111");

/* Add another employee record in the database */


Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Dilip", "Kumar", 3000, address2);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Update employee's salary records */


ME.updateEmployee(empID1, 5000);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Method to add an address record in the database */


public Address addAddress(String street, String city, String state, String zipcode) {
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer addressID = null;
Address address = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
address = new Address(street, city, state, zipcode);
addressID = (Integer) session.save(address);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return address;
}

/* Method to add an employee record in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary, Address address){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary, address);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}

/* Method to list all the employees detail */


public void listEmployees( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
List employees = session.createQuery("FROM Employee").list();
for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){
Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
Address add = employee.getAddress();
System.out.println("Address ");
System.out.println("\tStreet: " + add.getStreet());
System.out.println("\tCity: " + add.getCity());
System.out.println("\tState: " + add.getState());
System.out.println("\tZipcode: " + add.getZipcode());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to update salary for an employee */


public void updateEmployee(Integer EmployeeID, int salary ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
employee.setSalary( salary );
session.update(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

Hibernate - Annotations

So far you have seen how Hibernate uses XML mapping file for the transformation of data
from POJO to database tables and vice versa. Hibernate annotations are the newest way to
define mappings without the use of XML file. You can use annotations in addition to or as a
replacement of XML mapping metadata.

Hibernate Annotations is the powerful way to provide the metadata for the Object and
Relational Table mapping. All the metadata is clubbed into the POJO java file along with the
code, this helps the user to understand the table structure and POJO simultaneously during
the development.

If you going to make your application portable to other EJB 3 compliant ORM applications,
you must use annotations to represent the mapping information, but still if you want greater
flexibility, then you should go with XML-based mappings.
Environment Setup for Hibernate Annotation

First of all you would have to make sure that you are using JDK 5.0 otherwise you need to
upgrade your JDK to JDK 5.0 to take advantage of the native support for annotations.

Second, you will need to install the Hibernate 3.x annotations distribution package, available
from the sourceforge: (Download Hibernate Annotation) and copy hibernate-
annotations.jar, lib/hibernate-comons-annotations.jar and lib/ejb3-persistence.jar from
the Hibernate Annotations distribution to your CLASSPATH.

Annotated Class Example

As I mentioned above while working with Hibernate Annotation, all the metadata is clubbed
into the POJO java file along with the code, this helps the user to understand the table
structure and POJO simultaneously during the development.

Consider we are going to use the following EMPLOYEE table to store our objects −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Following is the mapping of Employee class with annotations to map objects with the defined
EMPLOYEE table −

import javax.persistence.*;

@Entity
@Table(name = "EMPLOYEE")
public class Employee {
@Id @GeneratedValue
@Column(name = "id")
private int id;

@Column(name = "first_name")
private String firstName;

@Column(name = "last_name")
private String lastName;

@Column(name = "salary")
private int salary;

public Employee() {}
public int getId() {
return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Hibernate detects that the @Id annotation is on a field and assumes that it should access
properties of an object directly through fields at runtime. If you placed the @Id annotation on
the getId() method, you would enable access to properties through getter and setter methods
by default. Hence, all other annotations are also placed on either fields or getter methods,
following the selected strategy.

Following section will explain the annotations used in the above class.

@Entity Annotation

The EJB 3 standard annotations are contained in the javax.persistence package, so we


import this package as the first step. Second, we used the @Entity annotation to the
Employee class, which marks this class as an entity bean, so it must have a no-argument
constructor that is visible with at least protected scope.

@Table Annotation
The @Table annotation allows you to specify the details of the table that will be used to
persist the entity in the database.

The @Table annotation provides four attributes, allowing you to override the name of the
table, its catalogue, and its schema, and enforce unique constraints on columns in the table.
For now, we are using just table name, which is EMPLOYEE.

@Id and @GeneratedValue Annotations

Each entity bean will have a primary key, which you annotate on the class with
the @Id annotation. The primary key can be a single field or a combination of multiple fields
depending on your table structure.

By default, the @Id annotation will automatically determine the most appropriate primary
key generation strategy to be used but you can override this by applying
the @GeneratedValue annotation, which takes two parameters strategy and generator that
I'm not going to discuss here, so let us use only the default key generation strategy. Letting
Hibernate determine which generator type to use makes your code portable between different
databases.

@Column Annotation

The @Column annotation is used to specify the details of the column to which a field or
property will be mapped. You can use column annotation with the following most commonly
used attributes −

• name attribute permits the name of the column to be explicitly specified.


• length attribute permits the size of the column used to map a value particularly for a
String value.
• nullable attribute permits the column to be marked NOT NULL when the schema is
generated.
• unique attribute permits the column to be marked as containing only unique values.

Create Application Class

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application.
We will use this application to save few Employee's records and then we will apply CRUD
operations on those records.

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Iterator;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.cfg.AnnotationConfiguration;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;
public class ManageEmployee {
private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new AnnotationConfiguration().
configure().
//addPackage("com.xyz") //add package if used.
addAnnotatedClass(Employee.class).
buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Add few employee records in database */


Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Zara", "Ali", 1000);
Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Daisy", "Das", 5000);
Integer empID3 = ME.addEmployee("John", "Paul", 10000);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Update employee's records */


ME.updateEmployee(empID1, 5000);

/* Delete an employee from the database */


ME.deleteEmployee(empID2);

/* List down new list of the employees */


ME.listEmployees();
}

/* Method to CREATE an employee in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee();
employee.setFirstName(fname);
employee.setLastName(lname);
employee.setSalary(salary);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}

/* Method to READ all the employees */


public void listEmployees( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
List employees = session.createQuery("FROM Employee").list();
for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){
Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to UPDATE salary for an employee */


public void updateEmployee(Integer EmployeeID, int salary ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
employee.setSalary( salary );
session.update(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
/* Method to DELETE an employee from the records */
public void deleteEmployee(Integer EmployeeID){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
session.delete(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}

Database Configuration

Now let us create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file to define database related parameters.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration SYSTEM
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-configuration>
<session-factory>

<property name = "hibernate.dialect">


org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.driver_class">


com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
</property>

<!-- Assume students is the database name -->

<property name = "hibernate.connection.url">


jdbc:mysql://localhost/test
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.username">


root
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.password">


cohondob
</property>

</session-factory>
</hibernate-configuration>

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Delete Employee.hbm.xml mapping file from the path.


• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

You would get the following result, and records would be created in EMPLOYEE table.

Hibernate - Query Language

Hibernate Query Language (HQL) is an object-oriented query language, similar to SQL, but
instead of operating on tables and columns, HQL works with persistent objects and their
properties. HQL queries are translated by Hibernate into conventional SQL queries, which in
turns perform action on database.

Although you can use SQL statements directly with Hibernate using Native SQL, but I would
recommend to use HQL whenever possible to avoid database portability hassles, and to take
advantage of Hibernate's SQL generation and caching strategies.

Keywords like SELECT, FROM, and WHERE, etc., are not case sensitive, but properties like
table and column names are case sensitive in HQL.

FROM Clause

You will use FROM clause if you want to load a complete persistent objects into memory.
Following is the simple syntax of using FROM clause −

String hql = "FROM Employee";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

If you need to fully qualify a class name in HQL, just specify the package and class name as
follows −

String hql = "FROM com.hibernatebook.criteria.Employee";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();
AS Clause

The AS clause can be used to assign aliases to the classes in your HQL queries, especially
when you have the long queries. For instance, our previous simple example would be the
following −

String hql = "FROM Employee AS E";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

The AS keyword is optional and you can also specify the alias directly after the class name,
as follows −

String hql = "FROM Employee E";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

SELECT Clause

The SELECT clause provides more control over the result set then the from clause. If you
want to obtain few properties of objects instead of the complete object, use the SELECT
clause. Following is the simple syntax of using SELECT clause to get just first_name field of
the Employee object −

String hql = "SELECT E.firstName FROM Employee E";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

It is notable here that Employee.firstName is a property of Employee object rather than a


field of the EMPLOYEE table.

WHERE Clause

If you want to narrow the specific objects that are returned from storage, you use the
WHERE clause. Following is the simple syntax of using WHERE clause −

String hql = "FROM Employee E WHERE E.id = 10";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

ORDER BY Clause

To sort your HQL query's results, you will need to use the ORDER BY clause. You can
order the results by any property on the objects in the result set either ascending (ASC) or
descending (DESC). Following is the simple syntax of using ORDER BY clause −

String hql = "FROM Employee E WHERE E.id > 10 ORDER BY E.salary DESC";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

If you wanted to sort by more than one property, you would just add the additional properties
to the end of the order by clause, separated by commas as follows −

String hql = "FROM Employee E WHERE E.id > 10 " +


"ORDER BY E.firstName DESC, E.salary DESC ";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

GROUP BY Clause

This clause lets Hibernate pull information from the database and group it based on a value of
an attribute and, typically, use the result to include an aggregate value. Following is the
simple syntax of using GROUP BY clause −

String hql = "SELECT SUM(E.salary), E.firtName FROM Employee E " +


"GROUP BY E.firstName";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

Using Named Parameters

Hibernate supports named parameters in its HQL queries. This makes writing HQL queries
that accept input from the user easy and you do not have to defend against SQL injection
attacks. Following is the simple syntax of using named parameters −

String hql = "FROM Employee E WHERE E.id = :employee_id";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
query.setParameter("employee_id",10);
List results = query.list();

UPDATE Clause

Bulk updates are new to HQL with Hibernate 3, and delete work differently in Hibernate 3
than they did in Hibernate 2. The Query interface now contains a method called
executeUpdate() for executing HQL UPDATE or DELETE statements.

The UPDATE clause can be used to update one or more properties of an one or more objects.
Following is the simple syntax of using UPDATE clause −

String hql = "UPDATE Employee set salary = :salary " +


"WHERE id = :employee_id";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
query.setParameter("salary", 1000);
query.setParameter("employee_id", 10);
int result = query.executeUpdate();
System.out.println("Rows affected: " + result);
DELETE Clause

The DELETE clause can be used to delete one or more objects. Following is the simple
syntax of using DELETE clause −

String hql = "DELETE FROM Employee " +


"WHERE id = :employee_id";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
query.setParameter("employee_id", 10);
int result = query.executeUpdate();
System.out.println("Rows affected: " + result);

INSERT Clause

HQL supports INSERT INTO clause only where records can be inserted from one object to
another object. Following is the simple syntax of using INSERT INTO clause −

String hql = "INSERT INTO Employee(firstName, lastName, salary)" +


"SELECT firstName, lastName, salary FROM old_employee";
Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
int result = query.executeUpdate();
System.out.println("Rows affected: " + result);

Aggregate Methods

HQL supports a range of aggregate methods, similar to SQL. They work the same way in
HQL as in SQL and following is the list of the available functions −

Sr.No. Functions & Description

avg(property name)
1
The average of a property's value

count(property name or *)
2
The number of times a property occurs in the results

max(property name)
3
The maximum value of the property values

min(property name)
4
The minimum value of the property values

sum(property name)
5
The sum total of the property values

The distinct keyword only counts the unique values in the row set. The following query will
return only unique count −

String hql = "SELECT count(distinct E.firstName) FROM Employee E";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
List results = query.list();

Pagination using Query

There are two methods of the Query interface for pagination.

Sr.No. Method & Description

Query setFirstResult(int startPosition)


1 This method takes an integer that represents the first row in your result
set, starting with row 0.

Query setMaxResults(int maxResult)


2 This method tells Hibernate to retrieve a fixed number maxResults of
objects.

Using above two methods together, we can construct a paging component in our web or
Swing application. Following is the example, which you can extend to fetch 10 rows at a time

String hql = "FROM Employee";


Query query = session.createQuery(hql);
query.setFirstResult(1);
query.setMaxResults(10);
List results = query.list();
Hibernate - Criteria Queries

Hibernate provides alternate ways of manipulating objects and in turn data available in
RDBMS tables. One of the methods is Criteria API, which allows you to build up a criteria
query object programmatically where you can apply filtration rules and logical conditions.

The Hibernate Session interface provides createCriteria() method, which can be used to
create a Criteria object that returns instances of the persistence object's class when your
application executes a criteria query.

Following is the simplest example of a criteria query is one, which will simply return every
object that corresponds to the Employee class.

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);
List results = cr.list();

Restrictions with Criteria

You can use add() method available for Criteria object to add restriction for a criteria query.
Following is the example to add a restriction to return the records with salary is equal to 2000

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);
cr.add(Restrictions.eq("salary", 2000));
List results = cr.list();

Following are the few more examples covering different scenarios and can be used as per the
requirement −

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

// To get records having salary more than 2000


cr.add(Restrictions.gt("salary", 2000));

// To get records having salary less than 2000


cr.add(Restrictions.lt("salary", 2000));

// To get records having fistName starting with zara


cr.add(Restrictions.like("firstName", "zara%"));

// Case sensitive form of the above restriction.


cr.add(Restrictions.ilike("firstName", "zara%"));

// To get records having salary in between 1000 and 2000


cr.add(Restrictions.between("salary", 1000, 2000));

// To check if the given property is null


cr.add(Restrictions.isNull("salary"));

// To check if the given property is not null


cr.add(Restrictions.isNotNull("salary"));

// To check if the given property is empty


cr.add(Restrictions.isEmpty("salary"));

// To check if the given property is not empty


cr.add(Restrictions.isNotEmpty("salary"));

You can create AND or OR conditions using LogicalExpression restrictions as follows −

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

Criterion salary = Restrictions.gt("salary", 2000);


Criterion name = Restrictions.ilike("firstNname","zara%");

// To get records matching with OR conditions


LogicalExpression orExp = Restrictions.or(salary, name);
cr.add( orExp );

// To get records matching with AND conditions


LogicalExpression andExp = Restrictions.and(salary, name);
cr.add( andExp );

List results = cr.list();

Though all the above conditions can be used directly with HQL as explained in previous
tutorial.

Pagination Using Criteria

There are two methods of the Criteria interface for pagination.

Sr.No. Method & Description

public Criteria setFirstResult(int firstResult)


1 This method takes an integer that represents the first row in your result
set, starting with row 0.

public Criteria setMaxResults(int maxResults)


2 This method tells Hibernate to retrieve a fixed number maxResults of
objects.

Using above two methods together, we can construct a paging component in our web or
Swing application. Following is the example, which you can extend to fetch 10 rows at a time

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);
cr.setFirstResult(1);
cr.setMaxResults(10);
List results = cr.list();

Sorting the Results

The Criteria API provides the org.hibernate.criterion.Order class to sort your result set in
either ascending or descending order, according to one of your object's properties. This
example demonstrates how you would use the Order class to sort the result set −

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

// To get records having salary more than 2000


cr.add(Restrictions.gt("salary", 2000));

// To sort records in descening order


cr.addOrder(Order.desc("salary"));

// To sort records in ascending order


cr.addOrder(Order.asc("salary"));

List results = cr.list();


Projections & Aggregations

The Criteria API provides the org.hibernate.criterion.Projections class, which can be used
to get average, maximum, or minimum of the property values. The Projections class is similar
to the Restrictions class, in that it provides several static factory methods for
obtaining Projection instances.

Following are the few examples covering different scenarios and can be used as per
requirement −

Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

// To get total row count.


cr.setProjection(Projections.rowCount());

// To get average of a property.


cr.setProjection(Projections.avg("salary"));

// To get distinct count of a property.


cr.setProjection(Projections.countDistinct("firstName"));

// To get maximum of a property.


cr.setProjection(Projections.max("salary"));

// To get minimum of a property.


cr.setProjection(Projections.min("salary"));

// To get sum of a property.


cr.setProjection(Projections.sum("salary"));

Criteria Queries Example

Consider the following POJO class −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Let us create the following EMPLOYEE table to store Employee objects −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Following will be the mapping file.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application
where we will use Criteria queries −

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Iterator;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.Criteria;
import org.hibernate.criterion.Restrictions;
import org.hibernate.criterion.Projections;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {


private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Add few employee records in database */


Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Zara", "Ali", 2000);
Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Daisy", "Das", 5000);
Integer empID3 = ME.addEmployee("John", "Paul", 5000);
Integer empID4 = ME.addEmployee("Mohd", "Yasee", 3000);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Print Total employee's count */


ME.countEmployee();

/* Print Total salary */


ME.totalSalary();
}

/* Method to CREATE an employee in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}

/* Method to READ all the employees having salary more than 2000 */
public void listEmployees( ) {
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);
// Add restriction.
cr.add(Restrictions.gt("salary", 2000));
List employees = cr.list();

for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){


Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to print total number of records */


public void countEmployee(){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

// To get total row count.


cr.setProjection(Projections.rowCount());
List rowCount = cr.list();

System.out.println("Total Coint: " + rowCount.get(0) );


tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to print sum of salaries */


public void totalSalary(){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Criteria cr = session.createCriteria(Employee.class);

// To get total salary.


cr.setProjection(Projections.sum("salary"));
List totalSalary = cr.list();

System.out.println("Total Salary: " + totalSalary.get(0) );


tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

Hibernate - Native SQL

You can use native SQL to express database queries if you want to utilize database-specific
features such as query hints or the CONNECT keyword in Oracle. Hibernate 3.x allows you
to specify handwritten SQL, including stored procedures, for all create, update, delete, and
load operations.

Your application will create a native SQL query from the session with
the createSQLQuery() method on the Session interface −

public SQLQuery createSQLQuery(String sqlString) throws HibernateException

After you pass a string containing the SQL query to the createSQLQuery() method, you can
associate the SQL result with either an existing Hibernate entity, a join, or a scalar result
using addEntity(), addJoin(), and addScalar() methods respectively.

Scalar Queries

The most basic SQL query is to get a list of scalars (values) from one or more tables.
Following is the syntax for using native SQL for scalar values −

String sql = "SELECT first_name, salary FROM EMPLOYEE";


SQLQuery query = session.createSQLQuery(sql);
query.setResultTransformer(Criteria.ALIAS_TO_ENTITY_MAP);
List results = query.list();

Entity Queries
The above queries were all about returning scalar values, basically returning the "raw" values
from the result set. Following is the syntax to get entity objects as a whole from a native sql
query via addEntity().

String sql = "SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEE";


SQLQuery query = session.createSQLQuery(sql);
query.addEntity(Employee.class);
List results = query.list();

Named SQL Queries

Following is the syntax to get entity objects from a native sql query via addEntity() and using
named SQL query.

String sql = "SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEE WHERE id = :employee_id";


SQLQuery query = session.createSQLQuery(sql);
query.addEntity(Employee.class);
query.setParameter("employee_id", 10);
List results = query.list();

Native SQL Example

Consider the following POJO class −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}
public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {
this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Let us create the following EMPLOYEE table to store Employee objects −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Following will be mapping file −

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>
<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application
where we will use Native SQL queries −

import java.util.*;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.SQLQuery;
import org.hibernate.Criteria;
import org.hibernate.Hibernate;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {


private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Add few employee records in database */


Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Zara", "Ali", 2000);
Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Daisy", "Das", 5000);
Integer empID3 = ME.addEmployee("John", "Paul", 5000);
Integer empID4 = ME.addEmployee("Mohd", "Yasee", 3000);

/* List down employees and their salary using Scalar Query */


ME.listEmployeesScalar();

/* List down complete employees information using Entity Query */


ME.listEmployeesEntity();
}

/* Method to CREATE an employee in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}

/* Method to READ all the employees using Scalar Query */


public void listEmployeesScalar( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
String sql = "SELECT first_name, salary FROM EMPLOYEE";
SQLQuery query = session.createSQLQuery(sql);
query.setResultTransformer(Criteria.ALIAS_TO_ENTITY_MAP);
List data = query.list();

for(Object object : data) {


Map row = (Map)object;
System.out.print("First Name: " + row.get("first_name"));
System.out.println(", Salary: " + row.get("salary"));
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to READ all the employees using Entity Query */


public void listEmployeesEntity( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
String sql = "SELECT * FROM EMPLOYEE";
SQLQuery query = session.createSQLQuery(sql);
query.addEntity(Employee.class);
List employees = query.list();

for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){


Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

Hibernate - Caching

Caching is a mechanism to enhance the performance of a system. It is a buffer memorythat


lies between the application and the database. Cache memory stores recently used data items
in order to reduce the number of database hits as much as possible.

Caching is important to Hibernate as well. It utilizes a multilevel caching scheme as


explained below −
First-level Cache

The first-level cache is the Session cache and is a mandatory cache through which all
requests must pass. The Session object keeps an object under its own power before
committing it to the database.

If you issue multiple updates to an object, Hibernate tries to delay doing the update as long as
possible to reduce the number of update SQL statements issued. If you close the session, all
the objects being cached are lost and either persisted or updated in the database.

Second-level Cache

Second level cache is an optional cache and first-level cache will always be consulted before
any attempt is made to locate an object in the second-level cache. The second level cache can
be configured on a per-class and per-collection basis and mainly responsible for caching
objects across sessions.

Any third-party cache can be used with Hibernate.


An org.hibernate.cache.CacheProvider interface is provided, which must be implemented
to provide Hibernate with a handle to the cache implementation.

Query-level Cache
Hibernate also implements a cache for query resultsets that integrates closely with the
second-level cache.

This is an optional feature and requires two additional physical cache regions that hold the
cached query results and the timestamps when a table was last updated. This is only useful
for queries that are run frequently with the same parameters.

The Second Level Cache

Hibernate uses first-level cache by default and you have nothing to do to use first-level cache.
Let's go straight to the optional second-level cache. Not all classes benefit from caching, so
it's important to be able to disable the second-level cache.

The Hibernate second-level cache is set up in two steps. First, you have to decide which
concurrency strategy to use. After that, you configure cache expiration and physical cache
attributes using the cache provider.

Concurrency Strategies

A concurrency strategy is a mediator, which is responsible for storing items of data in the
cache and retrieving them from the cache. If you are going to enable a second-level cache,
you will have to decide, for each persistent class and collection, which cache concurrency
strategy to use.

• Transactional − Use this strategy for read-mostly data where it is critical to prevent
stale data in concurrent transactions, in the rare case of an update.
• Read-write − Again use this strategy for read-mostly data where it is critical to prevent
stale data in concurrent transactions, in the rare case of an update.
• Nonstrict-read-write − This strategy makes no guarantee of consistency between the
cache and the database. Use this strategy if data hardly ever changes and a small
likelihood of stale data is not of critical concern.
• Read-only − A concurrency strategy suitable for data, which never changes. Use it for
reference data only.

If we are going to use second-level caching for our Employee class, let us add the mapping
element required to tell Hibernate to cache Employee instances using read-write strategy.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<cache usage = "read-write"/>


<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">
<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

The usage="read-write" attribute tells Hibernate to use a read-write concurrency strategy for
the defined cache.

Cache Provider

Your next step after considering the concurrency strategies, you will use your cache
candidate classes to pick a cache provider. Hibernate forces you to choose a single cache
provider for the whole application.

Sr.No. Cache Name & Description

EHCache
1 It can cache in memory or on disk and clustered caching and it supports
the optional Hibernate query result cache.

OSCache
2 Supports caching to memory and disk in a single JVM with a rich set of
expiration policies and query cache support.

warmCache
3 A cluster cache based on JGroups. It uses clustered invalidation, but
doesn't support the Hibernate query cache.

JBoss Cache
A fully transactional replicated clustered cache also based on the JGroups
4 multicast library. It supports replication or invalidation, synchronous or
asynchronous communication, and optimistic and pessimistic locking.
The Hibernate query cache is supported.

Every cache provider is not compatible with every concurrency strategy. The following
compatibility matrix will help you choose an appropriate combination.

Strategy/Provider Read-only Nonstrictread-write Read-write Transactional

EHCache X X X

OSCache X X X
SwarmCache X X

JBoss Cache X X

You will specify a cache provider in hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file. We choose


EHCache as our second-level cache provider −

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration SYSTEM
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd">
<hibernate-configuration>
<session-factory>

<property name = "hibernate.dialect">


org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.driver_class">


com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
</property>

<!-- Assume students is the database name -->

<property name = "hibernate.connection.url">


jdbc:mysql://localhost/test
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.username">


root
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.password">


root123
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.cache.provider_class">


org.hibernate.cache.EhCacheProvider
</property>

<!-- List of XML mapping files -->


<mapping resource = "Employee.hbm.xml"/>

</session-factory>
</hibernate-configuration>

Now, you need to specify the properties of the cache regions. EHCache has its own
configuration file, ehcache.xml, which should be in the CLASSPATH of the application. A
cache configuration in ehcache.xml for the Employee class may look like this −
<diskStore path="java.io.tmpdir"/>

<defaultCache
maxElementsInMemory = "1000"
eternal = "false"
timeToIdleSeconds = "120"
timeToLiveSeconds = "120"
overflowToDisk = "true"
/>

<cache name = "Employee"


maxElementsInMemory = "500"
eternal = "true"
timeToIdleSeconds = "0"
timeToLiveSeconds = "0"
overflowToDisk = "false"
/>

That's it, now we have second-level caching enabled for the Employee class and Hibernate,
now hits the second-level cache whenever you navigate to an Employee or when you load an
Employee by identifier.

You should analyze your all the classes and choose appropriate caching strategy for each of
the classes. Sometime, second-level caching may downgrade the performance of the
application. So, it is recommended to benchmark your application first, without enabling
caching and later on enable your well suited caching and check the performance. If caching is
not improving system performance, then there is no point in enabling any type of caching.

The Query-level Cache

To use the query cache, you must first activate it using


the hibernate.cache.use_query_cache="true" property in the configuration file. By setting
this property to true, you make Hibernate create the necessary caches in memory to hold the
query and identifier sets.

Next, to use the query cache, you use the setCacheable(Boolean) method of the Query class.
For example −

Session session = SessionFactory.openSession();


Query query = session.createQuery("FROM EMPLOYEE");
query.setCacheable(true);
List users = query.list();
SessionFactory.closeSession();

Hibernate also supports very fine-grained cache support through the concept of a cache
region. A cache region is part of the cache that's given a name.

Session session = SessionFactory.openSession();


Query query = session.createQuery("FROM EMPLOYEE");
query.setCacheable(true);
query.setCacheRegion("employee");
List users = query.list();
SessionFactory.closeSession();

This code uses the method to tell Hibernate to store and look for the query in the employee
area of the cache.

Print Page

Hibernate - Batch Processing

Consider a situation when you need to upload a large number of records into your database
using Hibernate. Following is the code snippet to achieve this using Hibernate −

Session session = SessionFactory.openSession();


Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();
for ( int i=0; i<100000; i++ ) {
Employee employee = new Employee(.....);
session.save(employee);
}
tx.commit();
session.close();

By default, Hibernate will cache all the persisted objects in the session-level cache and
ultimately your application would fall over with an OutOfMemoryException somewhere
around the 50,000th row. You can resolve this problem, if you are using batch
processing with Hibernate.

To use the batch processing feature, first set hibernate.jdbc.batch_size as batch size to a
number either at 20 or 50 depending on object size. This will tell the hibernate container that
every X rows to be inserted as batch. To implement this in your code, we would need to do
little modification as follows −

Session session = SessionFactory.openSession();


Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();
for ( int i=0; i<100000; i++ ) {
Employee employee = new Employee(.....);
session.save(employee);
if( i % 50 == 0 ) { // Same as the JDBC batch size
//flush a batch of inserts and release memory:
session.flush();
session.clear();
}
}
tx.commit();
session.close();
Above code will work fine for the INSERT operation, but if you are willing to make
UPDATE operation, then you can achieve using the following code −

Session session = sessionFactory.openSession();


Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();

ScrollableResults employeeCursor = session.createQuery("FROM EMPLOYEE").scroll();


int count = 0;

while ( employeeCursor.next() ) {
Employee employee = (Employee) employeeCursor.get(0);
employee.updateEmployee();
seession.update(employee);
if ( ++count % 50 == 0 ) {
session.flush();
session.clear();
}
}
tx.commit();
session.close();

Batch Processing Example

Let us modify the configuration file to add hibernate.jdbc.batch_size property −

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-configuration SYSTEM
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-configuration-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-configuration>
<session-factory>

<property name = "hibernate.dialect">


org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.driver_class">


com.mysql.jdbc.Driver
</property>

<!-- Assume students is the database name -->

<property name = "hibernate.connection.url">


jdbc:mysql://localhost/test
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.connection.username">


root
</property>
<property name = "hibernate.connection.password">
root123
</property>

<property name = "hibernate.jdbc.batch_size">


50
</property>

<!-- List of XML mapping files -->


<mapping resource = "Employee.hbm.xml"/>

</session-factory>
</hibernate-configuration>

Consider the following POJO Employee class −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;

public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}
public void setLastName( String last_name ) {
this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Let us create the following EMPLOYEE table to store the Employee objects −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Following will be the mapping file to map the Employee objects with EMPLOYEE table −

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>
Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application
where we will use flush() and clear() methods available with Session object so that
Hibernate keeps writing these records into the database instead of caching them in the
memory.

import java.util.*;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {


private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}
ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Add employee records in batches */


ME.addEmployees( );
}

/* Method to create employee records in batches */


public void addEmployees( ){
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
for ( int i=0; i<100000; i++ ) {
String fname = "First Name " + i;
String lname = "Last Name " + i;
Integer salary = i;
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
session.save(employee);
if( i % 50 == 0 ) {
session.flush();
session.clear();
}
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return ;
}
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained above.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program, which will create 100000 records
in EMPLOYEE table.
Hibernate - Interceptors

As you have learnt that in Hibernate, an object will be created and persisted. Once the object
has been changed, it must be saved back to the database. This process continues until the next
time the object is needed, and it will be loaded from the persistent store.

Thus an object passes through different stages in its life cycle and Interceptor
Interface provides methods, which can be called at different stages to perform some required
tasks. These methods are callbacks from the session to the application, allowing the
application to inspect and/or manipulate properties of a persistent object before it is saved,
updated, deleted or loaded. Following is the list of all the methods available within the
Interceptor interface −

Sr.No. Method & Description

findDirty()
1 This method is be called when the flush() method is called on a Session
object.

instantiate()
2
This method is called when a persisted class is instantiated.

isUnsaved()
3 This method is called when an object is passed to
the saveOrUpdate() method/

onDelete()
4
This method is called before an object is deleted.
onFlushDirty()
5 This method is called when Hibernate detects that an object is dirty (i.e.
have been changed) during a flush i.e. update operation.

onLoad()
6
This method is called before an object is initialized.

onSave()
7
This method is called before an object is saved.

postFlush()
8 This method is called after a flush has occurred and an object has been
updated in memory.

preFlush()
9
This method is called before a flush.

Hibernate Interceptor gives us total control over how an object will look to both the
application and the database.

How to Use Interceptors?

To build an interceptor, you can either implement Interceptor class directly or


extend EmptyInterceptor class. Following will be the simple steps to use Hibernate
Interceptor functionality.

Create Interceptors

We will extend EmptyInterceptor in our example where Interceptor's method will be called
automatically when Employee object is created and updated. You can implement more
methods as per your requirements.

import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Iterator;

import org.hibernate.EmptyInterceptor;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.type.Type;

public class MyInterceptor extends EmptyInterceptor {


private int updates;
private int creates;
private int loads;

public void onDelete(Object entity, Serializable id,


Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types) {
// do nothing
}
// This method is called when Employee object gets updated.
public boolean onFlushDirty(Object entity, Serializable id,
Object[] currentState, Object[] previousState, String[] propertyNames,
Type[] types) {
if ( entity instanceof Employee ) {
System.out.println("Update Operation");
return true;
}
return false;
}

public boolean onLoad(Object entity, Serializable id,


Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types) {
// do nothing
return true;
}

// This method is called when Employee object gets created.


public boolean onSave(Object entity, Serializable id,
Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types) {
if ( entity instanceof Employee ) {
System.out.println("Create Operation");
return true;
}
return false;
}

//called before commit into database


public void preFlush(Iterator iterator) {
System.out.println("preFlush");
}

//called after committed into database


public void postFlush(Iterator iterator) {
System.out.println("postFlush");
}
}

Create POJO Classes

Now, let us modify a little bit our first example where we used EMPLOYEE table and
Employee class to play with −

public class Employee {


private int id;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
private int salary;
public Employee() {}

public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {


this.firstName = fname;
this.lastName = lname;
this.salary = salary;
}

public int getId() {


return id;
}

public void setId( int id ) {


this.id = id;
}

public String getFirstName() {


return firstName;
}

public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {


this.firstName = first_name;
}

public String getLastName() {


return lastName;
}

public void setLastName( String last_name ) {


this.lastName = last_name;
}

public int getSalary() {


return salary;
}

public void setSalary( int salary ) {


this.salary = salary;
}
}

Create Database Tables

Second step would be creating tables in your database. There would be one table
corresponding to each object, you are willing to provide persistence. Consider the objects
explained above, need to be stored and retrieved into the following RDBMS table −

create table EMPLOYEE (


id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
last_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
salary INT default NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Create Mapping Configuration File

This step is to create a mapping file that instructs Hibernate — how to map the defined class
or classes to the database tables.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>


<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd">

<hibernate-mapping>
<class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">

<meta attribute = "class-description">


This class contains the employee detail.
</meta>

<id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">


<generator class="native"/>
</id>

<property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>


<property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
<property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>

</class>
</hibernate-mapping>

Create Application Class

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application.
Here, it should be noted that while creating session object, we used our Interceptor class as an
argument.

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.Iterator;

import org.hibernate.HibernateException;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;
public class ManageEmployee {
private static SessionFactory factory;
public static void main(String[] args) {

try {
factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
} catch (Throwable ex) {
System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex);
}

ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();

/* Add few employee records in database */


Integer empID1 = ME.addEmployee("Zara", "Ali", 1000);
Integer empID2 = ME.addEmployee("Daisy", "Das", 5000);
Integer empID3 = ME.addEmployee("John", "Paul", 10000);

/* List down all the employees */


ME.listEmployees();

/* Update employee's records */


ME.updateEmployee(empID1, 5000);

/* Delete an employee from the database */


ME.deleteEmployee(empID2);

/* List down new list of the employees */


ME.listEmployees();
}

/* Method to CREATE an employee in the database */


public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary){
Session session = factory.openSession( new MyInterceptor() );
Transaction tx = null;
Integer employeeID = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
return employeeID;
}
/* Method to READ all the employees */
public void listEmployees( ){
Session session = factory.openSession( new MyInterceptor() );
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
List employees = session.createQuery("FROM Employee").list();
for (Iterator iterator = employees.iterator(); iterator.hasNext();){
Employee employee = (Employee) iterator.next();
System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName());
System.out.print(" Last Name: " + employee.getLastName());
System.out.println(" Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
}
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to UPDATE salary for an employee */


public void updateEmployee(Integer EmployeeID, int salary ){
Session session = factory.openSession( new MyInterceptor() );
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
employee.setSalary( salary );
session.update(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}

/* Method to DELETE an employee from the records */


public void deleteEmployee(Integer EmployeeID){
Session session = factory.openSession( new MyInterceptor() );
Transaction tx = null;

try {
tx = session.beginTransaction();
Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID);
session.delete(employee);
tx.commit();
} catch (HibernateException e) {
if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
e.printStackTrace();
} finally {
session.close();
}
}
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure, you have
set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and
execution.

• Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.


• Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.
• Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create MyInterceptor.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.
• Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

You would get the following result, and records would be created in the EMPLOYEE table.

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