By Subham Aggarwal | 5/24/2017 | General |Beginners

Hibernate O/R Mapping using Bag Collection

Hibernate O/R Mapping using Bag Collection

In this article, we’ll look at Hibernate O/R collection mappings and learn how to map a Collection to entities stored in the database.

 

Hibernate is a complete solution for the persistence module in a Java project. It handles the application interaction with the database, leaving the developer free to concentrate more on business logic and solving complex problems.

 

So far, we have seen basic O/R mapping, Set, List mappings using hibernate but there are more important mappings like inserting Bag Collections in the database.

Collection Mapping

If an entity or class has multiple values for a particular property or variable, then we can map those values using 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.

 

The collection we want to use depends on the behavior we want to introduce like if we want to store any value, we will use Bag collection.

 

Let’s look at each of these with examples here.

 

A Bag is a java collection that stores elements without caring about the sequencing but allow duplicate elements in the list. A bag is a random grouping of the objects in the list.

 

A Bag Collection is mapped with a <bag> element in the mapping table and initialized with java.util.ArrayList.

Defining RDBMS tables

We start by defining our RDBMS table. We will again use our Student table here:

create table STUDENT (
  id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
  first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
  last_name  VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
  grade     DECIMAL(3,1)  default NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Now, let us assume that each student can have multiple certifications involved. So we will store certificate related information in a separate table which has the following schema:

create table CERTIFICATE (
  id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
  certificate_name VARCHAR(30) default NULL,
  student_id INT default NULL,
  PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

POJO for Entities

Let us have a look at our Student entity POJO once again:

public class Student {
  private int id;
  private String firstName; 
  private String lastName;   
  private float grade;  

  private Collection certificates;

  public Student() {}


  public Student(String fname, String lname, float grade) {
     this.firstName = fname;
     this.lastName = lname;
     this.grade = grade;
  }
  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 getGrade() {
     return grade;
  }
  public void setGrade( float grade ) {
     this.grade = grade;
  }

  public Collection getCertificates() {
     return certificates;
  }

  public void setCertificates( Collection certificates ) {
     this.certificates = certificates;
  }
}

 

Next, we define our second POJO class for the CERTIFICATE table so that certificate objects can be saved and read from the CERTIFICATE table.

public class Certificate {
  private int id;
  private String name; 

  public Certificate() {}
  public Certificate(String name) {
     this.name = name;
  }
  public int getId() {
     return id;
  }
  public void setId( int id ) {
     this.id = id;
  }
  public String getName() {
     return name;
  }
  public void setName( String name ) {
     this.name = name;
  }
}

Now, as our POJO classes are ready, we define our Hibernate mapping file.

Hibernate Mapping file

In this file, the <bag> element will be used to define the rule for Bag collection used.

<?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="Student" table="STUDENT">
     <meta attribute="class-description">
        This class contains the student detail. 
     </meta>
     <id name="id" type="int" column="id">
        <generator class="native"/>
     </id>
     <bag name="certificates" cascade="all">
        <key column="student_id"/>
        <one-to-many class="Certificate"/>
     </bag>
     <property name="firstName" column="first_name" type="string"/>
     <property name="lastName" column="last_name" type="string"/>
     <property name="grade" column="grade" type="float"/>
  </class>

  <class name="Certificate" table="CERTIFICATE">
     <meta attribute="class-description">
        This class contains the certificate records. 
     </meta>
     <id name="id" type="int" column="id">
        <generator class="native"/>
     </id>
     <property name="name" column="certificate_name" type="string"/>
  </class>

</hibernate-mapping>

The <bag> element is used to set the relationship between the Certificate and Student classes. We used the cascade attribute in the <bag> element to tell Hibernate to persist the Certificate objects at the same time as the Student objects. The name attribute is set to the defined Collection variable in the parent class, in our case it is certificates.

 

The <one-to-many> element indicates that one Student object relates to many Certificate objects and, as such, the Certificate object must have a Student parent object associated with it. We can use either <one-to-one>, <many-to-one> or <many-to-many> elements based on our requirement.

Application class

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

ArrayList list1 = new ArrayList();
list.add(new Certificate("MCA"));
list.add(new Certificate("MBA"));
list.add(new Certificate("PMP"));
    
/* Add student records in the database */
Integer studentID1 =

   ManageStudent.addStudent("Liran", "Heim", 4000, list1);

Clearly, it was simple to create ArrayList elements and store them in the database.

 

Now, if we check our database, we will have the following results in our Student and Certificate tables.

 

mysql> select * from student;
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
| id | first_name | last_name | grade |
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
| 1  | Liran      | Heim      |   5.1 |
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

mysql> select * from certificate;
+----+------------------+-------------+
| id | certificate_name | student_id  |
+----+------------------+-------------+
| 1  | MBA              |          1  |
| 2  | PMP              |          1  |
| 3  | MCA              |          1  |
+----+------------------+-------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

Conclusion

In this article, we studied Hibernate O/R mappings using Collection mappings and built the last example once again but this time, using Hibernate Collection mappings.

 

In a later article, we will build upon these concepts to learn about Hibernate using Map and SortedMap.

By Subham Aggarwal | 5/24/2017 | General

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