= 6.0 Migration Guide :toc: :user-guide-base: https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html :javadoc-base: https://link.to/hibernate/javadoc :java-javadoc-base: https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/11/docs/api/java.base :fn-converter:Think `AttributeConverter` This guide discusses migration from Hibernate ORM version 6.0. For migration from earlier versions, see any other pertinent migration guides as well. == Known changes === Jakarta Persistence 6.0 moves from Java Persistence as defined by the Java EE specs to Jakarta Persistence as defined by the Jakarta EE spec. The most immediate impact of this change is that applications would need to be updated to use the Jakarata Persistence classes (`jakarta.persistence.*`) instead of the Java Persistence ones (`javax.persistence.*`). The Jakarta spec also renames the JPA settings (again, from `javax.persistence.*` to 'jakarta.persistence.*') and defines a new set of XSD namespaces for `orm.xml` and `persistence.xml` files. Jakarta provides a https://github.com/eclipse/transformer[transformer] tool which, along with appropriate "rules", will transform a project from Java Persistence to Jakarta Persistence. This can update package names in source, settings, xsd references and more. NOTE: As far as the XSD and setting changes, Hibernate does support both sets as a temporary aid in migration. It logs a deprecation warning when the Java EE variants are used. See the `rules/` directory in the project root for the configuration used to migrate Hibernate itself. === Java 11 With 6.0, Hibernate ORM has moved to expect Java 11 as its baseline version [[read-jdbc]] === Reading from JDBC Throughput testing of Hibernate was showing that its use of reading JDBC values by name, rather than by position was its limiting factor in any further scaling in terms of throughput. This is the main reason for most of the changes in Hibernate 6. This seemingly simple change, however, ripples through quite a few contracts - including some APIs and some SPIs ==== Replace read-by-name with read-by-position Various contracts in `org.hibernate.type` and `org.hibernate.usertype` were changed to now offer a read-by-position method. The read-by-name methods were removed. Read-by-position rather than read-by-name [[type]] === Type system / custom types Another change is to generally modernize Hibernate's mapping annotations and make them more type-safe. We decided this is the right time since 6.0 is a major release and most of the type-related contracts were already changing to implement the <> changes. One part of this work was the removal of various String-based approaches for specifying Types to use from annotations, including the removal of `@Type`, `@AnyMetaDef`, `@AnyMetaDefs`, `@MapKeyType`, @TypeDef` and `@TypeDefs`, as well as removing annotation attributes accepting the type to use as a String (e.g. `org.hibernate.annotations.CollectionType#type`) The Hibernate {user-guide-base}?type[User Guide] covers the details of mapping your domain model. // todo (6.0) - find proper id syntax for "domain model" type ^^ [[rename-java-type]] ==== Renaming of JavaTypeDescriptor contract The interface `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.java.JavaTypeDescriptor` has been renamed to `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.java.JavaType` [[rename-jdbc-type]] ==== Renaming of SqlTypeDescriptor contract The interface `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.sql.SqlTypeDescriptor` has been renamed to `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.jdbc.JdbcType` [[basic-type]] ==== Basic types Basic types are no longer exposed as customizable. Instead, users configure the different aspects of mapping the basic value to the database - * `JavaType` * `JdbcType` * `BasicValueConverter`{fn-converter} * `MutabilityPlan` See the Hibernate {user-guide-base}?basic-type[User Guide] for details of mapping // todo (6.0) - find proper id syntax for "domain model" basic-type ^^ basic values in your domain model, including how to influence these 4 aspects. This also made the various implementations of `BasicType` obsolete, thus they have been removed. `NamedBasicTypeImpl` takes the role of all the previous specific implementations by wrapping a `JdbcType` and `JavaType`. The `StandardBasicTypes` class previously exposed `BasicType` instance fields, which now have been replaced with fields of the type `BasicTypeReference`. APIs that previously accepted just a `BasicType` have been adapted to also accept a `BasicTypeReference` which allows for uses of `StandardBasicType` fields to stay mostly source compatible. ==== Embeddables / components Addition of `EmbeddableInstantiator` Constructor injection. Embeddables used as identifiers cannot use constructor injection. See the Hibernate {user-guide-base}?embeddable-type[User Guide] for details. // todo (6.0) - find proper id syntax for "domain model" embeddable-type ^^ Multiple component mappings for the same java class with different property mappings is no longer supported. Every property mapping combination should have its own java class ==== Plural attributes `@CollectionClassification` `@CollectionSemantics` `@CollectionType` [[query]] === Query [[query-sqm]] ==== SQM todo (6.0) - cover functions todo (6.0) - cover new temporal capabilities todo (6.0) - cover new syntaxes todo (6.0) - cover bulk manipulation query handling [[query-sqm-rows]] ==== Result "rows" Queries that use joins without specifying a select clause (e.g. `from Person p join p.address`) used to return a `List`. Starting with 6.0, such a query instead returns `List` The HQL query `select p, a from Person p join p.address a` returns instead a `List`. ``` List result = session.createQuery("from Person p join p.address").list(); List results = session.createQuery("select p, a from Person p join p.address a").list(); ``` [[query-sqm-pass-thru]] ===== Pass-through tokens The use of plain HQL identifiers in e.g. functions which couldn't be interpreted as an attribute of a `FROM` root were passed through as-is to SQL in Hibernate 5.x which was dropped in 6.0 because we believe this is unsafe and might lead to surprising results. HQL queries that relied on this, need to be changed and use the newly introduced `sql` function, which allows passing through the content of a string literal to SQL. An HQL query like `select substring( e.description, 21, 11, octets ) from AnEntity e`, which relies on this for passing through `octets` can be migrated to `select substring( e.description, 21, 11, sql('octets') ) from AnEntity e`. [[query-sqm-distinct]] ===== DISTINCT Starting with Hibernate ORM 6 it is no longer necessary to use *distinct* in JPQL and HQL to filter out the same parent entity references when join fetching a child collection. The returning duplicates of entities are now always filtered by Hibernate. Which means that for instance it is no longer necessary to set `QueryHints#HINT_PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH` to `false` in order to skip the entity duplicates without producing a `distinct` in the SQL query. From Hibernate ORM 6, `distinct` is always passed to the SQL query and the flag `QueryHints#HINT_PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH` has been removed. ===== Association Comparisons Previously Hibernate did allow comparing an association with an FK value like `... where alias.association = 1` or `... where alias.association = alias.association.id` or even `... where alias.association = :param` where `param` is bound to an integer `1`. This was supported prior to Hibernate 6.0 if the foreign key for the association is an integer. The right way to do this is de-referencing the association by the FK attribute `... where alias.association.id = 1` which is guaranteed to not produce a join, or use an entity reference for `... where alias.association = :param` where `param` is bound to `entityManager.getReference(EntityClass.class, 1)`. [[query-sqm-psuedo-attr]] ===== Collection psuedo-attributes Prior to 6.0, it was possible to de-reference special properties on plural attributes like `size` which was dropped. The special properties lead to confusion and were sometimes ambiguous. The replacement is the function syntax. size:: The collection size can be determined by using the `size( pluralAttribute )` function instead elements:: The collection elements can be referred to by using the `value( pluralAttribute )` function instead indices:: The collection indices can be referred to by using the `index( pluralAttribute )` or `key( pluralAttribute )` function instead index:: The collection index can be referred to by using the `index( pluralAttribute )` or `key( pluralAttribute )` function instead maxindex:: The collection maximum index can be determined by using the `maxindex( pluralAttribute )` function instead minindex:: The collection minimum index can be determined by using the `minindex( pluralAttribute )` function instead maxelement:: The collection maximum element can be determined by using the `maxelement( pluralAttribute )` function instead minelement:: The collection minimum element can be determined by using the `minelement( pluralAttribute )` function instead [[query-native]] ==== Native Using NativeQuery to call a SQL function is no longer supported. Given the `NamedNativeQuery` ``` @NamedNativeQuery( name = "fn_person_and_phones", query = "{ ? = call fn_person_and_phones( ? ) }", callable = true, resultSetMapping = "person_with_phones" ) ``` the code ``` scope.inTransaction( entityManager -> { try { List postAndComments = entityManager.createNamedQuery("fn_person_and_phones" ).setParameter( 1, 1L ).getResultList(); ``` is going to throw an `IllegalArgumentException`. If you want to retain the named version, you can change the definition to ``` @NamedStoredProcedureQuery( name = "fn_person_and_phones", procedureName = "fn_person_and_phones", resultSetMapping = "person_with_phones", hints = @QueryHint(name = "org.hibernate.callableFunction", value = "true"), parameters = { @StoredProcedureParameter(type = Long.class) } ) ``` and call this like ``` List postAndComments = entityManager.createNamedStoredProcedureQuery( "fn_person_and_phones" ).setParameter( 1, 1L ).getResultList(); ``` or not define the stored procedure and use this code ``` List postAndComments = entityManager.createStoredProcedureQuery( "fn_person_and_phones", "person_with_phones" ).setParameter( 1, 1L ).getResultList(); ``` [[query-stream]] ==== Stream `jakarta.persistence.Query#getResultStream()` and `org.hibernate.query.Query#stream()` no longer return a `Stream` decorator. In order to close the underlying IO resources, it is now necessary to explicitly call the `Stream#close()` method. This change makes the Streams returned by Hibernate behave as defined in the JDK link:{java-javadoc-base}/java/util/stream/Stream.html[Stream] documentation, which is quite explicit about the need for an explicit call to `close` by the user to avoid resource leakages. [[query-iterate]] ==== Iterate The `Query#iterate()` method has been removed. The alternative is to use `Query#stream()` or `Query#getResultStream()`. [[query-ordinal-param]] ==== Ordinal Parameters binding HQL ordinal parameter binding is 1-based, this means that queries like ``` s.createQuery( "select p from Parent p where id in ?0", Parent.class ); query.setParameter( 0, Arrays.asList( 0, 1, 2, 3 ) ); ``` that uses a 0-based positional binding are not supported, and they should be changed to the following ``` s.createQuery( "select p from Parent p where id in ?`", Parent.class ); query.setParameter( 1, Arrays.asList( 0, 1, 2, 3 ) ); ``` [[proc-call]] === ProcedureCall [[proc-call-param]] ==== Procedure Parameters For parameters defined on a ProcedureCall as accepting binding (IN and INOUT), a distinction is now made between whether `setParameter` is called or not. If `setParameter` was called, whatever value was set by the user is passed to the database. If it was not called, Hibernate will not set any value which triggers the default value defined on the database procedure argument be used === Removals * JMX integration * JACC integration * @Deprecated features: ** 'hibernate.classLoader.application', 'hibernate.classLoader.resources', 'hibernate.classLoader.hibernate' and 'hibernate.classLoader.environment': use 'hibernate.classLoaders' instead. ** 'hibernate.hbm2dll.create_namespaces': use 'jakarta.persistence.create-database-schemas' or 'hibernate.hbm2ddl.create_namespaces' === org.hibernate.Interceptors The method ``` boolean onSave(Object entity, Serializable id, Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types) ``` has been removed in favour of ``` boolean onSave(Object entity, Object id, Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types) ``` === Fetch behaviour change We changed the way we detect circularity, we do not follow anymore a deep first detection, so what happens is that in a model like ``` @Entity class Node { @ManyToOne Node node1; @ManyToOne Node node2; } ``` being all eager we are executing a query with 4 joins ``` FROM Node JOIN Node.node1 JOIN Node.node1.node2 JOIN Node.node2 JOIN Node.node2.node1 ``` whereas before we ``` FROM Node JOIN Node.node1 JOIN Node.node1.node2 ``` and issue a select for `Node.node2` if the FK of `Node.node2` is not null ``` FROM Node.node2 JOIN Node.node2.node1 JOIN Node.node2.node1.node2 ``` In this simple example this is not such a big deal, but if we increase the number of eager fetched self-associations to e.g. 3 like here: ``` @Entity class Node { @ManyToOne Node node1; @ManyToOne Node node2; @ManyToOne Node node3; } ``` this results in mind-blowing 15 joins ``` FROM Node JOIN Node.node1 JOIN Node.node1.node2 JOIN Node.node1.node2.node3 JOIN Node.node1.node3 JOIN Node.node1.node3.node2 JOIN Node.node2 JOIN Node.node2.node1 JOIN Node.node2.node1.node3 JOIN Node.node2.node3 JOIN Node.node2.node3.node1 JOIN Node.node3 JOIN Node.node3.node1 JOIN Node.node3.node1.node2 JOIN Node.node3.node2 JOIN Node.node3.node2.node1 ``` as you can see, this leads to a lot of joins very quickly, but the behavior of 5.x simply was not intuitive. To avoid creating so many joins, and also in general, we recommend that you use lazy fetching i.e. `@ManyToOne(fetch = FetchType.LAZY)` or `@OneToOne(fetch = FetchType.LAZY)` for most associations, but this is especially important if you have multiple self-referencing associations as you can see in the example. === Removal of legacy Hibernate Criteria API The legacy Hibernate Criteria API which was deprecated back in Hibernate 5.x was removed in 6.0. Usually, all queries using the legacy API can be modeled with the JPA Criteria API. In some cases it is necessary to use the Hibernate JPA Criteria extensions. === Restructuring of `org.hibernate.loader` The contents of the `loader.collection` package were restructured into `loader.ast.spi` and `loader.ast.internal` as well as adapted to the SQM API. The contents of `loader.custom` were adapted and moved to `query.sql`. The contents of `loader.entity` and `loader.plan` were removed === Restructuring of the sql package The contents of `sql.ordering` were adapted and moved to `metamodel.mapping.ordering.ast`. Classes of the `sql` package that were previously used for building SQL, but aren't needed anymore, were removed. The SQL generation is now fully handled through the `SqlAstTranslator` which a `Dialect` exposes a factory for. ==== Misc * The default type for `Duration` was changed to `NUMERIC` which could lead to schema validation errors