= Hibernate 6.0 Final
Steve Ebersole
:awestruct-tags: ["Hibernate ORM"]
:awestruct-layout: blog-post
:docs-url: https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0
:javadocs-url: {docs-url}/javadocs
:migration-guide-url: {docs-url}/migration-guide/migration-guide.html
:user-guide-url: {docs-url}/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html
:jakarta-transformer-url: https://github.com/eclipse/transformer

It has been years in the making, but ORM 6.0 Final has finally been released!

This announcement will discuss the major changes, as well as give insight into why
certain choices were made.

We will also be following up with a series of more focused posts targeting specific
improvements or cool new features.  Stay tuned!


[[api-spi]]
== APIs and SPIs

While many things have changed in 6.0, we strove to minimize changes to APIs to help
mitigate migration costs.

[NOTE]
====
See https://hibernate.org/community/compatibility-policy/ for a discussion of what we consider
an API versus an SPI.
====

Applications which use only the Jakarta Persistence APIs will be source compatible within the
discussion in <<jpa>>.

Applications using Hibernate APIs will generally be bytecode and source compatible, aside
from the removal of deprecated stuff.  There are a few one-off changes that break bytecode and/or
source compatibility; these are covered in the link:{migration-guide-url}[migration guide].

One specific change to note is that many of these contracts have been better defined with type
parameters.  Theses were inconsistently (and sometimes poorly) defined in previous versions.

Quite a few SPI contracts have changed to support many of the topics discussed here as well as in
the link:{migration-guide-url}[migration guide].  Many will also be the subject of the mentioned
follow-up posts.


[[jpa]]
== Jakarta Persistence

Java Persistence has become Jakarta Persistence as part of the overall move of Java EE
to Jakarta.  Various legal requirements forced the changing of the `javax` namespace -
for persistence, that means changing from `javax.persistence` to `jakarta.persistence`
for package names as well as property and hint names.

This is clearly an unfortunate and invasive change, but beyond our control.  Luckily Jakarta
have developed a link:{jakarta-transformer-url}[transformer] to help with these migrations.  We actually
used this tool to migrate Hibernate's own source code.  It works well-ish.

For those using Maven, you are in luck (well, within the bounds of actually using Maven) in that
Jakarta themselves provide a Maven plugin to integrate this transformer.

For those using Gradle, you can use the tasks we developed to transform Hibernate's source code.

There is also a command-line form.  See the link:{jakarta-transformer-url}[transformer] docs for details.


[[read-by-position]]
== Read-by-position

A few years ago, around the 5.4 timeframe, we worked with the amazing performance team at Red Hat
to squeeze even more great performance out of Hibernate ORM.

This work was part of a larger effort to improve the performance of WildFly.  Ultimately, the limiting
factor to additional improvements within Hibernate was our approach of reading values from a JDBC
`ResultSet` by name rather than by position.  For every JDBC driver out there, reading by name is slower.

It quickly became obvious that minimal changes would not be enough, and so this work led to many changes.
A great analogy is to consider migrating a Map-based solution to List-based.  There is the obvious impact
of changing calls to accept an `int` rather than a `String` as well as internally keeping track of the
positions of each selected value within the `ResultSet`.  There is also the perhaps not-so-obvious
impact of changing the callers and consumers of those contracts to keep track of positions.

These changes have led to improvements on a number of fronts:

1. As mentioned, reading by position is significantly faster than reading by name which leads to
performance improvements.
2. Historically Hibernate generated SQL select queries with a defined pattern of named column aliases
which were later used to access the specific result.  We've all seen these "ugly" aliases.  With these
changes, those select-clause aliases are no longer needed resulting in much more readable generated
SQL.
3. Although we implemented some improved support for limiting needed joins within an entity mapping
(joined inheritance, secondary tables) in 5.x, 6.0 allows even better opportunity for this.  In
fact, the support for this in 5.x was conceptually back-ported from the 6.0 work.
4. (2) and (3) combined results in much smaller SQL needing to be sent to the server which can
have an impact on network communication.  Every bit helps.

This was by far the biggest force behind 6.0 initially.



[[mapping-model]]
== Mapping Model

The mapping model is an SPI and as such will not be seen by all users.  But
it is a major development and impacts many users providing extensions.

The main driving force behind this mapping model work was <<read-by-position>>,
and we had a number of design goals in developing it:

- support positional processing of attributes
- make it object-oriented
- make it user friendly

This model can be accessed though
link:{javadocs-url}/org/hibernate/engine/spi/SessionFactoryImplementor.html#getRuntimeMetamodels()[`RuntimeMetamodelsImplementor`]
which provides access to both:

- The Jakarta Persistence model : link:{javadocs-url}/org/hibernate/metamodel/spi/RuntimeMetamodelsImplementor.html#getJpaMetamodel()[`JpaMetamodelImplementor`]
- Hibernate's mapping model : link:{javadocs-url}/org/hibernate/metamodel/spi/RuntimeMetamodelsImplementor.html#getMappingMetamodel()[`MappingMetamodelImplementor`]


[[annotations]]
== Annotations

Historically, Hibernate's annotations grew directly from its `hbm.xml` mappings. These old
annotations are String-based just like XML, providing all the cons of XML and really none
of the benefits of annotations.

6.0 redesigns Hibernate's annotations with type-safety in mind, as well as better leveraging
the benefits of annotations.  Most are also usable as meta-annotations.

Annotations for mapping basic values saw the most change.  The
link:{user-guide-url}/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#basic[User Guide] contains
the details.

The mapping of embeddables has also changed.  Again, see the
link:{user-guide-url}/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#embeddable[User Guide] for
details.  Embeddables now support
link:{user-guide-url}/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#embeddable-instantiator[constructor injection]


[[query]]
== Query API

- Parameter binding
- `Session#createSelectionQuery`
- `Session#createMutationQuery`
- others???


[[sqm]]
== Semantic Query Model

Hibernate's Semantic Query Model (SQM) is its semantic representation of HQL
and Criteria queries.  HQL is interpreted into SQM; Hibernate's Criteria
implementations are SQM nodes.

6.0 implements quite a few changes shared between HQL and Criteria.  Most of
these are covered in link:{user-guide-url}#query-language[HQL] and
link:{user-guide-url}#criteria[Criteria] chapters of the User Guide.

Some specific changes include

- Automatic de-duplication of single entity results in a Query.  See the link:{migration-guide-url}#query-sqm-rows[Migration Guide] for details
- Set operations (union, intersect, except)
- Set aggregations (listagg, e.g.)
- Window operations (over, e.g.)
- Vastly improved function support.  See the link:{user-guide-url}#hql-exp-functions[User Guide] for details.
- ILIKE operator
- Improved temporal support (arithmetic, etc)


[[hql]]
== HQL

Previous versions of Hibernate used Antlr 2 for parsing.  6.0 updates to Antlr 4 for a few reasons:

- Antlr 2 is no longer supported, and has not for years
- Antlr 4 is faster than Antlr 2
- Antlr 4 grammars are easier to maintain, while the previous Antlr 2 grammars were poorly defined (largely as a function of Antlr 2 itself) and difficult to maintain.



[[criteria]]
== Criteria

Hibernate's legacy Criteria API has been deprecated for many years and has been fully removed in 6.0.
Support for Criteria queries is now offered solely through the Jakarta Persistence APIs plus extensions.

As mentioned in <<sqm>>, Hibernate's SQM model is the implementation of the Jakarta Persistence
Criteria node APIs.  This offers significantly better performance in terms of execution compared to
previous versions which essentially converted the Criteria to HQL and translated the HQL.

6.0 also adds a new setting related to Criteria performance - `hibernate.criteria.copy_tree`.
The Jakarta Persistence specification requires that a copy be made of the Criteria tree passed to
`EntityManager#createQuery`.  This obviously has a performance impact, but is intended for safety.
`hibernate.criteria.copy_tree` allows Hibernate to not make a copy of the tree which results in
better performance.  Just be sure to not mutate the tree after the call to `#createQuery`.



[[sql-ast]]
== SQL as AST

6.0 goes all-in in terms of modeling queries as trees.  We discussed above how that works
for HQL and Criteria queries, but we also now model SQL queries as trees.

This has quite a few benefits, but the main one is direct Dialect involvement.  The tree acts
as an API to a contract which translates the AST into JDBC calls, which allows much more
powerful involvement by the Dialect in this process.


[[dialect-init]]
== Dialect initialization

In previous versions, Dialect was essentially static details about the database being used.
This meant that Dialect implementations could not incorporate version-specific deviations,
which is why Hibernate  had so many version-specific subclasses.

6.0 changes the way Dialects are created to allow them to initialize themselves based on the
version of the database/driver being used.


[[incubating]]
== @Incubating

6.0 also introduces a new `@Incubating` annotation which is intended to notify users that
a particular contract may change in the future.  These are typically new contracts which
we may need to change in response to additional use cases or clarification of existing use cases.

Think of it as a "use at your own risk" kind of notice.  Obviously we will strive to not change
such contracts, but this gives us the flexibility to do so if needed and communicating that this
could potentially happen to the user.

Sometimes settings are considered incubating.  These are indicated by `@Incubating` on the
corresponding `org.hibernate.cfg.AvailableSettings` field and are also logged using the
`org.hibernate.orm.incubating` category.

We also generate a documentation <<release-artifacts,report>>.


[[release-artifacts]]
== Release artifacts

Starting with 6.0 we will no longer be publishing zip and tgz bundles to SourceForge.

Starting in 6.0 we now publish additional documentation artifacts, such as:

- The link:{migration-guide-url}[Migration Guide]
- The generated link:{docs-url}/logging/logging.html[logging] report
- The generated link:{docs-url}/incubating/incubating.txt[incubation] report
- The generated link:{docs-url}/internals/internal.txt[internals] report

Over the next few weeks we will also begin re-evaluating both:

- The link:{docs-url}/integrationguide/[Integration Guide]
- The link:{docs-url}/topical/[Topical Guide]

Much of this content is either out-of-date or incorporated elsewhere.


== Conclusion

For additional details, see:

- the link:{user-guide-url}[User Guide]
- the link:{migration-guide-url}[Migration Guide]
- the https://hibernate.org/orm/releases/6.0/[release page].

To get in touch, use the usual channels as discussed on the https://hibernate.org/community/[website].