902 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
902 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
= 6.0 Migration Guide
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:toc:
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:toclevels: 4
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:docsBase: https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0
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:userGuideBase: {docsBase}/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html
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:javadocsBase: {docsBase}/javadocs
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:fn-converter: footnote:converter[Think `AttributeConverter`]
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This guide discusses migration from Hibernate ORM version 6.0. For migration from
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earlier versions, see any other pertinent migration guides as well.
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== Java 11
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With 6.0, Hibernate ORM has moved to expect Java 11 as its baseline version.
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== Jakarta Persistence
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6.0 moves from Java Persistence as defined by the Java EE specs to
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Jakarta Persistence as defined by the Jakarta EE spec. The most immediate
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impact of this change is that applications would need to be updated to use
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the Jakarata Persistence classes (`jakarta.persistence.*`) instead of the Java
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Persistence ones (`javax.persistence.*`).
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The Jakarta spec also renames the JPA settings (again, from `javax.persistence.*` to
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'jakarta.persistence.*') and defines a new set of XSD namespaces for `orm.xml` and
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`persistence.xml` files.
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Jakarta provides a https://github.com/eclipse/transformer[transformer]
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tool which, along with appropriate "rules", will transform a project from Java Persistence to
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Jakarta Persistence. This can update package names in source, settings, xsd references and more.
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NOTE: As far as the XSD and setting changes, Hibernate does support both sets as a temporary aid
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in migration. It logs a deprecation warning when the Java EE variants are used. See the `rules/`
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directory in the project root for the configuration used to migrate Hibernate itself.
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[[read-jdbc]]
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== Reading from JDBC
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One of the main reasons for 6.0 development was the move from reading results
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from the JDBC `ResultSet` by name (read-by-name) as done in previous versions
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of Hibernate, to reading the results by position (read-by-position).
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Throughput testing of Hibernate showed that its use of read-by-name was its limiting factor
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in any further scaling in terms of throughput - much of the issue was actually the call into
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the `ResultSet`. We like to improve performance all the time :)
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This change, along with <<sql>>, helped achieve this goal.
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As discussed in <<type>> though, this change has a very big impact on Hibernate's mapping type system
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[[sql]]
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== Generated SQL
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1. Column aliases are no longer generated.
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2. Column references are "unique-d".
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3. Better definition of joins
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4. Better determination of unnecessary joins (secondary tables, inheritance tables)
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== Bulk SQM against entities mapped to multiple tables
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The implementations for bulk SQM DML statements like `insert`, `update` and `delete` were significantly improved in 6.0.
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An important bug fix is, that `delete` statements now properly clean up collection tables.
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`insert` statements now also support inserting into multi-table entities by making use of special purpose temporary tables
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into which the insert goes and is then split up into the respective tables.
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There are currently 2 implementation strategies:
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* Using temporary tables (the default)
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* Using DML in CTEs (used on DB2 and PostgreSQL)
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The temporary table approach is pretty simple and works in a similar way to how 5.x already implemented it.
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Data or primary key values are first inserted into a temporary table and then the DML changes are applied to the various
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tables that are affected by the SQM DML statement.
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The CTE approach is new and implements a more performant approach by executing a single statement,
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containing the various individual DML statements that would normally be executed separately.
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This allows to run SQM DML statements in a single JDBC operation that does not move any data between the database and the application,
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which should provide a significant boost for statements that involve many rows.
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[[identifier-object]]
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== Identifier as Object
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Previous versions of Hibernate required that all identifier types implement `Serializable`. 6.0
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removes this restriction - identifiers can be any `Object`.
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This change affects many api and spi methods previously defined using `Serializable`.
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[[id-gen-type]]
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== @IdGeneratorType
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6.0 adds a new `@IdGeneratorType` annotation that allows better, type-safe way
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to define custom generators to use for identifier generation.
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// todo (6.0 - @Steve - need to add content about this to the User Guide
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[[id-sequence-generation]]
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== Id Sequence and Table generation
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For a sequence id generation strategy Hibernate 6.0 by default does not create anymore a single sequence named `hibernate_sequence` but it creates one sequence for each entity.
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In order to maintain backward compatibility a new setting `hibernate.id.db_structure_naming_strategy`
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has been introduced.
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In case the code has a generator name with no matching generator or with a generator not specifying a sequence or table name
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and the property `hibernate.model.generator_name_as_sequence_name` is not set to `false` then to maintain the backward compatibility is necessary to set
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hibernate.id.db_structure_naming_strategy=org.hibernate.id.enhanced.LegacyPreferDefaultGeneratorNameDatabaseNamingStrategy
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```
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otherwise
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```
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hibernate.id.db_structure_naming_strategy=org.hibernate.id.enhanced.LegacyNoPreferDefaultGeneratorNameDatabaseNamingStrategy
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```
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[[type]]
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== Type system
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Another change is to generally modernize Hibernate's mapping annotations and make them
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more type-safe.
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We decided this is the right time since 6.0 is a major release and most of the type-related
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contracts were already changing to implement the <<read-jdbc,read-by-position>> changes.
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One part of this work was the removal of various String-based approaches for specifying Types to use from annotations, including
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the removal of `@AnyMetaDef`, `@AnyMetaDefs`, `@TypeDef` and `@TypeDefs`, as well as
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removing annotation attributes accepting the type to use as a String (e.g. `org.hibernate.annotations.CollectionType#type`)
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The https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#domain-model[User Guide]
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covers the details of mapping your domain model.
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[[rename-java-type]]
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=== Renaming of JavaTypeDescriptor contract
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The interface `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.java.JavaTypeDescriptor` has been renamed to
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`org.hibernate.type.descriptor.java.JavaType`
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[[rename-jdbc-type]]
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=== Renaming of SqlTypeDescriptor contract
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The interface `org.hibernate.type.descriptor.sql.SqlTypeDescriptor` has been renamed to
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`org.hibernate.type.descriptor.jdbc.JdbcType`.
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[[basic-type]]
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=== Basic types
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Basic mappings are no longer configurable through the `BasicType` contract. Instead,
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users configure the different aspects of mapping the basic value to the database -
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* `JavaType`
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* `JdbcType`
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* `BasicValueConverter` {fn-converter}
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* `MutabilityPlan`
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This also made the various implementations of `BasicType` obsolete, thus they have been removed.
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`NamedBasicTypeImpl` takes the role of all the previous specific implementations by wrapping a
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`JdbcType` and `JavaType`.
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The `StandardBasicTypes` class previously exposed `BasicType` instance fields, which now have been
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replaced with fields of the type `BasicTypeReference`. APIs that previously accepted just a `BasicType`
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have been adapted to also accept a `BasicTypeReference` which allows for uses of `StandardBasicType`
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fields to stay mostly source compatible.
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#basic for details.
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==== UserType
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`UserType` is still supported, and is specified using the new `Type` annotation.
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#basic-mapping-custom for details.
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==== Boolean converters
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Hibernate now provides standard `AttributeConverter` implementations for handling different database representations
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as boolean values in the domain model:
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`YesNoConverter`:: Handles values stored in the database as either `Y` or `N`. Replaces the removed `YesNoBooleanType` (`yes_no`)
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`TrueFalseConverter`:: Handles values stored in the database as either `T` or `F`. Replaces the removed `TrueFalseBooleanType` (`true_false`)
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`NumericBooleanConverter`:: Handles values stored in the database as either `1` or `0`. Replaces the removed `NumericBooleanType` (`numeric_boolean`)
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E.g.
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```
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@Type(type="yes_no")
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boolean isActive;
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```
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becomes
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```
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@Convert(converter=YesNoConverter.class)
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boolean isActive;
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```
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In fact, if your application consistently maps booleans to the same database representation you can
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even register one as an auto-apply converter.
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#basic-boolean for details.
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=== Embeddables / components
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Mapping of embeddables had a few changes as well.
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==== Different embeddable mappings
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Multiple component mappings for the same Java class with different property mappings is no
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longer supported. Every property mapping combination should have its own Java class
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==== EmbeddableInstantiator
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6.0 introduces the new `EmbeddableInstantiator` contract.
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`EmbeddableInstantiator` supports constructor-injection! Note, however, that embeddables used as
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identifiers cannot use constructor injection.
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#embeddable-instantiator for details.
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==== CompositeUserType changes
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The `CompositeUserType` interface was re-implemented to be able to model user types as proper embeddable types.
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A major difference to 5.x is the introduction of an "embeddable projection" that is used to determine the mapping structure.
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Previously, a `CompositeUserType` had to provide property names and types through dedicated accessor methods,
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but this was complicated for non-basic mappings and required quite some knowledge about Hibernate internals.
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With 6.0 these methods are replaced with a method that returns an "embeddable projection" class.
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The class is like a regular `@Embeddable` class and is used to determine the mapping structure for the `CompositeUserType`.
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Component values of a user type object are accessed by property index. The property index is 0-based and can be determined
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by sorting the persistent attribute names lexicographically ascending and using the 0-based position as property index.
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For example, the following component:
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```java
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public class MonetaryAmountEmbeddable {
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BigDecimal value;
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Currency currency;
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}
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```
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will assign property index 0 to `currency` and index 1 to `value`.
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Note that it is not possible anymore to use `@Columns` to specify the names of columns of a composite user type mapping.
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Since a `CompositeUserType` now constructs a proper component, it is necessary to use the `@AttributeOverride` annotation.
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=== Plural attributes
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6.0 defines 2 main ways to influence collection mapping `@CollectionType` and `@CollectionTypeRegistration`
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[[collection-type-ann]]
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==== `@CollectionType`
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The `@CollectionType` annotation is kept from 5.x. However, where it used to define
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```
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String type();
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```
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it now defines
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```
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Class<? extends UserCollectionType> type();
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```
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The type to use must be a `UserCollectionType` (can no longer be a `CollectionType`) and
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it no longer works with type-definitions. See <<type>> for further discussion of general type changes.
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#collection-type-ann
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for details of using `@CollectionType`
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[[collection-type-reg-ann]]
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==== `@CollectionTypeRegistration`
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Allows to "auto apply" a `UserCollectionType` whenever Hibernate encounters a particular
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plural attribute classification
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See https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/6.0/userguide/html_single/Hibernate_User_Guide.html#collection-type-reg-ann
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for details of using `@CollectionTypeRegistration`
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=== Duration mapping changes
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Duration now maps to the type code `SqlType.INTERVAL_SECOND` by default, which maps to the SQL type `interval second`
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if possible, and falls back to `numeric(21)`.
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In either case, schema validation errors could occur as 5.x used the type code `Types.BIGINT`.
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Migration to `numeric(21)` should be easy. The migration to `interval second` might require a migration expression like
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`cast(cast(old as numeric(21,9) / 1000000000) as interval second(9))`.
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To retain backwards compatibility, configure the setting `hibernate.type.preferred_duration_jdbc_type` to `NUMERIC`.
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=== UUID mapping changes
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UUID now maps to the type code `SqlType.UUID` by default, which maps to the SQL type `uuid`
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if possible, and falls back to `binary(16)`.
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Due to the change to the native `uuid` type, schema validation errors could occur on database with native data type support.
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The migration to `uuid` might require a migration expression like `cast(old as uuid)`.
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To retain backwards compatibility, configure the setting `hibernate.type.preferred_uuid_jdbc_type` to `BINARY`.
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=== Instant mapping changes
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Instant now maps to the type code `SqlType.TIMESTAMP_UTC` by default, which maps to the SQL type `timestamp with time zone`
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if possible, and falls back to `timestamp`.
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Due to this change, schema validation errors could occur on some databases.
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The migration to `timestamp with time zone` might require a migration expression like `cast(old as timestamp with time zone)`.
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To retain backwards compatibility, configure the setting `hibernate.type.preferred_instant_jdbc_type` to `TIMESTAMP`.
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[[query]]
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== Query
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// todo (6.0) - Query parameter binding overloads accepting `Type`, `BindableType`
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// todo (6.0) - addition of parameter binding overloads accepting Class - AttributeConverter, UserType, Java Type (resolved from JavaTypeRegistry), ...
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[[query-stream]]
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=== Stream
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`jakarta.persistence.Query#getResultStream()` and `org.hibernate.query.Query#stream()` no longer
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return a `Stream` decorator. In order to close the underlying IO resources, it is now necessary to
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explicitly call the `Stream#close()` method.
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This change makes the Streams returned by Hibernate behave as defined in the JDK
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https://docs.oracle.com/en/java/javase/11/docs/api/java.base/java/util/stream/Stream.html[Stream]
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documentation, which is quite explicit about the need for an explicit call to `close` by the user
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to avoid resource leakages.
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[[query-iterate]]
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=== Iterate
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The `Query#iterate()` method has been removed. The alternative is to use one of
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* `Query#stream()`
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* `Query#getResultStream()`
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* Get the `Iterator` from `List` returned by `Query#list()` / `Query#getResultList()`
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[[query-result-cache]]
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== Query result cache
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Another change in 6.0 is related to the query result cache.
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In previous versions, when the query-cache is enabled and a query returning entities is executed, only the entity identifiers were stored in the query-cache. If second-level caching is enabled for a returned entity, the entity data was stored in its second-level cache region.
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Storing just the identifiers in the query-cache has a major drawback when fetching is defined for the query (dynamic fetch, entity-graph, etc) as it can, and often does, lead to N+1 selects.
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Starting in 6.0, we now store the complete set of data for the entity into the query-cache. This also can have a drawback related to the size of caches. We plan to address this further in later 6.x releases to allow storing just the identifiers along the lines of the previous behavior.
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E.g.
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```
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Statistics stats = sessionFacroty.getStatistics();
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// First time the query is executed, query and results are cached and both the query and entity chache will be populated.
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TypedQuery<Employee> query = session.createQuery( "select e from Employee e", Employee.class )
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.setHint( HINT_CACHEABLE, true );
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List<Employee> employees = query.getResultList();
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assertEquals( 1, employees.size() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getQueryCacheHitCount() );
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assertEquals( 1, stats.getQueryCacheMissCount() );
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assertEquals( 1, stats.getQueryCachePutCount() ); // query cache is populated.
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getSecondLevelCacheHitCount() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getSecondLevelCacheMissCount() );
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assertEquals( 1, stats.getSecondLevelCachePutCount() ); // entity cache is populated as well.
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stats.clear();
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// Second time the same query is executed only the query cache will be hit.
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TypedQuery<Employee> query = session.createQuery( "select e from Employee e", Employee.class )
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.setHint( HINT_CACHEABLE, true );
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List<Employee> employees = query.getResultList();
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assertEquals( 1, employees.size() );
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assertEquals( 1, stats.getQueryCacheHitCount() ); // the query cache is hit.
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getQueryCacheMissCount() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getQueryCachePutCount() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getSecondLevelCacheHitCount() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getSecondLevelCacheMissCount() );
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assertEquals( 0, stats.getSecondLevelCachePutCount() ); // No need to hit the entity cache because the query cache contains all the entity data.
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```
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[[query-sqm]]
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== SQM (HQL/Criteria)
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Another major change in 6.0 is the move to a dedicated tree structure to model
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HQL and Criteria queries. This tree structure is called the Semantic Query Model, or
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SQM for short.
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todo (6.0) - cover functions
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todo (6.0) - cover new temporal capabilities
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todo (6.0) - cover new syntaxes
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todo (6.0) - cover bulk manipulation query handling
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[[query-criteria-copy]]
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== Hibernate Criteria behavior change
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By default, when bootstrapping Hibernate through the native bootstrap APIs or when explicitly disabling the newly introduced
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`hibernate.criteria.copy_tree` configuration property, it is expected that criteria queries passed to
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`jakarta.persistence.EntityManager#createQuery(CriteriaQuery)`, `jakarta.persistence.EntityManager#createQuery(CriteriaUpdate)`
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or `jakarta.persistence.EntityManager#createQuery(CriteriaDelete)` are not mutated afterwards to avoid the need for copying the criteria query.
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Prior to 6.0, mutations to criteria queries didn't affect `Query` instances created from that.
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To retain backwards compatibility, enable the `hibernate.criteria.copy_tree` configuration property.
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[[query-sqm-rows]]
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==== Result "rows"
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Queries that use joins without specifying a select clause (e.g. `from Person p join p.address`)
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used to return a `List<Object[]>`. Starting with 6.0, such a query instead returns
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`List<Person>`
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The HQL query `select p, a from Person p join p.address a` returns instead a `List<Object[]>`.
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```
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List<Person> result = session.createQuery("from Person p join p.address").list();
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List<Object[]> results = session.createQuery("select p, a from Person p join p.address a").list();
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```
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[[query-sqm-pass-thru]]
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==== Pass-through tokens
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The use of plain HQL identifiers in e.g. functions which couldn't be interpreted as an attribute of a `FROM` root
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were passed through as-is to SQL in Hibernate 5.x which was dropped in 6.0 because we believe this is unsafe
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and might lead to surprising results. HQL queries that relied on this, need to be changed and use the newly introduced
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`sql` function, which allows passing through the content of a string literal to SQL.
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An HQL query like `select substring( e.description, 21, 11, octets ) from AnEntity e`, which relies on this for passing through `octets`
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can be migrated to `select substring( e.description, 21, 11, sql('octets') ) from AnEntity e`.
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[[query-sqm-distinct]]
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==== DISTINCT
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Starting with Hibernate ORM 6 it is no longer necessary to use *distinct* in JPQL and HQL
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to filter out the same parent entity references when join fetching a child collection.
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The returning duplicates of entities are now always filtered by Hibernate.
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Which means that for instance it is no longer necessary to set `QueryHints#HINT_PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH` to `false`
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in order to skip the entity duplicates without producing a `distinct` in the SQL query.
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From Hibernate ORM 6, `distinct` is always passed to the SQL query and the flag `QueryHints#HINT_PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH`
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has been removed.
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==== Association Comparisons
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Previously Hibernate did allow comparing an association with an FK value like `... where alias.association = 1`
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|
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]]
|
|
== NativeQuery
|
|
|
|
As `NativeQuery` extends from `Query`, all the changes listed in <<query>> also apply
|
|
to `NativeQuery`.
|
|
|
|
Some additional changes apply specifically to `NativeQuery`
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[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-nativequery]]
|
|
=== Callable via NativeQuery
|
|
|
|
Using `NativeQuery` to call SQL functions and procedures is no longer
|
|
supported. `org.hibernate.procedure.ProcedureCall` or
|
|
`jakarta.persistence.StoredProcedureQuery` should be used instead.
|
|
|
|
`@NamedNativeQuery` references defining execution of procedure or
|
|
functions should be migrated to use `@NamedStoredProcedureQuery`
|
|
instead.
|
|
|
|
E.g., the following `@NamedNativeQuery` -
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
@NamedNativeQuery(
|
|
name = "personAndPhones",
|
|
query = "{ ? = call fn_person_and_phones( ? ) }",
|
|
callable = true,
|
|
resultSetMapping = "personWithPhonesResultMapping"
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
final List<Object[]> personAndPhones = entityManager
|
|
.createNamedQuery("personAndPhones" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
should be changed to use `@NamedStoredProcedureQuery` instead -
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
@NamedStoredProcedureQuery(
|
|
name = "personAndPhones",
|
|
procedureName = "fn_person_and_phones",
|
|
resultSetMappings = "personWithPhonesResultMapping",
|
|
hints = @QueryHint(name = "org.hibernate.callableFunction", value = "true"),
|
|
parameters = @StoredProcedureParameter(type = Long.class)
|
|
)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Callable named native queries in hbm.xml files should be migrated to the orm.xml version.
|
|
|
|
E.g., the following `<sql-query callable="true">` -
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
<sql-query name="simpleScalar" callable="true">
|
|
<return-scalar column="name" type="string"/>
|
|
<return-scalar column="`value`" type="long"/>
|
|
{ ? = call simpleScalar(:number) }
|
|
</sql-query>
|
|
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
final List<Object[]> results = entityManager
|
|
.createNamedQuery("simpleScalar" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
should be changed to use `<named-stored-procedure-query/>` instead -
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<named-stored-procedure-query name="simpleScalar" procedure-name="simpleScalar">
|
|
<parameter class="java.lang.Integer" mode="IN" name="number"/>
|
|
<result-set-mapping>simpleScalar</result-set-mapping>
|
|
<hint name="org.hibernate.callableFunction" value="true"/>
|
|
</named-stored-procedure-query>
|
|
<sql-result-set-mapping name="simpleScalar">
|
|
<column-result name="name" class="java.lang.String"/>
|
|
<column-result name="value" class="java.lang.Long"/>
|
|
</sql-result-set-mapping>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
TIP: To ease the migration, `<sql-query callable="true"/>` and `@NamedNativeQuery(callable = true)` queries
|
|
will be translated and registered as named stored procedure in 6.0, but future versions will drop this automatic translation.
|
|
|
|
Either `org.hibernate.procedure.ProcedureCall` or `jakarta.persistence.StoredProcedureQuery`
|
|
can be used to execute the named query -
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
// Use StoredProcedureQuery
|
|
final List<Object[]> personAndPhones = entityManager
|
|
.createNamedStoredProcedureQuery( "simpleScalar" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
|
|
// Use ProcedureCall
|
|
final List<Object[]> personAndPhones = entityManager
|
|
.unwrap( Session.class )
|
|
.getNamedProcedureCall( "simpleScalar" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is also no longer supported to execute procedures and functions
|
|
via a dynamic (unnamed) `NativeQuery`. All such usages should be converted
|
|
to use `ProcedureCall` or `StoredProcedureQuery` instead via
|
|
`Session#createStoredProcedureCall` or `EntityManager#createStoredProcedureQuery`,
|
|
respectively.
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
// Use StoredProcedureQuery
|
|
final List<Object[]> personAndPhones = entityManager
|
|
.createStoredProcedureQuery( "fn_person_and_phones", "personWithPhonesResultMapping" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
|
|
// Use ProcedureCall
|
|
final List<Object[]> personAndPhones = entityManager
|
|
.unwrap( Session.class )
|
|
.createStoredProcedureCall( "fn_person_and_phones", "personWithPhonesResultMapping" )
|
|
.setParameter( 1, 1L )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
|
|
[[proc-call-param]]
|
|
== ProcedureCall / StoredProcedureQuery 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
|
|
|
|
|
|
== Interceptor
|
|
|
|
The signature of the `#onSave` method has been changed from
|
|
```
|
|
boolean onSave(Object entity, Serializable id, Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
to
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
boolean onSave(Object entity, Object id, Object[] state, String[] propertyNames, Type[] types)
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
to account for the general change in expected identifier type from `Serializable` to `Object`.
|
|
See <<identifier-object>>.
|
|
|
|
If custom Interceptor implementations do not use `@Override` on their implementations, this
|
|
can lead to situations where a custom Interceptor no longer overrides this method. Moral
|
|
of the story... always use `@Override` - this is why it exists
|
|
|
|
|
|
== Removals
|
|
|
|
|
|
=== Legacy Hibernate Criteria API
|
|
|
|
The legacy Hibernate Criteria API which was deprecated back in Hibernate 5.x and 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.
|
|
|
|
=== HQL fetch all properties clause
|
|
|
|
The `fetch all properties` clause was removed from the HQL language without a replacement.
|
|
A similar behavior can be achieved by constructing an entity graph and applying that as load graph:
|
|
|
|
```java
|
|
EntityGraph<Document> entityGraph = entityManager.createEntityGraph( Document.class );
|
|
for ( Attribute<Document, ?> attr : entityManager.getMetamodel().entity( Document.class ).getAttributes() ) {
|
|
entityGraph.addAttributeNodes( attr.getName() );
|
|
}
|
|
List<Document> documents = s.createQuery( "from Document", Document.class )
|
|
.setHint( "jakarta.persistence.loadgraph", entityGraph )
|
|
.getResultList();
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
=== JMX integration
|
|
|
|
Hibernate no longer provides built-in support for integrating itself with JMX environments.
|
|
|
|
=== JACC integration
|
|
|
|
Hibernate no longer provides built-in support for integrating itself with JACC environments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
=== Previously 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'
|
|
|
|
// todo (6.0) - surely there are more than this...
|
|
|
|
|
|
== Width-first fetch determination
|
|
|
|
Previous versions of Hibernate determined fetches using a depth-first approach, which occasionally led
|
|
to odd "circularity" determination. Starting with 6.0, we now perform fetch determination using a width
|
|
first approach.
|
|
|
|
As back-ground, Hibernate does not always know that a fetch is truly
|
|
circular. So it uses the approach that seeing the same table and column(s) as keys might be a circularity
|
|
and stops processing fetches using that table/column(s) combination.
|
|
|
|
Given a model such as
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
@Entity
|
|
class Node {
|
|
|
|
@ManyToOne
|
|
|
|
Node node1;
|
|
|
|
@ManyToOne
|
|
Node node2;
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Hibernate previously generated joins by walking the entity association graph for the `Node#node1` sub-tree prior to walking the `Node#node2` sub-tree.
|
|
Since the associations are all eager, Hibernate 6.0 now executes a query with 4 joins
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
FROM Node
|
|
JOIN Node.node1
|
|
JOIN Node.node1.node2
|
|
JOIN Node.node2
|
|
JOIN Node.node2.node1
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
whereas before it executed
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
FROM Node
|
|
JOIN Node.node1
|
|
JOIN Node.node1.node2
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
and issued a select for `Node.node2` if the FK of `Node.node2` was 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 the number of eager fetched self-associations
|
|
is increased 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.
|
|
|
|
|
|
== 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.
|
|
|
|
|
|
== Deprecation of hbm.xml mappings
|
|
|
|
Legacy `hbm.xml` mapping format is considered deprecated and will no longer supported beyond 6.x.
|
|
|
|
|
|
== Association laziness now respected
|
|
|
|
Prior to Hibernate 6.0, lazy associations that used `fetch="join"` or `@Fetch(FetchMode.JOIN)` were considered eager
|
|
when loaded by-id i.e. through `Session#get`/`EntityManager#find`, even though for queries the association was treated as lazy.
|
|
|
|
Starting with Hibernate 6.0, the laziness of such associations is properly respected, regardless of the fetch mechanism.
|
|
Backwards compatibility can be achieved by specifying `lazy="false"` or `@ManyToOne(fetch = EAGER)`/`@OneToOne(fetch = EAGER)`/`@OneToMany(fetch = EAGER)`/`@ManyToMany(fetch = EAGER)`.
|
|
|
|
== hbm.xml <return-join/> behavior change
|
|
|
|
As of Hibernate 6.0, a `<return-join/>` will cause a fetch of an association, rather than adding a selection item.
|
|
Consider the following example:
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<sql-query name="organizationreturnproperty">
|
|
<return alias="org" class="Organization">
|
|
<return-property name="id" column="ORGID"/>
|
|
<return-property name="name" column="NAME"/>
|
|
</return>
|
|
<return-join alias="emp" property="org.employments">
|
|
<return-property name="key" column="EMPLOYER"/>
|
|
<return-property name="element" column="EMPID"/>
|
|
<return-property name="element.employee" column="EMPLOYEE"/>
|
|
</return-join>
|
|
...
|
|
</sql-query>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Prior to 6.0, a query would return a list of tuples [`Organization`, `Employee`],
|
|
but now this will return a list of `Organization` with an initialized `employments` collection.
|
|
|
|
== hbm.xml multiple <column/> now disallowed
|
|
|
|
In 6.0 the support for basic property mappings with multiple columns was removed. The only use case for that was when a
|
|
`CompositeUserType` was in use, which was reworked to now work on top of components.
|
|
|
|
Uses like:
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<property name="salary" type="org.hibernate.orm.test.sql.hand.MonetaryAmountUserType">
|
|
<column name="CURRENCY"/>
|
|
<column name="AMOUNT" sql-type="float"/>
|
|
</property>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
have to be migrated to proper components:
|
|
|
|
```xml
|
|
<component name="salary" class="org.hibernate.orm.test.sql.hand.MonetaryAmountUserType">
|
|
<property name="value" column="AMOUNT">
|
|
<type name="float"/>
|
|
</property>
|
|
<property name="currency" column="CURRENCY"/>
|
|
</component>
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The component class attribute now supports interpreting a `CompositeUserType` class properly.
|