Is it necessary to use Entity annotation for Select query records from Database - spring-boot

I have spring boot application with JPA and MySQL. The table is already created and data are present. From the spring boot application, we need to create two API - get a particular record using id and get all the records. I created a model class but confused with usage of #Entity. Because I'm not going to insert/delete a record from the database. I want to use only for select the record.
For Select query (findBy), do we need to use #Entity annotation at the top of model class?

Yes, you would need to use #Entity to mark your model class, this tells JPA that your class is used for mapping to and from a database table. If you want to make sure that you don't accidentally overwrite the data, you could implement a check via #EntityListener, as described in this answer.

Related

Why is my spring boot app creating another record in the database instead of merging them together?

AHere's the setup:
Springboot, springboot-data-jpa, hibernate.
I have one entity, a Review, that has a property that has a many-to-one relationship with another entity, a vehicle. The vehicle entity conversely has a one-to-many relationship with the review entity.
To create the review entity via a POST endpoint, I give the vehicle entity as of the properties in the JSON.
This works fine, not only is the review record added in the database but it goes ahead and creates the vehicle entity as well. The only issue is that in the case where the vehicle already exists, instead of making that connection, it creates another record with the exact same information so I have a duplicate vehicle entity.
Is this because I should be handling the creation of the vehicle entity on my own instead of relying on hibernate? Am I just missing some annotation I'm not aware of?
Originally I was getting an error about flushing or something so I added the Cascade.ALL annotation to the review class 'vehicle' property and that fixed that problem. I tried changing the Cascade type as it seems to be relevant somehow but it either breaks the server or doesn't work at all.

Expose custom query in Spring Boot Rest API with multiple joins

I have an Spring REST Api and a MySQL Database, now I would like to expose the result of an custom query with multiple joins.
I have tried multiple suggestions that I found online but none of them were working for me so far.
What I want to do is something like a read only DTO that has all the fields of my custom query so that in the end I have one api page exposing the DTO data as JSON so my client (Angular) can read the data from there.
I already tried to:
create an #RestController with an injected EntityManager that executes a NativeQuery and then populates the DTO with the returned data but since my DTO is no Entity I get an Hibernate Mapping Exception
create a custom Repository and its Impl but with a similar outcome
place the Query inside an existing #Entity that is part of the Query statement
What am I missing here? Do I have to annotate my DTO maybe? Cuttently it's just a POJO, I think the #Entity annotation is not the right thing here since I don't want a Table created from my DTO.
Fixed it by letting the Query return an Array of type Object and afterwards mapping it to the DTO Constructor.

Search for a String in a column of List of Strings using Spring jpa query

I have a Spring Boot application and I am using Spring Data JPA to query a PostgreSQL database.
I have a column of List type in my database. Now I need a query to search all those rows where my input parameter is present in this list.
eg. I have a column of type List containing any of these values: ["cat","dog","cow"].
I need to find all those rows where "cat" is one among the list.
Can you help me with the format of this query? Thanks in advance.
From what I could understand, you have a DB table, let's say Sample. Now this table has multiple columns with one column whose values can be either of "cat","dog","cow". Let's assume the column name to be 'sampleName'.
So, in your code you must be having an #Entity class for Sample with #Column sampleName, and a corresponding JPA repository - SampleRepository.
Now, the code for requirement should look like as shown below:
public interface SampleRepository extends JpaRepository<Sample, Long> {
Optional<Sample> findBySampleName(String sampleName);
}
In above JPA repository, I have assumed that you have an #Id field of type Long in your entity Sample. Also, I have made use of method-name strategy. Spring boot will automatically translate this method name to a SQL query at run time like - SELECT * FROM sample WHERE sampleName = 'cat'. This value cat will be provided to your repository method as an argument from #Service layer.
Hope this helps!
In addition to this, you can also choose to use the native query approach. Please refer - https://www.baeldung.com/spring-data-jpa-query for more details.

How to map a Spring Data JPA repository entity into a view model?

Here is the situation, I want to fetch an entity from database and map it to a new view domain model which has more or less properties, if this view model has more properties, signs the extra properties with default value. I want a map technique in JPA to complete this, which is similar to MyBatis mapping mechanism.
So how to do it?
Just load the entity, copy it over in the new entity, fill the unset properties with the desired default values and store it using JPA (possibly via Spring Data JPA).
For copying over the data from one entity to another you might want to look int Dozer or similar libraries.
You could also misuse Spring Data's projection support to query the original entity, but return it as the target entity with methods similar to the following:
interface SourceRepository<Source, Long> extends CrudRepository<Source, Long> {
List<Target> findTargetBy();
}
The resulting Target entities then could be stored again using another repository (you might have to set version and id properties to null to make it clear to the framework that these are new entities.

How do I execute named queries from a JPA EntityListener?

I have a requirement to set a date_updated value in my database for each row when that row is updated. Let's call the entity that I'm working with Order, which has a corresponding orders table in the database.
I've added the date_updated column to the orders table. So far, so good.
The #Entity Order object that I'm working with is provided by a third party. I do not have the ability to modify the source code to add a field called dateUpdated. I have no requirement to map this value to the object anyway - the value is going to be used for business intelligence purposes only and does not need to be represented in the Java entity object.
My problem is this: I want to update the date_updated column in the database to the current time each time an Order object (and its corresponding database table row) is modified.
Constraints:
We are using Oracle, Spring, JPA and Hibernate
I cannot use Oracle triggers to update the value. We are using a database replication technology that prevents us from using triggers.
My approach thus far has been to use a JPA EntityListener, defined in xml, similar to this:
<entity-mappings xmlns="....">
<entity class="com.theirs.OrderImpl">
<entity-listeners>
<entity-listener class="com.mine.listener.OrderJPAListener" />
</entity-listeners>
</entity>
</entity-mappings>
My listener class looks like this:
public class OrderJPAListener {
#PostPersist
#PostUpdate
public void recordDateUpdated(Order order) {
// do the update here
}
}
The problem I'm having is injecting any sort of persistence support (or anything at all, really) into my listener. Because JPA loads the listener via its methods, I do not have access to any Spring beans in my listener class.
How do I go about injecting an EntityManager (or any Spring bean) into my listener class so that I can execute a named query to update the date_updated field?
How do I go about injecting an EntityManager (or any Spring bean) into
my listener class so that I can execute a named query to update the
date_updated field?
As noted above JPA 2.1 supports injecting managed beans to an Entity Listener via CDI. Whether or not Spring supports this I am not sure. The folloiwng post proposes a Spring specific solution.
https://guylabs.ch/2014/02/22/autowiring-pring-beans-in-hibernate-jpa-entity-listeners/
A possible alternative approach would be however to override the SQL generated by Hibernate on an update which is possible as detailed below.
https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/3.6/reference/en-US/html/querysql.html#querysql-cud
This would be straightforward if you had the source as you would just need to add the #SQLUpdate annotation and tag on the additional date_update column. As you don't however you would need to look at redefining the metadata for that Entity via an xml configuration file and defining the sql-update statement as outlined above:
https://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/stable/annotations/reference/en/html/xml-overriding.html#xml-overriding-principles-entity
Since JPA 2.1 Entity Listeners are CDI managed. Have you tried using #PersistenceUnit annotation? Are you using JTA transaction type?
Otherwise you could use Persistence.createEntityManagerFactory within the Listener class to retrieve the Persistence Context.

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