Impossible to return a list / collection of projection - spring-boot

I made a spring-boot project to access to my datas.
My main class is Patient.java:
#Entity
public class Patient {
private Long id;
private String numeroSs;
private String profession;
// lot of stuff...., getters, setters, ...
}
In order to improve my requests, I've made a very simple projection of my class Patient. I've called this projection PatientCustom :
public interface PatientCustom {
String getNumeroSs();
Timestamp getDateProchainRdv();
}
And in my repository "PatientRepo.java", I created two custom methods :
#Transactional
#RepositoryRestResource(collectionResourceRel = "patient", path = "patient")
public interface PatientRepo extends JpaRepository<Patient, Long> {
PatientCustom findOneByNumeroSs(String numeroSs);
Collection<PatientCustom> findByNumeroSs(String numeroSs);
}
When I use the first method, no problem : it returns a PatientCustom :
{
numeroSs: "150505617017002",
dateProchainRdv: null
}
But When I want a list or a collection, it sends me an error :
{
cause: null,
message: "Couldn't find PersistentEntity for type class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy165!"
}
And the traces in my terminal :
2019-03-12 10:32:34.671 ERROR 2072 --- [nio-8090-exec-2] o.s.d.r.w.RepositoryRestExceptionHandler : Couldn't find PersistentEntity for type class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy165!
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Couldn't find PersistentEntity for type class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy165!
at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.PersistentEntities.lambda$getRequiredPersistentEntity$2(PersistentEntities.java:96) ~[spring-data-commons-2.1.5.RELEASE.jar:2.1.5.RELEASE]
at java.util.Optional.orElseThrow(Optional.java:290) ~[na:1.8.0_181]
at org.springframework.data.mapping.context.PersistentEntities.getRequiredPersistentEntity(PersistentEntities.java:95) ~[spring-data-commons-2.1.5.RELEASE.jar:2.1.5.RELEASE]
I understand very well that spring wants to add a proxy class to my interface, but when it want to add this proxy to a list or a collection, it's unhappy because list and collection are not interfaces but classses.
What can I do to solve this ?

Related

Getting bean creation errors when creating a shared interface for my ReactiveCrudRepositories, is it possible to create share interfaces like this?

so my Kotlin / spring-boot application makes use of several reactiveCrudRepositories, and I am trying to reduce the amount of code I need to write methods that are common to each table in my database.
I was trying to create a common interface that each table implements, but am getting the following error when i build:
Error creating bean with name 'sharedRepo' defined in com...sharedRepo defined in #EnableR2dbcRepositories declared on R2dbcRepositoriesAutoConfiguireRegistrar.EnableR2dbcRepositoriesConfiguration: Invocation of ini method failed; nested exception is in org.springframework.data.mapping.MappingException: Couldn't find persistentEntity for type class java.lang.Object!
I have tried reducing the complexity of the interface down to just an empty interface (so that i can still write generic methods) but this has not worked.. the following is what my code currently looks like:
itemA.kt
#Table(table_a)
data class itemA(
#Id
#Column("id")
val menuId: UUID
#Column("name")
val prodName: String
...
}
interface AClassRepository : sharedRepo<itemA>, Serializable
itemB.kt
#Table(table_b)
data class itemB(
#Id
#Column("id")
val menuId: UUID
#Column("name")
val prodName: String
...
}
interface BClassRepository : sharedRepo<itemB>, Serializable
SharedRepo.kt
interface sharedRepo<T> : ReactiveCrudRepository<T, UUID>
databaseAssistant.kt
fun <T> sharedRepo<T>.persist(item: T) = {
Try {
//this is calling the ReactiveCrudRepository.save method
save
} ...
}
fun <T> sharedRepo<T>.someOtherDbCall(item: T, newName: String) =
*some other method body*
serviceC.kt
#Service
class ServiceC(
private val repositoryA: AClassRepository,
private val repositoryB: BClassRepository
( {
fun useRepo() =
repositoryB.persist(someInstanceOfItemA)
fun useOtherRepo() =
repositoryA.someOtherDbCall(someInstanceOfItemB, "aNiceName")
}

How to get column field only with spring-data-jpa?

How can I make spring-data-jpa return a String column only, instead of a bean?
The following should return the bookingNumber String from a Booking #Entity:
public interface BookingRepository extends CrudRepository<Booking, Long> {
String findDistinctBookingNumberByLastname(String lastname);
}
If the booking exists, I'm getting the following exception instead of the bookingnumber string only:
java.lang.ClassCastException: class Booking cannot be cast to class java.lang.String
at com.sun.proxy.$Proxy198.findDistinctBookingNumberByLastname(Unknown Source) ~[?:?]
Sidenote: I know I could write a native #Query on the interface methods, but I'd prefer a query by method name only.

SqlResultSetMapping to POJO class from a NamedNativeQuery throwing 'could not locate appropriate constructor'

I made a #NamedNativeQuery and attached it to an entity 'Doctor', on the same entity I attached a #SqlResultSetMapping which takes the columns of the query's result and maps them to a constructor of a specifically made POJO class. This query is also connected to a JPA method, which resides in the repository of the same entity.
However I keep getting an error that the appropriate constructor could not be located, as if the #SqlResultSetMapping or the POJO constructors are not in sync. (stack trace is at the bottom)
My entity, #NamedNativeQuery and #SqlResultSetMapping:
I tried the query directly on the DB and it gave the expected result, so I am just writing the select clause
#Entity
#NamedNativeQuery(
name =
"Doctor.findFreeExaminationTimes", // name of the JPA method in entity's repository (definition below)
query =
"SELECT on_date AS onDate, LAG(to_time, 1, '00:00') OVER mojWindow AS fromTime, from_time AS toTime " +
"...",
resultSetMapping = "freeTimesByDoctorId" // name of the mapping below
)
#SqlResultSetMapping(
name = "freeTimesByDoctorId", // result set mapping name
classes = #ConstructorResult(
targetClass = DoctorAvailabilityResponse.class, // my POJO class (definition below)
columns = { // order and types are the same as in the select clause above and the POJO constructor below
#ColumnResult(name = "onDate", type = java.sql.Date.class),
#ColumnResult(name = "fromTime", type = java.sql.Time.class),
#ColumnResult(name = "toTime",type = java.sql.Time.class)
}
)
)
public class Doctor extends User {...}
The POJO class which I mention in the #ConstructorResult under 'targetClass' has a constructor with the exact order, number and type, of arguments, specified under 'columns'
My POJO class which should be mapped to the query's result:
public class DoctorAvailabilityResponse {
final private java.sql.Date onDate;
final private java.sql.Time fromTime;
final private java.sql.Time toTime;
public DoctorAvailabilityResponse(java.sql.Date onDate, java.sql.Time fromTime, java.sql.Time toTime) {
this.onDate = onDate;
this.fromTime = fromTime;
this.toTime = toTime;
}
// getters
}
My repository:
#RepositoryRestResource
public interface DoctorRepository extends UserRepository<Doctor> {
// JPA method mapped to the named native query above
List<DoctorAvailabilityResponse> findFreeExaminationTimes(#Param("doctorId") Long doctorId);
}
However when testing this JPA method I get an exception with the message 'could not locate appropriate constructor'.
My test:
#SpringBootTest
public class DoctorTests {
#Autowired
private DoctorRepository doctorRepository;
private final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(this.getClass());
#Test
public void shouldReturnDoctorAvailability() {
// Exception thrown here
List<DoctorAvailabilityResponse> freeTimes = doctorRepository.findFreeExaminationTimes(4L);
LOGGER.info(freeTimes.toString());
}
}
I cannot understand why is this happening. Is there a way to manually map this result set to the POJO while maintaining the JPA repository method?
Stack trace:
org.springframework.dao.InvalidDataAccessApiUsageException: Could not locate appropriate constructor on class : com.example.isaproj.isa_projekat_2019.Model.DTO.DoctorAvailabilityResponse; nested exception is java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Could not locate appropriate constructor on class : com.example.isaproj.isa_projekat_2019.Model.DTO.DoctorAvailabilityResponse
at org.springframework.orm.jpa.EntityManagerFactoryUtils.convertJpaAccessExceptionIfPossible(EntityManagerFactoryUtils.java:374)
at org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaDialect.translateExceptionIfPossible(HibernateJpaDialect.java:256)
at org.springframework.orm.jpa.AbstractEntityManagerFactoryBean.translateExceptionIfPossible(AbstractEntityManagerFactoryBean.java:528)
...
...
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Could not locate appropriate constructor on class : com.example.isaproj.isa_projekat_2019.Model.DTO.DoctorAvailabilityResponse
at org.hibernate.loader.custom.ConstructorResultColumnProcessor.resolveConstructor(ConstructorResultColumnProcessor.java:92)
at org.hibernate.loader.custom.ConstructorResultColumnProcessor.performDiscovery(ConstructorResultColumnProcessor.java:45)
at org.hibernate.loader.custom.CustomLoader.autoDiscoverTypes(CustomLoader.java:494)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.processResultSet(Loader.java:2333)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.getResultSet(Loader.java:2289)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.executeQueryStatement(Loader.java:2045)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.executeQueryStatement(Loader.java:2007)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.doQuery(Loader.java:953)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.doQueryAndInitializeNonLazyCollections(Loader.java:354)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.doList(Loader.java:2810)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.doList(Loader.java:2792)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.listIgnoreQueryCache(Loader.java:2624)
at org.hibernate.loader.Loader.list(Loader.java:2619)
at org.hibernate.loader.custom.CustomLoader.list(CustomLoader.java:338)
at org.hibernate.internal.SessionImpl.listCustomQuery(SessionImpl.java:2137)
at org.hibernate.internal.AbstractSharedSessionContract.list(AbstractSharedSessionContract.java:1134)
at org.hibernate.query.internal.NativeQueryImpl.doList(NativeQueryImpl.java:173)
at org.hibernate.query.internal.AbstractProducedQuery.list(AbstractProducedQuery.java:1526)
at org.hibernate.query.Query.getResultList(Query.java:165)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:62)
at java.base/jdk.internal.reflect.DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(DelegatingMethodAccessorImpl.java:43)
at java.base/java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Method.java:564)
at org.springframework.orm.jpa.SharedEntityManagerCreator$DeferredQueryInvocationHandler.invoke(SharedEntityManagerCreator.java:409)
at com.sun.proxy.$Proxy212.getResultList(Unknown Source)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryExecution$CollectionExecution.doExecute(JpaQueryExecution.java:126)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryExecution.execute(JpaQueryExecution.java:88)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.AbstractJpaQuery.doExecute(AbstractJpaQuery.java:154)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.AbstractJpaQuery.execute(AbstractJpaQuery.java:142)
at org.springframework.data.repository.core.support.RepositoryFactorySupport$QueryExecutorMethodInterceptor.doInvoke(RepositoryFactorySupport.java:618)
at org.springframework.data.repository.core.support.RepositoryFactorySupport$QueryExecutorMethodInterceptor.invoke(RepositoryFactorySupport.java:605)
at org.springframework.aop.framework.ReflectiveMethodInvocation.proceed(ReflectiveMethodInvocation.java:186)
at org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionAspectSupport.invokeWithinTransaction(TransactionAspectSupport.java:353)
at org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionInterceptor.invoke(TransactionInterceptor.java:99)
at org.springframework.aop.framework.ReflectiveMethodInvocation.proceed(ReflectiveMethodInvocation.java:186)
at org.springframework.dao.support.PersistenceExceptionTranslationInterceptor.invoke(PersistenceExceptionTranslationInterceptor.java:139)
... 73 more
Sanity check and alternative approach
To make a sanity check I deleted the #SqlResultSetMapping, in which case the query is supposed to return a list of 'Object[]' values, and then I tested each individual value in that array to check its type, it showed me that the types are what I assumed them to be 'java.sql.Date' and 'java.sql.Time' twice, and all three of them were in the expected order, (Date, Time, Time), which matches the order of the constructor parameters of my POJO class.
My entity and namedNativeQuery:
#Entity
#NamedNativeQuery(
name =
"Doctor.findFreeExaminationTimes",
query =
"SELECT on_date AS onDate, LAG(to_time, 1, '00:00') OVER mojWindow AS fromTime, from_time AS toTime " +
"..."
)
public class Doctor extends User {...}
My repository with a new return type:
#RepositoryRestResource
public interface DoctorRepository extends UserRepository<Doctor> {
List<Object[]> findFreeExaminationTimes(#Param("doctorId") Long doctorId);
}
My test:
#SpringBootTest
public class DoctorTests {
#Autowired
private DoctorRepository doctorRepository;
private final Logger LOGGER = LoggerFactory.getLogger(this.getClass());
#Test
public void shouldReturnDoctorAvailability() {
// Exception thrown here
List<DoctorAvailabilityResponse> freeTimes = doctorRepository.findFreeExaminationTimes(4L);
freeTimes.stream().forEach((ft) -> {
// Values are in expected order and of expected types
String classNameOnDate = ft[0].getClass().toString(); // java.sql.Date
String classNameFromTime = ft[1].getClass().toString(); // java.sql.Time
String classNameToTime = ft[1].getClass().toString(); // java.sql.Time
// I suppose the mapping mechanism is supposed to do something like this, but fails for some reason
DoctorAvailabilityResponse dar = new DoctorAvailabilityResponse((Date)ft[0], (Time)ft[1], (Time)ft[2]);
});
LOGGER.info(freeTimes.toString());
}
}
Running this test works perfectly which supposedly shows that the problem is in the #SqlResultSetMapping or in POJO class.
I would appreciate any feedback. Thanks!
SOLUTION
I had to change the types in the #SqlResultSetMapping and in the constructor of my POJO class.
Changed #SqlResultSetMapping
#SqlResultSetMapping(
name = "freeTimesByDoctorId",
classes = #ConstructorResult(
targetClass = DoctorAvailabilityResponse.class,
columns = {
#ColumnResult(name = "onDate", type = String.class),
#ColumnResult(name = "fromTime", type = String.class),
#ColumnResult(name = "toTime",type = String.class)
}
)
)
Changed POJO class constructor
public DoctorAvailabilityResponse(String onDate, String fromTime, String toTime) {
this.onDate = Date.valueOf(onDate);
this.fromTime = Time.valueOf(fromTime);
this.toTime = Time.valueOf(toTime);
}
This alone did not solve my problem however as I got a hibernate exception as mentioned and solved in this SO question. According to this answer I also changed my repository and added an additional annotation.
Changed repository
#RepositoryRestResource
public interface DoctorRepository extends UserRepository<Doctor> {
#Query(nativeQuery = true) // This is added
List<DoctorAvailabilityResponse> findFreeExaminationTimes(#Param("doctorId") Long doctorId);
}
Now everything works, though the question remains why didn't #SqlResultSetMapping map java.sql.* types to the constructor in the first place.
#ConstructorResult does not work very well with java.sql.Date.class or java.sql.Time.class type. A way to fix your issue is to use String.class instead and then convert the String values to Date/Time in DoctorAvailabilityResponse's constructor

Spring Data JPA native query result binding

Entity class:
#Entity
#SqlResultSetMapping(
name="hourMapping",
classes=#ConstructorResult(
targetClass=Representation.class,
columns={
#ColumnResult(name="hour", type=BigDecimal.class),
#ColumnResult(name="transactions", type=BigDecimal.class)
}
)
)
#NamedNativeQuery(name="MyEntity.reportByHour", query="SELECT hour,SUM(tran_per_hour) AS transactions FROM MY_ENTITY GROUP BY hour ORDER BY hour"
,resultSetMapping="hourMapping")
#Table(name="MY_ENTITY")
public class MyEntity implements Serializable {
Pojo class:
#Data //Lombok
#JsonAutoDetect(fieldVisibility = Visibility.ANY)
public class Representation {
public Representation(BigDecimal hour, BigDecimal transactions) {
this.hour = hour;
this.transactions = transactions;
}
private BigDecimal hour;
private BigDecimal transactions;
Repository interface:
public interface MyEntityRepository extends JpaRepository<MyEntity, MyEntityPK> {
List<Representation> reportByHour();
}
When I run the endpoint which invokes the native query, I get exception:
Failed to convert from type [java.lang.Object[]] to type [com.representation.Representation] for value '{0, 198}'; nested exception is org.springframework.core.convert.ConverterNotFoundException: No converter found capable of converting from type [java.math.BigDecimal] to type [com.representation.Representation]
Now if I just have "hour" field returned from my native query (and relevant changes to POJO constructor etc) it works fine.
Any help appreciated.
Ok, false alarm. My hibernate dependencies were all messed up and causing conflicts so resulting in the above exception.
After fixing these dependency issues, works great!!
Long story short: let spring-boot-* handle most hibernate dependencies instead of overriding or managing your own.

Spring Data JPA and Generics

I have an entity that looks like this
#Entity(name = "encounter_pdf_export")
public class EncounterPDFExport<T extends Encounter> implements Serializable {
public static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
#Id
#GeneratedValue
private Long pdfExportId;
#Any(metaColumn = #Column(name = "encounter_type"))
#Cascade(CascadeType.ALL)
#AnyMetaDef(
idType = "long",
metaType = "string",
metaValues = {
#MetaValue(value = "FooEncounter", targetEntity = FooEncounter.class)
})
#JoinColumn(name = "encounter_id")
private T encounter;
The abstract type that I'm extending is:
public abstract class Encounter {
public abstract Long getEncounterId();
}
Here is my Spring Data Repository
#Repository
public interface EncounterPDFExportRepository extends PagingAndSortingRepository<EncounterPDFExport, Long> {
EncounterPDFExport findOneByEncounter_encounterId(#Param("encounterId") Long encounterId);
}
I am getting a stack trace when starting up the application related to to the findOneByEncounter_encounterId method:
Caused by: java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Unable to locate Attribute with the the given name [encounter] on this ManagedType [com.iimassociates.distiller.domain.EncounterPDFExport]
at org.hibernate.jpa.internal.metamodel.AbstractManagedType.checkNotNull(AbstractManagedType.java:144)
at org.hibernate.jpa.internal.metamodel.AbstractManagedType.getAttribute(AbstractManagedType.java:130)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.QueryUtils.toExpressionRecursively(QueryUtils.java:468)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryCreator$PredicateBuilder.getTypedPath(JpaQueryCreator.java:300)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryCreator$PredicateBuilder.build(JpaQueryCreator.java:243)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryCreator.toPredicate(JpaQueryCreator.java:148)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryCreator.create(JpaQueryCreator.java:88)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryCreator.create(JpaQueryCreator.java:46)
at org.springframework.data.repository.query.parser.AbstractQueryCreator.createCriteria(AbstractQueryCreator.java:109)
at org.springframework.data.repository.query.parser.AbstractQueryCreator.createQuery(AbstractQueryCreator.java:88)
at org.springframework.data.repository.query.parser.AbstractQueryCreator.createQuery(AbstractQueryCreator.java:73)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.PartTreeJpaQuery$QueryPreparer.<init>(PartTreeJpaQuery.java:116)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.PartTreeJpaQuery$CountQueryPreparer.<init>(PartTreeJpaQuery.java:237)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.PartTreeJpaQuery.<init>(PartTreeJpaQuery.java:65)
at org.springframework.data.jpa.repository.query.JpaQueryLookupStrategy$CreateQueryLookupStrategy.resolveQuery(JpaQueryLookupStrategy.java:100)
I am assuming that either Spring Data JPA doesn't support abstracted/generic fields? If that's the case, would creating a #Query be a sufficient workaround?
Not sure if this will be helpful to anyone, but I did get this working.
Removed the abstract class and made it an interface with a single public getEncounterId() method
Modified FooEncounter to implement the above interface
Removed generics from the EncounterPDFExport class
Modified the encounter field to utilize the above interface rather than a generic
Apparently, I'm hitting some Hibernate bug/limitation when accessing fields within FooEncounter. Accessing Encounter within EncounterPDFExport works OK, though. I modified my Spring Data JPA Repository to look like the following (note the modification from finding by encounter.encounterId vs. just encounter):
#Repository
public interface EncounterPDFExportRepository extends PagingAndSortingRepository<EncounterPDFExport, Long> {
EncounterPDFExport findOneByEncounter(#Param("encounter") Encounter encounter);
}
The Hibernate bug in question seems to be related to https://jira.spring.io/browse/DATAJPA-836.

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