I am new to hibernate. I am using postgres as the DB.
I have a table User. which contains a column called metadata which is of type jsonb.
I would like to map this column to an object (serializable) Metadata. I read through some tutorials and came to know that we need to implement custom userType to achieve this.
So I implemented MyMetadataType. Now I have another column called settings again of jsonb type. To map this column to its corresponding Object I need another userType implementation.
Is it possible to have a generic class like the following.. Just one class for all such columns?
class MyCustomType<T> implements UserType
{
...
...
}
if yes then how will I use it in the Entity definition?
@Entity
@Table(name = "user")
@TypeDefs({ @TypeDef(name = "MyCustomType", typeClass = MyCustomType<Metadata>.class) })
public class User extends BaseEntity implements Serializable
{
@Id
@Column(name = "id")
private int id;
@Column(name = "metadata")
@Type(type = "MyCustomeType")
private Metadata metadata;
.........
.........
.........
}
By looking up previous SO questions, I came up with the following class:
public class MyCustomType<T> implements UserType
{
protected static Conversion conversion = new JsonDataConversionImpl();
private static final Logger logger = LogManager.getLogger(MyCustomType.class.getCanonicalName());
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
private Class<T> genericType = (Class<T>) GenericTypeResolver.resolveTypeArgument(getClass(), MyCustomType.class);
/**
* Reconstruct an object from the cacheable representation. At the very least this method should
* perform a deep copy if the type is mutable. (optional operation)
*
* @param cached
* the object to be cached
* @param owner
* the owner of the cached object
* @return a reconstructed object from the cachable representation
* @throws HibernateException
*/
@Override
public Object assemble(Serializable cached, Object owner) throws HibernateException
{
return this.deepCopy(cached);
}
/**
* Return a deep copy of the persistent state, stopping at entities and st collections. It is
* not necessary to copy immutable objects, or null values, in which case it is safe to simple
* return the argument.
*
* @param value
* the object to be cloned, which may be null
* @return object a copy
* @throws HibernateException
*/
@Override
public Object deepCopy(Object value) throws HibernateException
{
return value;
}
/**
* Transform the object into its cacheable representation. At the very least this method should
* perform a deep copy if the type is mutable. That may not be enough for some implementations,
* however; for example, associations must be cached as identifier values. (optional operation)
*
* @param value
* the object to be cached
* @return a cachable representation of the object
* @throws HibernateException
*/
@Override
public Serializable disassemble(Object value) throws HibernateException
{
return (String) this.deepCopy(value);
}
/**
* Compare two instances of the class mapped by this type for persistence "equality". Equality
* of the persistence state.
*
* @param x
* @param y
* @return boolean
* @throws HibernateException
*/
@Override
public boolean equals(Object x, Object y) throws HibernateException
{
if (x == null)
{
return y == null;
}
return x.equals(y);
}
/**
* Get a hashcode for the instance, consistent with persistence "equality".
*/
@Override
public int hashCode(Object x) throws HibernateException
{
return x.hashCode();
}
/**
* Are objects of this type mutable?
*
* @return boolean
*/
@Override
public boolean isMutable()
{
return true;
}
/**
* Retrieve an instance of the mapped class from a JDBC resultset. Implementors should handle
* possibility of null values.
*
* @param rs
* a JDBC result set
* @param names
* the column names
* @param session
* @param owner
* the containing entity
* @return
* @throws HibernateException
* @throws SQLException
*/
@Override
public Object nullSafeGet(ResultSet rs, String[] names, SessionImplementor session, Object owner) throws HibernateException, SQLException
{
T t = null;
try
{
if (rs.getString(names[0]) != null)
{
t = conversion.getObject(rs.getString(names[0]), genericType);
}
}
catch (MyException e)
{
logger.error("Error while reading data type", e);
}
return t;
}
/**
* Write an instance of the mapped class to a prepared statement. Implementors should handle
* possibility of null values. A multi-column type should be written to parameters starting from
* <tt>index</tt>
*
* @param st
* a JDBC prepared statement
* @param value
* the object to write
* @param index
* statement parameter index
* @param session
* @throws HibernateException
* @throws SQLException
*/
@Override
public void nullSafeSet(PreparedStatement st, Object value, int index, SessionImplementor session) throws HibernateException, SQLException
{
if (value == null)
{
st.setNull(index, Types.OTHER);
return;
}
st.setObject(index, value, Types.OTHER);
}
/**
* During merge, replace the existing (target) values in the entity we are merging to with a new
* (original) value from the detched entity we are merging. For immutable objects, or null
* values, it is safe to return a copy of the first parameter. For the objects with component
* values, it might make sense to recursively replace component values
*
* @param original
* the value from the detched entity being merged
* @param target
* the value in the managed entity
* @param owner
* @return the value to be merged
* @throws HibernateException
*/
@Override
public Object replace(Object original, Object target, Object owner) throws HibernateException
{
return original;
}
/**
* The class returned by <tt>nullSafeGet()</tt>
*
* @return Class
*/
@Override
public Class returnedClass()
{
return String.class;
}
/**
* Returns the SQL type codes for the columns mapped by this type. The codes are defined on
* <tt>java.sql.Types</tt>
*
* @return int[] the typecodes
* @see java.sql.Types
*/
@Override
public int[] sqlTypes()
{
return new int[] { Types.JAVA_OBJECT };
}
}
I just need to know how to use this custom type in the User class. Can anyone help me out?
Use the fully qualified name of the Type :
@Type(type = "package.MyCustomType")
You also need to use a ParameterizedType
:
@Type(type = "package.MyCustomType",
parameters = { @Parameter(
name = "class", value = "package.Metadata.class") })
In your UserType
, you'll have to add this method (implements ParameterizedType
interface):
void setParameterValues(Properties parameters);
where you'll get in parameters, the entry : class=package.Metadata.class
you'll just have to store this in a field, and modify the standard UserType
methods to change behavior base on it.