I am developing a Java Desktop Application but have some confusions in choosing a technology for my persistence layer.
Till now, I have been using JDBC for DB operations. Now, Recently I learnt Hibernate and JPA but still I am a novice on these technologies.
Now my question is What to use for my Java Desktop Application from the following?
JPA
Hibernate
JDBC
DAO
any other suggestion from you...
I know that there is no best choice from them and it totally depends on the complexity and the requeirements of the project so below are the requirements of my project
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On the basis of the below answers, I would like to go with JPA so as to prevent myself from writing vendor-specific SQL code.
But I have some problems in JPA which are mentioned at Java Persistence API
Both Hibernate & JDBC facilitate accessing relational tables with Java code. Hibernate is a more efficient & object-oriented approach for accessing a database. However, it is a bit slower performance-wise in comparison to JDBC.
JDBC is a low level standard for interaction with databases. JPA is higher level standard for the same purpose. JPA allows you to use an object model in your application which can make your life much easier. JDBC allows you to do more things with the Database directly, but it requires more attention.
JPA: Agnostic way to do Java persistence without coupling your clients to Hibernate, TopLink, etc. Hibernate: Good choice if you have an object model to map to. JDBC: All Java persistence is built on this. Lowest level.
Here's my take:
It's not a complex application. It contains only 5 tables (and 5 entities)
Any of these will work, but JDBC will be the simplest. All the others are built on top of JDBC.
I want to make my code flexible so that I can change the database later easily
Schema changes will have similar effects in all technologies.
The size of the application should remain as small as possible as I will have to distribute it to my clients through internet.
Using JPA or Hibernate will require JARs that will add to the size of your deployment. JDBC will minimize this.
It must be free to use in commercial development and distribution.
See licenses of all technologies. Shouldn't be a problem with any of them.
FYI: It's possible to write a generic DAO interface:
package persistence; import java.io.Serializable; import java.util.List; public interface GenericDao<T, K extends Serializable> { T find(K id); List<T> find(); List<T> find(T example); List<T> find(String queryName, String [] paramNames, Object [] bindValues); K save(T instance); void update(T instance); void delete(T instance); }
If your objects map 1:1 with your five tables, I'd say that JPA is overkill squared.
Is your app currently on the order of 3MB JAR? If no, then Hibernate or JPA will more than double the size. You can quantify exactly how much. And there's more than one JAR, because they both have dependencies.
YAGNI says that you should keep it simple. It's five tables!
Changing vendor, if you do it properly, means switching a JDBC driver JAR, changing the driver class name, and adding the new connection URL - which you have to do no matter what technology you pick.
I find that databases don't change that radically. You'll change the schema, but the entire vendor? Not likely, especially if you have several clients. It'll be a major inconvenience to make a user base switch databases.
Which one were you planning to ship with? HSQL or something that will require an installation like MySQL? That's a more pertinent concern.
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