I am developing a Java Application that uses Hibernate and is connected to an Oracle instance. Another client is looking to use the same application, but requires it run on MS SQL Server. I would like to avoid making changes to the existing annotations and instead create a package of xml files that we can drop in depending on the environment.
One way to do this is using JPA XML configuration to override the existing class annotations. However, JPA does not support generic generators, which is a requirement due to the structure of our legacy database. The other way that I am looking into is to use Hibernate XML configs to remap entire classes and have access to the generator
xml tag. This solution has some issues though:
org.hibernate.AnnotationException: Use of the same entity name twice
)Does anyone have any experience with overriding annotations using Hibernate XML Configuration files or is JPA the only way to go?
In Oracle, Sequences are used to generate unique IDs when inserting new records into the database. An id would then be annotated in the following manner:
@Id
@GeneratedValue(generator="EXAMPLE_ID_GEN", strategy=GenerationType.SEQUENCE)
@SequenceGenerator(name="EXAMPLE_ID_GEN", sequenceName="SEQ_EXAMPLE_ID")
@Column(name = "EXAMPLE_ID")
public String getExampleId() {
return this.exampleId;
}
However, MS SQL Server does not have the concept of Sequences (Ideological differences). Therefore, you could use a table generator to simulate sequences.
@Id
@GeneratedValue(generator="EXAMPLE_ID_GEN", strategy=GenerationType.TABLE)
@TableGenerator(name="EXAMPLE_ID_GEN", tableName="SEQUENCE", valueColumnName="VALUE", pkColumnName="SEQUENCE", pkColumnValue="EXAMPLE_ID")
public String getExampleId() {
return this.exampleId;
}
Two different configurations for two different types of databases. Keep in mind that this is a legacy database and that we aren't going to rewrite our application to support SQL Server identities, the native id generator for SQL Server (which would also require a different annotation).
To alleviate this, I have looked into using Hibernate's @GenericGenerator
and point it to a class of my own creation that models org.hibernate.id.SequenceGenerator
(or something similar) and also customize the structure of the table by extending org.hibernate.id.TableStructure
.
Back to my original question - is any of this possible with an XML override?
So, in the end, I found that JPA and Hibernate did not provide the out-of-box functionality that I was looking for. Instead, I created a custom generator that checked the database dialect and set the TableStructure appropriately. As I explored all options, I ended up using Hibernate's @GenericGenerator
annotation. This is an example of the Id generation annotation:
@Id
@GeneratedValue(generator="EXAMPLE_ID_GEN")
@GenericGenerator(name = "EXAMPLE_ID_GEN", strategy="com.my.package.CustomIdGenerator", parameters = {
@Parameter(name = "parameter_name", value="parameter_value")
})
public String getExampleId() {
return this.exampleId;
}
This solution necessitates that each Hibernate entity be modified with the new Id generator.
I think that if you don't use AnnotationConfiguration
when configuring your SessionFactory
, the annotations will be omitted.
So, use Configuration
.
For your generator problem (for which the solution would normally be "use the native generator" but doesn't work for you due to working with a legacy db), you could probably extend the SQLServerDialect and override the getNativeIdentifierGeneratorClass to return a (possibly custom) generator that does what you need for your legacy db.
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