Spring Persistence Concepts: Difference between revisions
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# [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Spring_Boot_Database_Initialization|Spring Boot Database Initialization]] | # [[Spring_Boot_Concepts#Spring_Boot_Database_Initialization|Spring Boot Database Initialization]] | ||
# Database Initialization with a High-Level Database Migration Tool such as [[Spring_Flyway_Support#Database_Migration_on_Startup|Flyway]] or Liquibase. | # Database Initialization with a High-Level Database Migration Tool such as [[Spring_Flyway_Support#Database_Migration_on_Startup|Flyway]] or Liquibase. | ||
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spring.jpa.properties.hibernate.temp.use_jdbc_metadata_defaults = false | |||
spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto=create | |||
hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto=create | |||
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=DataSource= | =DataSource= |
Latest revision as of 22:19, 3 December 2018
Internal
Overview
DAO
Repository
A repository is a Data Access Layer (or Persistence Layer) application component that intermediates interaction with a database: all database-related operations are done though the repository. The repository object conceals all low-level operations that are required by the interaction with the database and exposes to the application only high level operations such as queries, save, etc., all these taking domain model object instance arguments.
It is a good practice to define a repository as an interface in the application domain: an interface that exposes domain model-typed API, without any binding to a specific persistence technology. The following example defines a repository of "ingredients", where an "ingredient" is a domain model specific concept:
public interface IngredientRepository {
Ingredient findOne(String id);
Iterable<Ingredient> findAll();
Ingredient save(Ingredient ingredient);
}
Any repository interface defined as shown needs an implementation that performs the access to a specific persistence resource, depending on the persistence technology used. For example, a JDBC-based repository needs access to a JDBC DataSource or a higher-level JdbcTemplate, while a JPA-based repository needs access to an EntityManager. The repository implementation class can be configured with XML, or can be annotated with the @Repository stereotype annotation. The Spring repositories are inspired by the repository as described in the book Domain-Driven Design by Eric Evans. From that perspective, there's one repository per Aggregate Root.
Examples of repository implementations:
Aggregate Root
The aggregate root is another concept from the book Domain-Driven Design by Eric Evans, and describes an entity which controls the lifecycle of other entities, which together are an Aggregate. An Aggregate is a subset of the data model, which is consistent between method calls to the Aggregate Root.
Object IDs
- When persisting objects in a relational database, it is generally a good idea to have one field in the object that uniquely identifies the object. See Relational Databases.
Database Initialization
An SQL database can be initialized in several ways:
- Database Initialization with JPA
- Database Initialization with Hibernate
- Spring Boot Database Initialization
- Database Initialization with a High-Level Database Migration Tool such as Flyway or Liquibase.
Clarify and classify these:
spring.jpa.properties.hibernate.temp.use_jdbc_metadata_defaults = false
spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto=create
hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto=create
DataSource
If support for JDBC persistence is present in an application, we can access a DataSource as follows:
import javax.sql.DataSource;
public class SomeClass {
private DataSource dataSource;
public SomeClass(@Autowired DataSource dataSource) {
this.dataSource = dataSource;
}
...
}