Were there a standard "represent something in XML-ish format" contract
portable across a number of formats (XML, JAXB, JSON, etc) then I'd be more
inclined to agree with this. But as it is, supporting this would mean
Hibernate implementing multiple such contracts, one per format. However,
1. these formats are not our core competency
2. maintaining a complete set of these transformers across all the
popular formats du-jour is a large undertaking
3. I am not convinced that
All of these increase the technical risk.
Additionally, to properly support this we'd really need the ability to then
"map" multiple views for a given entity-graph-root. What I mean by that,
is that such DTO approaches often need multiple "views" of a given entity,
e.g. a CompanyListDTO, CompanyOverviewDTO, CompanyDetailsGeneralDTO, etc
for a Company entity. The point of this is that
1. the transformers for these are specific to each DTO type and would be
applied per-transformation
2. were Hibernate to "provide" this for applications
IMO the use of queries to obtain views is logical. Populating each of
those specific DTOs (CompanyListDTO, etc) in the most efficient way is
going to require very different SQL for each DTO. This implies some kind
of "mapping" to be able associate each DTO with query.
Given 6.0's improved dynamic-instantiation support, I even think that is a
great solution as well *for most cases*.
So, while my objection has a "practical impact" component, I also just
question whether Hibernate integrating with each format's "serializer" is
the proper solution.
On Thu, May 4, 2017 at 5:08 AM Christian Beikov <christian.beikov(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
This is exactly what I am trying to do with Blaze-Persistence Entity
Views, making DTOs sexy and efficient :)
Here a quick overview of how that looks like right now:
https://persistence.blazebit.com/documentation/entity-view/manual/en_US/i...
One of my targets is to make it possible to do something like this
entityManager.createQuery("FROM Order o", OrderDTO.class).getResultList()
and get an optimal query, as well as objects with only the necessary
contents.
Maybe we can collaborate on that somehow?
Mit freundlichen Grüßen,
------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Christian Beikov*
Am 04.05.2017 um 10:20 schrieb Emmanuel Bernard:
> Following up a bit on my previous email.
>
> While a core integration might be best I think, if there are too much
> reluctance, we can start with a dedicated hibernate-dto or whatever
> module or even separate project that makes life easier for these "pass
> through" use cases. This could be in the form of a wrapper API of sort
> and hence not affect existing Hibernate ORM APIs.
>
> Note that the ResultTransformer approach feels like it goes a long way
> towards fixing the problem but as demonstrated in Vlad's article
>
https://vladmihalcea.com/2017/04/03/why-you-should-use-the-hibernate-resu...
> it still requires quite a bit of code and a special DTO constructor
> object. That's what we need to get rid of I think.
>
> Emmanuel
>
> On Thu 17-05-04 10:04, Emmanuel Bernard wrote:
>> I was very much in the Vlad, Steve, Christian camp until relatively
>> recently. One of my main concern being that replacing a proxy by null
>> was really sending the wrong message. So I was against having Hibernate
>> ORM facilitate such a transformation.
>>
>> I am changing my mind because I am realizing that a lot of applications
>> are less complex that my perceived median. A lot of apps really just
>> want data to be fetched out and then passed to jackson (implicitly) and
>> pushed out as a REST response in JSON or some other serialization
>> protocol.
>>
>> So while we could try and keep the stance that such a solution should
>> remain out of scope of Hibernate ORM core, we should have a very smooth
>> integration with something like MapStruct to create such bounded DTO on
>> the fly. Ideally with as close to zero code as possible from the user
>> point of view.
>> I can't really describe how that could look like because I am not
>> familiar enough with MapStruct but I think it should have the following
>> characteristics:
>>
>> 1. do an implicit binding between the mapped object graph and a detached
>> object graph with a 1-1 mapping of type and replacing lazy objects
and
>> collections with null. That's the smoothest approach and the most
>> common use case but also the one where an inexperienced person could
>> shoot at someone else's foot
>> 2. do a binding between the mapped object graph and a detached version
of
>> that object graph with a 1-1 mapping of type, but declaratively
>> expressing the boundaries for the detached version. This enforces a
>> clear thinking of the boundaries and will load lazy data in case the
>> object graph loaded is missing a bit. I like the idea on principle
but
>> I think it overlaps a lot with the fetch graph.
>> 3. offer a full integration between MapStruct and Hibernate ORM by
>> letting people express a full fledge MapStruct transformation between
>> the managed object graph and a different target structure
>>
>> I favored MapStruct over Dozer because we know the MapStruct lead quite
well ;)
>>
>> Note however that the MapStruct approach requires an explicit object
>> copy, it feels a bit sad to have to double memory consumption. But that
>> might be a good enough approach and bypassing the managed object
>> creation leads to questions around the Persistence Context contract
>> where loading an object supposedly means it will be in the PC.
>> Maybe a constructor like query syntax allowing to reference a MapStruct
>> conversion logic might work?
>>
>> select mapStruct('order-and-items', o) from Order o left join fetch
o.items
>>
>> Emmanuel
>>
>>
>> On Wed 17-04-19 14:29, Vlad Mihalcea wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> Although I keep on seeing this request from time to time, I still think
>>> it's more like a Code Smell.
>>> Entities are useful for when you plan to modify them. Otherwise, a DTO
>>> projection is much more efficient, and you don't suffer from
>>> LazyInitializationException.
>>>
>>> With the ResultTransformer, you can even build graphs of entities, as
>>> explained in this article;
>>>
>>>
https://vladmihalcea.com/2017/04/03/why-you-should-use-the-hibernate-resu...
>>>
>>> Due to how Hibernate Proxies are handled, without Bytecode Enhancement,
>>> it's difficult to replace a Proxy with null after the Session is
closed. If
>>> we implemented this, we'd have to take into consideration both
Javassist
>>> and ByteBuddy as well as ByteCode Enhancements.
>>>
>>> all in all, the implementation effort might not justify the benefit,
and
>>> I'm skeptical of offering a feature that does not encourage data access
>>> Best Practices.
>>>
>>> Vlad
>>>
>>> On Wed, Apr 19, 2017 at 2:18 PM, Christian Beikov <
>>> christian.beikov(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hey Romain,
>>>>
>>>> I don't think it is a good idea to expose entities directly if you
>>>> really need a subset of the data.
>>>> Reasons for that thinking are that it gets hard to define what needs
to
>>>> be fetched or is safe to be used for a particular use case. Obviously
>>>> serialization is like a follow-up problem.
>>>> I see 2 possible solutions to the problem and both boil down to the
use
>>>> of DTOs.
>>>>
>>>> 1. Use an object mapper(e.g. Dozer) that maps entity object graphs
to
>>>> custom DTO types.
>>>> 2. Use specialized DTOs in queries.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Implementing 1. does not help you with lazy loading issues and 2.
might
>>>> require very intrusive changes in queries which is why I implemented
>>>> Blaze-Persistence Entity Views
>>>> <
https://github.com/beikov/blaze-persistence#entity-view-usage>.
>>>> This is a library that allows you to define DTOs with mappings to the
>>>> entity. In a query you can define that you want results to be
>>>> "materialized" as instances of the DTO type.
>>>> This reduces the pain induced by properly separating the
"presentation
>>>> model" from the "persistence model" and at the same time
will improve
>>>> the performance by utilizing the mapping information.
>>>> I don't want to advertise too much, just wanted to say that I had
the
>>>> same issues over and over which is why I started that project.
>>>>
>>>> Mit freundlichen Grüßen,
>>>>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>> *Christian Beikov*
>>>> Am 19.04.2017 um 10:51 schrieb Romain Manni-Bucau:
>>>>> Hi guys,
>>>>>
>>>>> Short sumarry: Wonder if hibernate could get a feature to kind of
either
>>>>> unproxy or freeze the entities once leaving the managed context to
avoid
>>>>> uncontrolled lazy loading on one side and serialization issues on
another
>>>>> side.
>>>>>
>>>>> Use case example: a common example is a REST service exposing
directly
>>>>> hibernate entities (which is more and more common with microservice
>>>>> "movement").
>>>>>
>>>>> Objective: the goal is to not need any step - or reduce them a lot
-
>>>>> between the hibernate interaction and a potential serialization to
avoid
>>>>> issues with lazy loading and unexpected loading. Today it requires
some
>>>>> custom and hibernate specific logic in the serializer which kind of
>>>> breaks
>>>>> the transversality of the two concerns (serialization and object
>>>>> management/loading).
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Implementation options I see:
>>>>>
>>>>> 1. a callback requesting if the lazy relationship should be
fetched,
>>>>> something like
>>>>>
>>>>> public interface GraphVisitor {
>>>>> boolean shouldLoad(Object rootEntity, Property property);
>>>>> }
>>>>>
>>>>> 2. An utility to remove any proxy potentially throwing an exception
and
>>>>> replacing the value by null or an empty collection, something like
>>>>>
>>>>> MyEntity e = Hibernate.deepUnproxy(entity);
>>>>>
>>>>> 3. A switch of the proxy implementation, this is close to 2 but
wouldn't
>>>>> require a call to any utility, just a configuration in the
persistence
>>>> unit.
>>>>> Side note: of course all 3 options can be mixed to create a single
>>>> solution
>>>>> like having 3 implemented based on 1 for instance.
>>>>>
>>>>> Configuration proposal: this would be activated through a property
in the
>>>>> persistence unit (this shouldn't be only global IMHO cause
otherwise
you
>>>>> can't mix 2 kind of units, like one for JSF and one for JAX-RS
to be
>>>>> concrete). This should also be activable as a query hint i think -
but
>>>> more
>>>>> a nice to have.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> What this feature wouldn't be responsible for: cycles. If
relationships
>>>> are
>>>>> bidirectional then the unproxied entity would still "loop"
if you
browse
>>>>> the object graph - this responsability would stay in the consumer
since
>>>> it
>>>>> doesn't depend on hibernate directly but more on a plain object
handling.
>>>>>
>>>>> What do you think?
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Romain Manni-Bucau
>>>>> @rmannibucau <
https://twitter.com/rmannibucau> | Blog
>>>>> <
https://blog-rmannibucau.rhcloud.com> | Old Blog
>>>>> <
http://rmannibucau.wordpress.com> | Github
<
https://github.com/
>>>> rmannibucau> |
>>>>> LinkedIn <
https://www.linkedin.com/in/rmannibucau> | JavaEE
Factory
>>>>> <
https://javaeefactory-rmannibucau.rhcloud.com>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> hibernate-dev mailing list
>>>>> hibernate-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/hibernate-dev
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