[Hibernate-JIRA] Created: (HHH-3458) Register postgres random() function as "rand" in PostgresSQLDialect
by Stephen Cresswell (JIRA)
Register postgres random() function as "rand" in PostgresSQLDialect
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Key: HHH-3458
URL: http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-3458
Project: Hibernate3
Issue Type: Improvement
Components: build
Affects Versions: 3.2.5
Environment: Postgres 8.3
Reporter: Stephen Cresswell
Priority: Trivial
I have an HQL query which uses "order by rand()". This works fine in our local integration tests (which are run against hsqldb), but fails against our build integration tests which runs postgres.
The reason the query fails is because postgres function for "rand" is called "random". We can workaround this by dynamically detecting the db driver and generating db specific queries, but it strikes me that the cleanest solution for this is to simply re-register postgres' random function as "rand" in the PostgresSQLDialect, i.e.
registerFunction( "random", new NoArgSQLFunction("random", Hibernate.DOUBLE) );
registerFunction( "rand", new NoArgSQLFunction("random", Hibernate.DOUBLE) );
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11 years, 11 months
[Hibernate-JIRA] Created: (HHH-6643) Criteria doesn't support a chaining of 2 not restrictions (sql = not not criterion)
by Lorber Sebastien (JIRA)
Criteria doesn't support a chaining of 2 not restrictions (sql = not not criterion)
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Key: HHH-6643
URL: http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-6643
Project: Hibernate Core
Issue Type: Bug
Components: query-criteria
Affects Versions: 3.2.7
Environment: Oracle 10g
Hibernate 3.2.7
Reporter: Lorber Sebastien
Priority: Trivial
When we do:
"Restrictions.not( Restrictions.not( Restrictions.eq("field",3) ) );"
Hibernate generates
"where not not field=3"
Which generates an SQL exception
The correct SQL syntax is:
"where not (not field=3)"
(At least our Oracle)
I think Hibernate should handle such a case.
/!\
See org.hibernate.criterion.NotExpression#toSqlString
It seems that for MySQLDialect the parenthesis are added, but not for other dialects...
I don't know the sql specificities of all dialects but perhaps the parenthesis should be added also for oracle dialect?
Note that we use a custom dialect, extending Oracle10gDialect
For those interested: i'm doing two not on a criterion instead of using the criterion directly.
In real world, my code sample would be a little more complex: sometimes we compose with a lot of criterions, in many different methods.
So i do not exactly use Restrictions.not( Restrictions.not( criterion ) );
Trust me, bad luck, it happened that the dynamic composition of my restrictions, in one specific case, resulted on a double not restriction applied to a criterion.
Note that an easy workaround of this is to "add the parenthesis manually".
A conjunction is a bit like an "empty restriction" thus what i've done is:
Restrictions.not(
Restrictions.and(
Restrictions.not(
Restrictions.eq("field",3)
),
Restrictions.conjunction()
)
);
Adding the "not criterion" into conjunction containing only the criterion.
This way, the sql of my inner not restriction become something like:
( not field = 3 AND 1=1 )
-> We can apply a not on that, while we weren't able on "not field = 3"
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11 years, 11 months
[Hibernate-JIRA] Created: (HHH-7304) NaturalIdResolutionCache not correctly filled on first persist when @GeneratedValue-@Id
by Frank Schwarz (JIRA)
NaturalIdResolutionCache not correctly filled on first persist when @GeneratedValue-@Id
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Key: HHH-7304
URL: https://hibernate.onjira.com/browse/HHH-7304
Project: Hibernate ORM
Issue Type: Bug
Components: core
Affects Versions: 4.1.3
Reporter: Frank Schwarz
{code:title=Employee.java|borderStyle=solid}
@Entity
public class Employee{
@Id @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY) private long id;
@NaturalId(mutable = true) private String name;
@NaturalId(mutable = true) private String surname;
private String position;
}
{code}
{code:title=NaturalIdTest1.java|borderStyle=solid}
entityManager.getTransaction().begin();
Employee e = new Employee();
e.setSurname("Hans");
e.setName("Dampf");
e.setPosition("Junior");
entityManager.persist(e);
entityManager.getTransaction().commit();
Session session = entityManager.unwrap(Session.class);
Employee e2 = (Employee) session.byNaturalId(Employee.class)
.using("surname", "Hans")
.using("name", "Dampf")
.load();
System.out.println(e2);
{code}
{code:title=NaturalIdTest2.java|borderStyle=solid}
entityManager.getTransaction().begin();
Employee e = new Employee();
e.setSurname("Hans");
e.setName("Dampf");
e.setPosition("Junior");
entityManager.persist(e);
// this is the only difference
e.setPosition("Senior");
entityManager.getTransaction().commit();
Session session = entityManager.unwrap(Session.class);
Employee e2 = (Employee) session.byNaturalId(Employee.class)
.using("surname", "Hans")
.using("name", "Dampf")
.load();
System.out.println(e2);
{code}
The NaturalIdTest1 will issue an SQL statement for the find-by-natural-id-query; the NaturalIdTest2 does not.
Put a breakpoint into NaturalIdResolutionCache#cache(Serializable, Object[]) and watch the pk-parameter to be {{null}} on the first invocation and not {{null}} on the second invocation.
If the @Id-field is not @GeneratedValue, the first invocation of NaturalIdResolutionCache#cache will be already correct.
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11 years, 11 months
[Hibernate-JIRA] Created: (HHH-2448) Generate identical column aliases among cluster
by Loïc LEFEVRE (JIRA)
Generate identical column aliases among cluster
-----------------------------------------------
Key: HHH-2448
URL: http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2448
Project: Hibernate3
Type: Improvement
Components: query-sql
Versions: 3.2.2
Environment: Hibernate version: 3.2.2, 2.1.8
Database: Oracle 9.2.0.8
Reporter: Loïc LEFEVRE
Attachments: report_1.txt, report_2.txt
Among our weblogic cluster (12 instances), we can see that a query can have different column aliases.
Although all seems correct, when regarding database reports like StatsPack or Spotlight we can see that because of these different aliases, the reports are wrong. Indeed, a resource consuming query can see its associated report properties (cpu usage, buffer gets, number of executions...) divided by the number of weblogic instances of our cluster (i.e. divided by 12) thus preventing us to pinpoint the queries to look at.
On a 3 instances cluster, we can see this report:
REPORT#1: one statement with a poor number of buffer gets/execution is reported splitted in 3, see the alias generated for column DTO.CREATION_DATE
for example
On a 4 instances cluster, we can see this report:
REPORT#2: one statement responsible of the latch free/cache buffers chains wait events splitted in 4, note the column alias generated fordeffcashcy0_.BEST_EXPECTED_CY
More than confusing the DBAs about the same query with n different "faces", our reports don't show us all the queries to look at: indeed, in our "Top 50 queries", a lot of them are duplicates! Also the memory required in the SGA to store the queries, the execution plan and so on is increased...
Finally, although the column aliases can have up to 30 characters under Oracle, the limit is set to 10, why?
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11 years, 11 months