]
Manuel Dominguez Sarmiento commented on HHH-3360:
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Please add it to the wiki, at least. We've put significant work into this and would
appreciate this being made more visible for fellow Oracle users.
Some observations:
1) Cannot these classes be packaged in a companion hibernate-oracle.jar ? I understand
that you do not generally rely on driver-specific implementation classes, but given that
Oracle is used by so many people, I guess it's worth it. The separate packaging
approach is used by many frameworks (e.g. Quartz)
2) We tried to migrate our apps to Hibernate 4.x but found that there is no equivalent
hook in order to implement a custom batching strategy. Is this being addressed?
3) This should probably be filed as a separate issue, but while debugging this custom
batching implementation, we noticed that internal state should be reset/cleared/cleaned up
on closeStatements() as well as in abortBatch(). Our latest implementation takes this into
account. However, BatchingBatcher (which is the default everyone uses) does not clean up
its internal state in these cases, which may cause strange problems in some edge cases.
The following fields are at risk:
private int batchSize;
private Expectation[] expectations;
Custom Oracle Batcher to allow batch updates for versioned data
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Key: HHH-3360
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-3360
Project: Hibernate Core
Issue Type: Improvement
Components: core
Affects Versions: 3.2.0.ga, 3.2.1, 3.2.2, 3.2.3, 3.2.4, 3.2.4.sp1, 3.2.5, 3.2.6,
3.3.0.CR1
Environment: Oracle 10g R1, 10g R2, 11g R1 (have not tried previous Oracle
versions), 11g R1 drivers (older drivers should also work)
Reporter: Manuel Dominguez Sarmiento
Assignee: Steve Ebersole
Priority: Minor
Attachments: C3P0OracleBatchingBatcherFactory.java,
C3P0OracleBatchingBatcher.java, OracleBatchingBatcherFactory.java,
OracleBatchingBatcher.java, OracleBatchingBatcher.java, OracleBatchingBatcher.java
Original Estimate: 0.5h
Remaining Estimate: 0.5h
We have developed a custom Oracle Batcher which allows batching versioned data. The
Oracle JDBC driver does not return update counts when using the standard JDBC 2.0 batching
mechanism, however the proprietary Oracle batching mechanism allows obtaining the total
batch row update count. The update counts are absolutely necessary to detect stale
updates.
Although it is not exactly the same, the total row update count is actually enough
information to be able to batch versioned data and still detect stale updates.
We'd like to contribute the attached files. They have a compile time dependency on
Oracle JDBC. If this is not acceptable, it could be easily solved by using reflection.
Another Batcher is provided for when the Oracle connection is being managed through c3p0
(a common deployment scenario). This has a compile time dependency on c3p0.
A few "dirty" tricks were necessary to pull this off without patching other
classes. Specifically, it was necessary to override Java private semantics to obtain
BasicExpectation.expectedRowCount. This could be easily solved by adding an accessor
method to the Expectation interface.
There is one issue which we are not completely sure of, however so far we have not found
any problems. When the Expectation is NONE, there is no way to check whether the total row
count is correct or not, even if other batched updates do have expectations with expected
row counts. Our understanding is that actually, since batching requires all statements to
be of the same type (since the same PreparedStatement / CallableStatement is being used),
then either ALL expectations will be NONE, or all will have an expected row count.
We'd welcome comments from the Hibernate team. This could also be probably handled
better by improving the Expectation interface.
Oracle JDBC docs that explain the Oracle batching model:
http://download.oracle.com/docs/cd/B28359_01/java.111/b31224/oraperf.htm#...
As expected, implementing this solution has resulted in drastical improvement in batch
processing.
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