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http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/ANN-632?page=co...
]
Rich Eggert commented on ANN-632:
---------------------------------
I agree that the existing documentation is not at all clear as to how to do this. I ran
into when I set nullable=false and my database started throwing null value constraint
exceptions.
Let me see if I'm understanding this correctly...
In the generic case (Parent-Child example), in order to get true List behavior from the
collection, my code needs to look something like this:
@Entity
class Parent
{
@OneToMany
@org.hibernate.annotations.IndexColumn(name="child_index", nullable=false,
base=0)
@JoinColumn(name="parent_id", nullable=false)
private List<Child> children;
...
}
@Entity
class Child
{
@ManyToOne(optional=false)
@JoinColumn(name="parent_id", insertable=false, updatable=false,
nullable=false)
private Parent parent;
...
}
Does this look correct?
By the way, I beat you to the Parent-Parent typo. ;-)
@IndexColumn doesn't set value of index column
----------------------------------------------
Key: ANN-632
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/ANN-632
Project: Hibernate Annotations
Issue Type: Improvement
Components: documentation
Affects Versions: 3.3.0.ga
Reporter: Dan Allen
Assignee: Diego Pires Plentz
Priority: Minor
I'm sure I will get screamed at for this, but the @IndexColumn just doesn't work
with @OneToMany. When I say it doesn't work, it means that I am a reasonable person
and I have studied the documentation for at least 4 hours and I just cannot figure out how
to make it work. So either the documentation needs to be improved, or there is something
wrong with Hibernate. I refuse to believe that I am this stupid.
Here is my problem in a nutshell. I have a Person and a collection of Jobs. The Jobs
should be an indexed list based on the history that the person holds them.
@Entity
public class Person {
@Id @GeneratedValue
private long id;
@Column
private String name;
@OneToMany(cascade=ALL, fetch=LAZY, mappedBy = "job")
@IndexColumn(base = 1, name = "order")
private List<Job> jobs = new ArrayList<Job>();
// getters and setters
}
@Entity
public class Job {
@Id @GeneratedValue
private long id;
@Column
private String name;
@ManyToOne
@JoinColumn(name="person_id")
private Person person;
@Column
private Integer order;
// getters and setters
}
If I do the following, I get NULL for order.
Person person = new Person();
person.setName("Chuck")
Job job1 = new Job();
job1.setName("sysadmin")
job1.setPerson(person);
person.getJobs().add(job1);
Job job2 = new Job();
jobs2.setName("network admin")
job2.setPerson(person);
person.getJobs().add(job2);
entityManager.persist(person);
Assume that the reason I am not assigning an order is more complex than this example. The
point is that we want to see the order column populated with the index of the list.
Now, if you give me the business about removing mappedBy, to that I will respond that by
removing mappedBy, Hibernate tries to work with a person_job table, which I don't
want. I want two tables, one for person and one for job.
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