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http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-468?page=co...
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Laurent Mallet commented on HHH-468:
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Hi gavin,
My team is working with Seam and jboss 4.2 and discover this bug when we install our
application on the pre-production plateform
on our entities objects.
Our pre-production and production plateforms are in RHEL 5. Our developpement plateform is
on RHEL 4.
The main difference is also the MySQL version.
This bug is really annonying because :
- RHEL 5 install version 5 of MySQL (No support on MySQL 4)
- MySQL 4 is at end of his lifecycle
- in JPA, it's so ugly to change our code from boolean to int
- a search in google "MySQL 5 boolean BIT problem" shows so many desesperate
people
- credibility of jboss : this bug is so annoying that my team doesn't understand that
it could be possible; they are afraid that it could have
other ugly bugs..
Laurent Mallet
CTO of Oxalya
MysqlDialect incorrectly maps java.lang.Boolean to SQL BIT
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Key: HHH-468
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-468
Project: Hibernate3
Issue Type: Bug
Affects Versions: 3.0.3
Environment: Hibernate 3.0, MySQL.
Reporter: Mark Matthews
Assignee: Scott Marlow
I didn't track down how java.lang.Boolean gets mapped to Types.BIT in hibernate, but
you probably _don't_ want to map to "bit" like you do in MysqlDialect.
"bit", according to SQL99 (it's not in the core standard, and the type was
actually dropped for sql2k3) is a bitfield, not a boolean value. You can of course define
a bit(1), but it is technically more correct for java.lang.Boolean to map to a SQL BOOLEAN
for MySQL since we support a BOOLEAN and a BIT.
It looks like the JDBC-3.0 guys ignored what the standard said, because in reality
you'd want BIT to map to something like byte[], or java.util.BitSet if you were
tracking how the SQL standard defines BIT.
I'm guessing you probably want to map to "boolean", which the JDBC driver
will automagically convert for you, as it silently maps to TINYINT(1) on the server side.
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