0

I'm terribly new to Hibernate. I've googled for two hours but I still can't figure out, how to make JOIN without using HQL, only by criteria. I have tables Clients(cID, name) and Visits(vID, vcID, date). The relation is one to many (one client can visit multiple times). I would also like to do it without setFetchMode. Just Criteria. Do I have to change the mappping xml?

UPDATE: this is part of my mapping xml:

 <class name="Client" table="Clients">
   <id name="cID" column="cID"><generator class="native"/></id>
   <property name="name"     length="10" not-null="true"/>
 </class>
 <class name="Visit" table="Visits">
   <id name="vID" column="vID"><generator class="native"/></id>
   <property name="vcID"     length="10" not-null="true"/>
   <property name="date" length="25" not-null="true"/>
 </class>
1
  • can you post here what is your current mapping and how you're trying to make the query? not enough information. Apr 9, 2012 at 18:41

2 Answers 2

3

Having a class Client with a list-attribute "visits" that's mapping to your Visit-Entity:

Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(Client.class);
criteria.addCriteria("visits");

This would create an inner join between your client-table and your visits-table.

Update:

Here you'll find some good examples: http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/3.3/reference/en/html/querycriteria.html#querycriteria-associations

Mapping Example

I hardly ever use hibernate mapping xml, however it should read similiar to:

   <class name="Client" table="Clients">
      <id name="cID" column="cID"><generator class="native"/></id>
      <property name="name"     length="10" not-null="true"/>

      <bag name="visits">
           <key column="vcId"/>
           <one-to-many class="Visit"/>
      </bag>
    </class>

Tell Hibernate that there is a property "visits" which represents a one-to-many relationship.

3
  • But how to resolve this without special list-attribute "visits"? I'm looking for equivalent for "SELECT name FROM Clients JOIN Visits ON vcID = cID". In the first post I put my mapping xml. Should I change something there?
    – polmarex
    Apr 9, 2012 at 19:01
  • Yes, your Client class needs a collection mapping to your Visits class, esp. defining the 1-n relation, see link
    – PepperBob
    Apr 9, 2012 at 19:12
  • So if I implemented such list(private List visits = new ArrayList();), what should I add to mapping xml? That document is not very clear for me.
    – polmarex
    Apr 9, 2012 at 19:31
1

You need to update you mapping:

 <class name="Client" table="Clients">
   <id name="cID" column="cID"><generator class="native"/></id>
   <property name="name"     length="10" not-null="true"/>
   <!-- Declare Set<Visit> visits in the Client class-->
   <set name="visits" lazy="false" cascade="all">
        <key column="vcID"/>
        <one-to-many class="your.package.Visit"/>
    </set>
 </class>
 <class name="Visit" table="Visits">
   <id name="vID" column="vID"><generator class="native"/></id>
   <!-- and add "Client client" property to your Visit class --> 
   <many-to-one name="client" column="vcID" lazy="false"/> 
   <property name="date" length="25" not-null="true"/>
 </class>

Then:

 Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(Visit.class).addCriteria("client")
                      .add(Restriction.eq(...));

or

Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(Client.class).addCriteria("visits")
                      .add(Restriction.eq(...));

And Hibernate will join them automatically.

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.