2

The situation is as follows:

I have a Oracle database where the database schema is given, so I can't change this. IDs are generated through the database and are the primary keys. The OR-mapper is a self-written one and I have to replace it with NHibernate.

I have two tables that have only an association and no inheritance:

  1. ModeType: ID, Name, Origin
  2. Mode: ID, Mode_Type_ID, Comment

The classes I have are as follows:

  1. ModeType: public properties: ID, Name, Origin
  2. ModeProduction: public properties: ID, ModeType_ID, Comment
  3. ModeQualityCheck: public properties: ID, ModeType_ID, Comment

With the "old" OR-mapper the classes ModeProduction and ModeQualityCheck are persisted to the table Mode. For example you want to retrieve (and then write back) all ModeProducts, the ModeProducts are taken from the table Mode where the "ModeType_ID" is equal to the "ID" in the ModeType table with "Origin" = 1. The property/column "Origin" acts like a discriminator, but without inheritance.

So, how can I map this in NHibernate to have the same effect: get all ModeProducts (and write them back later), where Origin is 1 in the ModeType table?

I have the following XML-mappings so far:

ModeType:

  <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
  <hibernate-mapping xmlns="urn:nhibernate-mapping-2.2"
                     assembly="Domain"
                     namespace="Domain.Domain">
    <class name="ModeTypeBase" table="MODE_TYPES">
      <id name="Id" column="ID" access="nosetter.camelcase-underscore">
        <generator class="sequence">
          <param name="sequence">MODE_TYPES_SEQ</param>
        </generator>
      </id>
      <property name="Name" column="NAME" not-null="true" />
      <property name="Origin" column="ORIGIN" not-null="true" />
    </class>
  </hibernate-mapping>

ModeProduction: (Origin = 1 in table ModeType)

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<hibernate-mapping xmlns="urn:nhibernate-mapping-2.2"
                   assembly="Domain"
                   namespace="Domain.Domain">
  <class name="ModeProduction" table="MODES">
    <id name="Id" column="ID" access="nosetter.camelcase-underscore">
      <generator class="sequence">
        <param name="sequence">MODES_SEQ</param>
      </generator>
    </id>
    <property name="Comment" column="COMMENT" not-null="true" />
    <many-to-one name="ModeTypeObject" class="ModeType" column="MODE_TYPE_ID" cascade="save-update" not-null="true" />
  </class>
</hibernate-mapping>

ModeQualityCheck: (Origin = 0 in table ModeType)

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<hibernate-mapping xmlns="urn:nhibernate-mapping-2.2"
                   assembly="Domain"
                   namespace="Domain.Domain">
  <class name="ModeQualityCheck" table="MODES">
    <id name="Id" column="ID" access="nosetter.camelcase-underscore">
      <generator class="sequence">
        <param name="sequence">MODES_SEQ</param>
      </generator>
    </id>
    <property name="Comment" column="COMMENT" not-null="true" />
    <many-to-one name="ModeTypeObject" class="ModeType" column="MODE_TYPE_ID" cascade="save-update" not-null="true" />
  </class>
</hibernate-mapping>

Can someone help me out, please?

2
  • maybe you can try adding a where attribute in your class mapping, see : stackoverflow.com/a/10905329/1236044
    – jbl
    Aug 5, 2013 at 14:49
  • Thanks for the tip! Somehow I read it over. But I think, this is not an option for my problem, because using "where" would end up in only one class, I think, and I need two different classes, like ModeTypeProduction and ModeTypeQualityCheck. Now, I changed my class-hierarchy, like the problem-poster of your link did. ;) That's the best option I have right now. ;)
    – 2-Lee
    Aug 6, 2013 at 7:32

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