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For a certain Hibernate entity we have a requirement to store its creation time and the last time it was updated. How would you design this?

  • What data types would you use in the database (assuming MySQL, possibly in a different timezone that the JVM)? Will the data types be timezone-aware?

  • What data types would you use in Java (Date, Calendar, long, ...)?

  • Whom would you make responsible for setting the timestamps—the database, the ORM framework (Hibernate), or the application programmer?

  • What annotations would you use for the mapping (e.g. @Temporal)?

I'm not only looking for a working solution, but for a safe and well-designed solution.

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8 Answers

vote up 5 vote down

If you are using the JPA annotations, you can use @PrePersist and @PreUpdate event hooks do this:

@Entity
@Table(name = "entities")    
public class Entity {
  ...

  private Date created;
  private Date updated;

  @PrePersist
  protected void onCreate() {
    created = new Date();
  }

  @PreUpdate
  protected void onUpdate() {
    updated = new Date();
  }
}

or you can use the @EntityListener annotation on the class and place the event code in an external class.

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vote up 2 vote down

Thanks everyone who helped. After doing some research myself (I'm the guy who asked the question), here is what I found to make sense most:

  • Database column type: the timezone-agnostic number of milliseconds since 1970 represented as decimal(20) because 2^64 has 20 digits and disk space is cheap; let's be straightforward. Also, I will use neither DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP, nor triggers. I want no magic in the DB.

  • Java field type: long. The Unix timestamp is well supported across various libs, long has no Y2038 problems, timestamp arithmetic is fast and easy (mainly operator < and operator +, assuming no days/months/years are involved in the calculations). And, most importantly, both primitive longs and java.lang.Longs are immutable—effectively passed by value—unlike java.util.Dates; I'd be really pissed off to find something like foo.getLastUpdate().setTime(System.currentTimeMillis()) when debugging somebody else's code.

  • The ORM framework should be responsible for filling in the data automatically.

  • I haven't tested this yet, but only looking at the docs I assume that @Temporal will do the job; not sure about whether I might use @Version for this purpose. @PrePersist and @PreUpdate are good alternatives to control that manually. Adding that to the layer supertype (common base class) for all entities, is a cute idea provided that you really want timestamping for all of your entities.

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While longs and Longs may be immutable, that will not help you in the situation you describe. They can still say foo.setLastUpdate(new Long(System.currentTimeMillis()); – Ian McLaird Oct 23 '08 at 14:52
That's fine. Hibernate requires the setter anyway (or it will try to access the field directly through reflection). I was talking about difficulty chasing down who's modifying the timestamp from our application code. It is tricky when you can do that using a getter. – ngn Oct 23 '08 at 15:21
vote up 1 vote down

A good approach is to have a common base class for all your entities. In this base class, you can have your id property if it is commonly named in all your entities (a common design), your creation and last update date properties.

For the creation date, you simply keep a java.util.Date property. Be sure, to always initialize it with new Date().

For the last update field, you can use a Timestamp property, you need to map it with @Version. With this Annotation the property will get updated automatically by Hibernate. Beware that Hibernate will also apply optimistic locking (it's a good thing).

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vote up 1 vote down

You might consider storing the time as a DateTime, and in UTC. I typically use DateTime instead of Timestamp because of the fact that MySql converts dates to UTC and back to local time when storing and retrieving the data. I'd rather keep any of that kind of logic in one place (Business layer). I'm sure there are other situations where using Timestamp is preferable though.

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vote up 0 vote down

As data type in JAVA I strongly recommend to use java.util.Date. I ran into pretty nasty timezone problems when using Calendar. See this Thread.

For setting the timestamps I would recommend using either an AOP approach or you could simply use Triggers on the table (actually this is the only thing that I ever find the use of triggers acceptable).

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vote up 0 vote down

Just to reinforce: java.util.Calender is not for Timestamps. java.util.Date is for a moment in time, agnostic of regional things like timezones. Most database store things in this fashion (even if they appear not to; this is usually a timezone setting in the client software; the data is good)

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vote up 0 vote down

Great thread. Thanks all!

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vote up 0 vote down

Solution with native MySQL functionality: Update and create timestamps with MySQL Works fine with java and hibernate.

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