If you are going to load the same entities that you want to do the aggregation on from the database in the same transaction, then the performance will be better if you do the calculation in Java.
It saves you one round-trip to the database, because in that case you already have the entities in memory.
Other benefits are:
- Easier to unit-test the calculation because you can stick to a Java-based unit testing framework
- Keeps the logic in one language
- Will also work for collections of entities that haven't been persisted yet
But if you're not going to load the same set of entities that you want to do the calculation on, then you will get a performance improvement in almost any situation if you let the database do the calculation. The more entities are involved, the bigger the performance benefit.
Imagine doing a summation over all line items in this year's orders, perhaps several million of them.
It should be clear that having to load all these entities into the memory of the Java process across a TCP connection (even if it is within the same machine) first will take more time, and more memory, than letting the database perform the calculation.
And if your mapping requires additional queries per entity, then Hibernate would have at least one extra round-trip to the database for every entity, in which case the performance benefits of calculating things in SQL on the database would be even bigger.