11

Hi I have 2 tables as below

Table1:


    +-------------------+
    | ID  LOB col1 col2 |
    +-------------------+

Primary Key (ID and LOB)

Table2:


    +-----------------+
    | SK ID col3 col4 |
    +-----------------+

Primary Key (SK)

I need to give a many to one relation from table 2 to table1, since table1 has compositePrimaryKey(ID and LOB) but table2 does not have any column related to LOB. I am unable to provide the Mapping. Please help on this.

EDIT I have tried hibernate mapping for Table2:

<many-to-one name="class1Obj" class="com.acs.enterprise.common.Class1" 
            lazy="proxy" insert="false" update="false">
    <column name="ID" />
    <column name="LOB" />
</many-to-one>

The above is not working. While fetching a record it tries to fetch LOB code from table2 which is not at all exist in Table1

2
  • Would you please post code for both the classes and the output which you're getting. Jul 18, 2015 at 5:42
  • If the second table has no ref to LOB than you can not map the composite key. Can you add a LOB column to table2?
    – Hace
    Jul 25, 2015 at 17:34

3 Answers 3

1
+25

Assuming table2.SK is a FK to table1.ID and there are no table1 entries having the same ID, you could write the mapping as follows:

@ManyToOne
@JoinColumn(name = "ID", insertable = false, updatable = false)
private Class1 class1Obj;

If there are more table1 rows with the same ID, the mapping will fail because a Child would then be matched to multiple Parents.

So, for a proper many-to-one association you need a FK to a Parent column that's unique.

2
  • Thanks for replying, but the above mapping is failing since table1 has composite-id declared in hibernate mapping, many-to-one is also asking for a same number of columns
    – Siva
    Jul 20, 2015 at 6:52
  • I know it works with JPA annotations, but for the old Hibernate specific XML configs, I'm not sure what's the equivalent. Jul 20, 2015 at 7:02
0

Hibernate @Id does not have to correspond to the real database primary key (although it is desirable that they match, of course).

If ID is a unique column in Table1, then map Hibernate id only to it, and leave LOB as just an ordinary field.

If ID is not a unique column, then your many-to-one will not work properly anyway, because there would be multiple matching rows in the referenced table.

0
@Entity
@Table(name="Table_name")
public class table_name {
@EmbeddedId
@AttributeOverrides({
@AttributeOverride(name = "id1", column = @Column(name = "col1")),
@AttributeOverride(name = "id2", column = @Column(name = "col2")) })
2
  • 4
    Could you add some explanation to your answer?
    – madsroskar
    Dec 14, 2017 at 10:18
  • 1
    Thank you for this code snippet, which might provide some limited, immediate help. A proper explanation would greatly improve its long-term value by showing why this is a good solution to the problem and would make it more useful to future readers with other, similar questions. Please edit your answer to add some explanation, including the assumptions you’ve made. Dec 14, 2017 at 10:45

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