I have a simple setup and encountered a puzzling (at least for me) problem:

I have three pojos which are related to each other:

@NodeEntity
public class Unit {
    @GraphId Long nodeId;
    @Indexed int type;
    String description;
}


@NodeEntity
public class User {
    @GraphId Long nodeId;
    @RelatedTo(type="user", direction = Direction.INCOMING)
    @Fetch private Iterable<Worker> worker;
    @Fetch Unit currentUnit;

    String name;

}

@NodeEntity
public class Worker {
    @GraphId Long nodeId;
    @Fetch User user;
    @Fetch Unit unit;
    String description;
}

So you have User-Worker-Unit with a "currentunit" which marks in user that allows to jump directly to the "current unit". Each User can have multiple workers, but one worker is only assigned to one unit (one unit can have multiple workers).

What I was wodnering now, is what "User.worker" needs the @Fetch annotation. I actually want this to be laoded only when needed, because most of the time I only work with "Worker".

I went through http://static.springsource.org/spring-data/data-neo4j/docs/2.0.0.RELEASE/reference/html/ and it isnt really clear to me:

  • worker is iterable because it should be read only (incoming relation) - in the docuemntation this is stated clarly, but in the examples Set is used most of the time. Why? or doesn't it matter...
  • How do I get worker to only load on access?
  • Why do I need to annotate even the simple relations (worker.unit) with @Fetch. Isn't ther a better way? I have another enitity with MANY such simple relations - I really want to avoid having to load the entire graph just because i want to the properties of one object.
  • Am I missing a spring configuration so it works with lazy loading?
  • Is there any way to load any relationships (which are not marked as @Fetch) via an extra call?

From how I see it, this construct loads the whole database as soon as I want a Worker, even if I don't care about the user most of the time.

The only workaround I see is to use repository and manually load the entities when needed.

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1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

Found the answer to all the questions myself:

@Iterable: yes, iterable can be used for readonly

@load on access: per default nothing is loaded. and automatic lazy loading is not available (at least as far as I can gather)

For the rest: When I need a relationship I either have to use @Fetch or use the neo4jtemplate.fetch method:

@NodeEntity
public class User {
    @GraphId Long nodeId;
    @RelatedTo(type="user", direction = Direction.INCOMING)
    private Iterable<Worker> worker;
    @Fetch Unit currentUnit;

    String name;

}

class GetService {
  @Autowired private Neo4jTemplate template;

  public void doSomethingFunction() {
    User u = ....;
    // worker is not avaiable here

    template.fetch(u.worker);
    // do something with the worker
  }  
}
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