62

I have Hibernate entity that I have to convert to JSON, and I have to translate some values in entity, but when I translate values, these values are instantly saved to database, but I don't want to save these changes to database. Is there any workaround for this problem?

6 Answers 6

55

You can detach an entity by calling Session.evict().

Other options are create a defensive copy of your entity before translation of values, or use a DTO instead of the entity in that code. I think these options are more elegant since they don't couple conversion to JSON and persistence layer.

2
  • 26
    In case of JPA, you can use: EntityManager.detach(object) Jan 13, 2014 at 13:48
  • 4
    I was always using DTO for this purpose. Using defensive copy is good idea but the maintenance becomes tougher as down the year, people think the new object is a managed one but in realy it is actualy a local copy.
    – VimalKumar
    Jul 29, 2015 at 19:47
4

I am also converting hibernate entities to JSON.

The bad thing when you close the session you cannot lazy load objects. For this reason you can use

hSession.setDefaultReadOnly(true);

and close the session after when you're done with the JSON.

1
  • This one should be voted the best answer, as it only does the bare minimum to solve the issue without affecting the entire session. To make the answer even more specific: hSession.setReadOnly(myObject, true);
    – Alexis
    Mar 21, 2023 at 20:23
3

You can also avoid that your entities are attached to the Hibernate Session by using a StatelessSession:

StatelessSession session = sessionFactory.openStatelessSession();

instead of

Session session = sessionFactory.getCurrentSession();

Note that you must take care yourself of closing the StatelessSession, unlike the regular Hibernate Session:

session.close(); // do this after you are done with the session

Another difference compared to the regular Session is that a StatelessSession can not fetch collections. I see it's main purpose for data-fetching-only SQLQuery stuff.

You can read more about the different session types here:

http://www.interviewadda.com/difference-between-getcurrentsession-opensession-and-openstatelesssession/

1

Close the Session. That will detach your entity for you, and no modifications will be flushed. If that's not possible, look into disabling autoFlush...but that's a whole other can of worms. The easiest is to close the Session and be done with it!

0

In my case I just flushed and cleared the session.

session.flush(); session.clear();

-1
public static <E> E deepClone(E e) {
    ByteArrayOutputStream bo = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
    ObjectOutputStream oo;
    try {
        oo = new ObjectOutputStream(bo);
        oo.writeObject(e);
    } catch (IOException ex) {
        ex.printStackTrace();
    }
    ByteArrayInputStream bi = new ByteArrayInputStream(bo.toByteArray());
    ObjectInputStream oi;
    try {
        oi = new ObjectInputStream(bi);
        return (E) (oi.readObject());
    } catch (IOException ex) {
        ex.printStackTrace();
        return null;
    } catch (ClassNotFoundException ex) {
        ex.printStackTrace();
        return null;
    }
}

first: deepClone the session pojo
second: alter fields
then: do whatever you want to do

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