613

Hibernate throws this exception during SessionFactory creation:

org.hibernate.loader.MultipleBagFetchException: cannot simultaneously fetch multiple bags

This is my test case:

Parent.java

@Entity
public Parent {

 @Id
 @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
 private Long id;

 @OneToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
 // @IndexColumn(name="INDEX_COL") if I had this the problem solve but I retrieve more children than I have, one child is null.
 private List<Child> children;

}

Child.java

@Entity
public Child {

 @Id
 @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
 private Long id;

 @ManyToOne
 private Parent parent;

}

How about this problem? What can I do?


EDIT

OK, the problem I have is that another "parent" entity is inside my parent, my real behavior is this:

Parent.java

@Entity
public Parent {

 @Id
 @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
 private Long id;

 @ManyToOne
 private AnotherParent anotherParent;

 @OneToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
 private List<Child> children;

}

AnotherParent.java

@Entity
public AnotherParent {

 @Id
 @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
 private Long id;

 @OneToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
 private List<AnotherChild> anotherChildren;

}

Hibernate doesn't like two collections with FetchType.EAGER, but this seems to be a bug, I'm not doing unusual things...

Removing FetchType.EAGER from Parent or AnotherParent solves the problem, but I need it, so real solution is to use @LazyCollection(LazyCollectionOption.FALSE) instead of FetchType (thanks to Bozho for the solution).

3
  • 2
    I would ask, what SQL query are you hoping to generate that will retrieve two separate collections simultaneously? The kinds of SQL that would be able to achieve these would either require a cartesian join (potentially highly inefficient) or a UNION of disjoint columns (also ugly). Presumably the inability to achieve this in SQL in a clean & efficient manner influenced the API design.
    – Thomas W
    Jan 16, 2018 at 0:47
  • @ThomasW These are the sql queries it should generate: select * from master; select * from child1 where master_id = :master_id; select * from child2 where master_id = :master_id
    – nurettin
    Oct 14, 2018 at 12:28
  • 2
    You can get a simillar error if you have more than one List<child> with fetchType defined for more than one List<clield>
    – Big Zed
    Feb 20, 2020 at 18:41

18 Answers 18

689

I think a newer version of hibernate (supporting JPA 2.0) should handle this. But otherwise you can work it around by annotating the collection fields with:

@LazyCollection(LazyCollectionOption.FALSE)

Remember to remove the fetchType attribute from the @*ToMany annotation.

But note that in most cases a Set<Child> is more appropriate than List<Child>, so unless you really need a List - go for Set

Use with caution

Remember that using a Set won't eliminate the underlying Cartesian Product as described by Vlad Mihalcea in his answer, featured as "The worst solution"!

15
  • 6
    odd, it has worked for me. Did you remove the fetchType from the @*ToMany ?
    – Bozho
    Dec 2, 2010 at 17:51
  • 118
    the problem is that the JPA annotations are parsed not to allow more than 2 eagerly loaded collection. But the hibernate-specific annnotations allow it.
    – Bozho
    Dec 2, 2010 at 23:27
  • 21
    The need for more than 1 EAGER seems totally realistic. Is this limitation just a JPA oversight? What are the concerns I should look for when having muliple EAGERs?
    – AR3Y35
    Jun 17, 2012 at 11:18
  • 9
    the thing is, hibernate can't fetch the two collections with one query. So when you query for the parent entity, it will need 2 extra queries per result, which is normally something you don't want.
    – Bozho
    Jun 18, 2012 at 11:19
  • 12
    It'd be great to have an explanation as to why this resolves the issue.
    – Ben
    Sep 24, 2013 at 13:29
330

Simply change from List type to Set type.

Use with caution

This solution is not recommended as it won't eliminate the underlying Cartesian Product as described by Vlad Mihalcea in his answer, featured as "The worst solution"!

10
  • 44
    A List and a Set are not the same thing: a set does not preserve order
    – Matteo
    Mar 15, 2012 at 15:36
  • 19
    LinkedHashSet preserves order
    – egallardo
    May 16, 2012 at 0:12
  • 18
    This is an important distinction and, when you think about it, entirely correct. The typical many-to-one implemented by a foreign key in the DB is really not a List, it's a Set because order is not preserved. So Set is really more appropriate. I think that makes the difference in hibernate, though I don't know why.
    – fool4jesus
    Dec 6, 2012 at 19:38
  • 3
    I was having the same cannot simultaneously fetch multiple bags but not because of annotations. In my case, I was doing left joins and disjunctions with the two *ToMany. Changing the type to Set solved my problem too. Excellent and neat solution. This should be the official answer.
    – L. Holanda
    Oct 15, 2014 at 20:22
  • 30
    I liked the answer, but the million dollar question is: Why? Why with Set don't show exceptions? Thanks
    – Hinotori
    Jan 31, 2017 at 16:56
211

Considering we have the following entities:

enter image description here

And, you want to fetch some parent Post entities along with all the comments and tags collections.

If you are using more than one JOIN FETCH directives:

List<Post> posts = entityManager.createQuery("""
    select p
    from Post p
    left join fetch p.comments
    left join fetch p.tags
    where p.id between :minId and :maxId
    """, Post.class)
.setParameter("minId", 1L)
.setParameter("maxId", 50L)
.getResultList();

Hibernate will throw the infamous:

org.hibernate.loader.MultipleBagFetchException: cannot simultaneously fetch multiple bags [
  com.vladmihalcea.book.hpjp.hibernate.fetching.Post.comments,
  com.vladmihalcea.book.hpjp.hibernate.fetching.Post.tags
]

Hibernate doesn't allow fetching more than one bag because that would generate a Cartesian product.

The worst "solution"

Now, you will find lots of answers, blog posts, videos, or other resources telling you to use a Set instead of a List for your collections.

That's terrible advice. Don't do that!

Using Sets instead of Lists will make the MultipleBagFetchException go away, but the Cartesian Product will still be there, which is actually even worse, as you'll find out the performance issue long after you applied this "fix".

The proper Hibernate 6 solution

If you're using Hibernate 6, then you can fix this issue like this:

List<Post> posts = entityManager.createQuery("""
    select p
    from Post p
    left join fetch p.comments
    where p.id between :minId and :maxId
    """, Post.class)
.setParameter("minId", 1L)
.setParameter("maxId", 50L)
.getResultList();

posts = entityManager.createQuery("""
    select distinct p
    from Post p
    left join fetch p.tags t
    where p in :posts 
    """, Post.class)
.setParameter("posts", posts)
.getResultList();

As long as you fetch at most one collection using JOIN FETCH per query, you will be fine.

By using multiple queries, you will avoid the Cartesian Product since any other collection, but the first one is fetched using a secondary query.

The proper Hibernate 5 solution

You can do the following trick:

List<Post> posts = entityManager.createQuery("""
    select distinct p
    from Post p
    left join fetch p.comments
    where p.id between :minId and :maxId
    """, Post.class)
.setParameter("minId", 1L)
.setParameter("maxId", 50L)
.setHint(QueryHints.PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH, false)
.getResultList();

posts = entityManager.createQuery("""
    select distinct p
    from Post p
    left join fetch p.tags t
    where p in :posts 
    """, Post.class)
.setParameter("posts", posts)
.setHint(QueryHints.PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH, false)
.getResultList();

In the first JPQL query, distinct DOES NOT go to the SQL statement. That's why we set the PASS_DISTINCT_THROUGH JPA query hint to false.

DISTINCT has two meanings in JPQL, and here, we need it to deduplicate the Java object references returned by getResultList on the Java side, not the SQL side.

By using multiple queries, you will avoid the Cartesian Product since any other collection, but the first one is fetched using a secondary query.

There's more you could do

If you're using the FetchType.EAGER strategy at mapping time for @OneToMany or @ManyToMany associations, then you could easily end up with a MultipleBagFetchException.

You are better off switching from FetchType.EAGER to Fetchype.LAZY since eager fetching is a terrible idea that can lead to critical application performance issues.

Conclusion

Avoid FetchType.EAGER and don't switch from List to Set just because doing so will make Hibernate hide the MultipleBagFetchException under the carpet. Fetch just one collection at a time, and you'll be fine.

As long as you do it with the same number of queries as you have collections to initialize, you are fine. Just don't initialize the collections in a loop, as that will trigger N+1 query issues, which are also bad for performance.

41
  • 2
    Vlad, thanks for the help I find it really usuful. However, the issue was related to hibernate.jdbc.fetch_size (eventually I set it to 350). By the chance, do you know how to optimize nested relations? E.g. entity1 -> entity2 -> entity3.1, entity 3.2 (where entity3.1 / 3.2 are @OneToMany relations) Nov 21, 2019 at 12:54
  • 4
    No, you can not. Think about it in terms of SQL. You cannot JOIN multiple one-to-many associations without generating a Cartesian Product. Jan 28, 2020 at 11:40
  • 7
    You should always havd @Transactional on the service methods calling a Spring Data Jpa Repository. Not doing so is a terrible mistake. Oct 27, 2020 at 19:29
  • 3
    Of course. The query is more obvious and doesn't have the IN clause limit issue. Nov 4, 2020 at 9:11
  • 3
    @JayD I'll blog about that in the future. Jun 23, 2022 at 15:01
186

Add a Hibernate-specific @Fetch annotation to your code:

@OneToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
@Fetch(value = FetchMode.SUBSELECT)
private List<Child> childs;

This should fix the issue, related to Hibernate bug HHH-1718

11
  • 6
    @DaveRlz why subSelect solves this problem. I tried your solution and its working, but dont know how the problem was solved by using this ? Aug 10, 2013 at 13:34
  • 4
    This is the best answer unless a Set really makes sense. Having a single OneToMany relationship using a Set results in 1+<# relationships> queries, where as using FetchMode.SUBSELECT results in 1+1 queries. Also, using the annotation in the accepted answer (LazyCollectionOption.FALSE) causes even more queries to be executed. Apr 21, 2015 at 22:35
  • 1
    FetchType.EAGER is not a proper solution for this. Need to proceed with Hibernate Fetch Profiles and need to solve it Jul 26, 2017 at 15:31
  • 3
    The two other top answers did not solve my problem. This one did. Thank you!
    – Blindworks
    Feb 22, 2018 at 11:48
  • 5
    Does anyone know why does SUBSELECT fix it, but JOIN does not?
    – Innokenty
    Jan 4, 2019 at 16:23
49

After trying with every single option describe in this posts and others, I came to the conclusion that the the fix is a follows.

In every XToMany place @XXXToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER) and intermediately after

@Fetch(value = FetchMode.SUBSELECT)

This worked for me

4
  • 7
    adding @Fetch(value = FetchMode.SUBSELECT) was enough Feb 25, 2015 at 20:44
  • 1
    This is a Hibernate only solution. What if you are using a shared JPA library?
    – Michel
    May 30, 2017 at 9:34
  • 5
    I'm sure you didnt mean to, but DaveRlz already wrote the same thing 3 years earlier
    – phil294
    Apr 29, 2018 at 9:10
  • 1
    This is probably duplicate of the above answer: stackoverflow.com/a/8309458/3451846 Nov 24, 2023 at 13:24
17

To fix it simply take Set in place of List for your nested object.

@OneToMany
Set<Your_object> objectList;

And don't forget to use fetch=FetchType.EAGER, It'll work.

There is one more concept CollectionId in Hibernate if you want to stick with list only.

Use with caution

Remember that you won't eliminate the underlying Cartesian Product as described by Vlad Mihalcea in his answer, featured as "The worst solution"!

1
  • 2
    Both recommendations you made are very bad in terms of performance. Nov 5, 2020 at 0:23
7

you can keep booth EAGER lists in JPA and add to at least one of them the JPA annotation @OrderColumn (with obviously the name of a field to be ordered). No need of specific hibernate annotations. But keep in mind it could create empty elements in the list if the chosen field does not have values starting from 0

 [...]
 @OneToMany(mappedBy="parent", fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
 @OrderColumn(name="orderIndex")
 private List<Child> children;
 [...]

in Children then you should add the orderIndex field

1
  • this is a very underrated solution to this problem, deserves more attention.
    – rasitayaz
    Jan 19 at 22:14
3

When you have too complex objects with saveral collection could not be good idea to have all of them with EAGER fetchType, better use LAZY and when you really need to load the collections use: Hibernate.initialize(parent.child) to fetch the data.

2

We tried Set instead of List and it is a nightmare: when you add two new objects, equals() and hashCode() fail to distinguish both of them ! Because they don't have any id.

typical tools like Eclipse generate that kind of code from Database tables:

@Override
public int hashCode() {
    final int prime = 31;
    int result = 1;
    result = prime * result + ((id == null) ? 0 : id.hashCode());
    return result;
}

You may also read this article that explains properly how messed up JPA/Hibernate is. After reading this, I think this is the last time I use any ORM in my life.

I've also encounter Domain Driven Design guys that basically say ORM are a terrible thing.

1

For me, the problem was having nested EAGER fetches.

One solution is to set the nested fields to LAZY and use Hibernate.initialize() to load the nested field(s):

x = session.get(ClassName.class, id);
Hibernate.initialize(x.getNestedField());
1
  • I would like to set the Java syntax highlight but the edit queue is full now, as usual Nov 24, 2023 at 13:27
1

At my end, this happened when I had multiple collections with FetchType.EAGER, like this:

@ManyToMany(fetch = FetchType.EAGER, targetEntity = className.class)
@JoinColumn(name = "myClass_id")
@JsonView(SerializationView.Summary.class)
private Collection<Model> ModelObjects;

Additionally, the collections were joining on the same column.

To solve this issue, I changed one of the collections to FetchType.LAZY since it was okay for my use-case.

Goodluck! ~J

1

You can also try to make fetch=FetchType.LAZY and just add @Transactional(readOnly = true) to method where you get child

0

Commenting both Fetch and LazyCollection sometimes helps to run project.

@Fetch(FetchMode.JOIN)
@LazyCollection(LazyCollectionOption.FALSE)
0

One good thing about @LazyCollection(LazyCollectionOption.FALSE) is that several fields with this annotation can coexist while FetchType.EAGER cannot, even in the situations where such coexistence is legit.

For example, an Order may have a list of OrderGroup(a short one) as well as a list of Promotions(also short). @LazyCollection(LazyCollectionOption.FALSE) can be used on both without causing LazyInitializationException neither MultipleBagFetchException.

In my case @Fetch did solve my problem of MultipleBacFetchException but then causes LazyInitializationException, the infamous no Session error.

0

I solved by annotating:

@OneToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL, fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
0

Ok so here's my 2 cents. I had the Fetch Lazy annotations in my Entity but I also duplicated the fetch lazy in the session bean thus causing a multiple bag issue. So I just removed the lines in my SessionBean

criteria.createAlias("FIELD", "ALIAS", JoinType.LEFT_OUTER_JOIN); //REMOVED

And I used Hibernate.initialize on the list I wanted to retrieve after the List parent = criteria.list was called. Hibernate.initialize(parent.getChildList());

0

TLDR: Don't use EAGER. Always fetch things only when you really need them!


A lot of mentions here about FetchType.EAGER and I wanted to go a bit more into detail why this is a bad idea and on what to use alternatively. Hopefully after reading this you realize that really you should absolutely NEVER use FetchType.EAGER.

There is just no good reason to! It's a mayor pitfall that can bite you (or even worse: someone else) down the road. Imagine you chose FetchType.EAGER for a Student -> Teacher relation, because you think every time you need to fetch a Student you also need his Teachers. Now even if you are 100% sure you never need students without teachers right now, you simply can't foresee how requirements change. FetchType.EAGER violates the Open-closed principle! Your code is no longer open for extension - if later the need for loading Students without Teachers arise it's difficult do to that without reworking (and possibly breaking) existing code!

An even bigger problem you have is that you basically created an n+1 select problem for possible future queries, that (rightfully) already fetched another bag in the basic query. Let's say in the future someone wants to load all Students with their grades and there are 30000 of them. Since you told Hibernate to EAGER fetch all Teachers it has to do that. But since you already fetched another "bag" (the grades) within the same query this actually results in 30001 queries - for data that wasn't even needed in that scenario! The first query for loading all Students+Grades and then a separate query for each Student to fetch his teachers. Needless to say that this is horrendous for performance. In my opinion this is the sole reason for people to believe that "Hibernate is slow" - they just don't realize how incredible inefficient it might query stuff in some situations. You really have to be careful with 1:n relations.

3 Alternatives (manually fetch stuff when needed):

  1. Use JOIN FETCH to fetch a collection. To stick with the example SELECT stud FROM STUDENT stud JOIN FETCH stud.teachers would do the trick. This will always fire a single query to fetch students AND teachers. Just be mindful to only fetch one collection that way (explanation would go too far for this answer).
  2. If you use Spring-JPA you can use @EntityGraph(attributePaths = {"teachers"}) to do the same.
  3. You could call Hibernate.initialize(oneStudent.getTeachers()) with the Hibernate-proxy to fetch the relation manually. This will always create a separate query, so don't do it in a loop or you just created a n+1 select problem yourself.

Also one final tip in general: turn the logging for org.hibernate.SQL to DEBUG to see when/what queries are fired and make sure your local dev setup has a reasonable amount of data. When you test your code with only 2 students and don't check the queries that are fired you might miss something like that and end up having issues on real systems with more data.

-5

You could use a new annotation to solve this:

@XXXToXXX(targetEntity = XXXX.class, fetch = FetchType.LAZY)

In fact, fetch's default value is FetchType.LAZY too.

1
  • 5
    JPA3.0 does not exist.
    – holmis83
    Aug 17, 2017 at 12:57

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