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I use JPA + OpenJPA with PostgreSQL as backend RDBMS. The primary keys of my tables usually consist of a SERIAL / BIGSERIAL column. So PostgreSQL automatically generates IDs for new entries (strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY).

The annotations of ID property look like this:

@Id
@SequenceGenerator(name="myseq",sequenceName="foobartable_fooid_seq")
@GeneratedValue(generator="myseq",strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)

My question is: Can I copy and paste this annotations block to several entities, while only modifying the sequenceName value? The sequenceName is different from table to table. But may the SequenceGenerator of all Entities be named myseq or something like that? Or does one have to specify a unique generator name for the SequenceGenerator of each Entity? So that each SequenceGenerator name must be unique in the persistence unit?

Is it possibly a good idea to use the same value used for the sequenceName in the database? So that I'd write something like

@Id
@SequenceGenerator(name="foobartable_fooid_seq",sequenceName="foobartable_fooid_seq")
@GeneratedValue(generator="foobartable_fooid_seq",strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)

Any recommendations on how to name the SequenceGenerators?

Many thanks in advance for any suggestions!

Yours, Mr. Snrub

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    First of all, if you use a sequence generator, you're not using the IDENTITY strategy (which would consist in using an auto-increment column like MySQL has). For the rest, why don't you just do it, and see what happens? Or you could also read the javadoc of SequenceGenerator which says: The scope of the generator name is global to the persistence unit (across all generator types).
    – JB Nizet
    Feb 7, 2013 at 22:51

1 Answer 1

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From the Javadoc for SequenceGenerator, emphasis is mine:

Defines a primary key generator that may be referenced by name when a generator element is specified for the GeneratedValue annotation. A sequence generator may be specified on the entity class or on the primary key field or property. The scope of the generator name is global to the persistence unit (across all generator types).

So you will want to use a unique name for each sequence defined in a persistence unit. On a tangent, your GeneratedValue strategy should be SEQUENCE, as pointed out in a comment above.

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  • Thanks a lot for your fast response! Are there any cons in using the same name also used in the database for the sequence, meaning name equals sequenceName?
    – MrSnrub
    Feb 7, 2013 at 23:00
  • Concerning the strategy: PostgreSQL creates an implicit sequence for columns with the type SERIAL. That's Postgres' somewhat weird pendent of MySQL's auto_increment. I assume IDENTITY is correct as several pages / examples use it that way with Postgres' special way to auto-increment.
    – MrSnrub
    Feb 7, 2013 at 23:07
  • I can't see any con to using the same name as what you defined in the DB, seeing as sequence names are required to be distinct in PostgreSQL. If anything, it simplifies your life.
    – Perception
    Feb 7, 2013 at 23:10

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