0

I use Ebean with Play 2.2.1 and I am trying to make a unidirectional OneToMany join between my entities.

Unfortunately I get the following exception and I have know idea how to avoid ebean using "book_book_id" instead of "book_id":

[PersistenceException: Query threw SQLException:Unknown column 't1.book_book_id' in 'on clause' Bind values:[197] Query was: select t0.book_id c0, t1.cross_ref_id c1, t1.accno c2 from book t0 left outer join cross_ref t1 on t1.book_book_id = t0.book_id where t0.book_id = ? order by t0.book_id ]

My first class:

@Entity
@Table(name="book")
public class Book extends Model {

    @Id
    @Column(name="book_id")
    public int bookId;

    @OneToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
    public List<Cross> crossReferences;

    public static List<Book> filterByIds(List<Integer> BookIds){

        if (BookIds.isEmpty()){
            List<Book> books = new ArrayList<>();

            return books;
        }
        else {
            Query<Book> query = Ebean.createQuery(Book.class);
            query.where(Expr.in("bookId", bookIds));

            return query.findList();
        }
    }
}

The secend class:

@Entity
@Table(name="cross_ref")
public class Cross extends Model {

    @Id
    @Column(name="cross_ref_id")
    public int crossRefId;

    @Column(name="book_id")
    public int bookId;

    public int accno;
}

4 Answers 4

1

You have the @JoinColumn for that. Also if you need to set the Join Table, use the @JoinTable annotation.

But it seems you have there an incomplete bilateral relationship (you used the bookID to point back to the Book entity).

1

Just tip: Play with Ebean can be quite smart so in many cases you don't even need to annotate JoinTables and JoinColumn, just use proper types where applicable and voila:

models/Book.java

@Entity
public class Book extends Model {
    @Id
    public Integer id;
    public static Finder<Integer, Book> find = new Finder<>(Integer.class, Book.class);

    public String name;

    @OneToMany(mappedBy = "book", cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
    public List<CrossReference> crossReferences;

    public static List<Book> filterByIds(List<Integer> bookIds){
       return find.where().in("id", bookIds).findList();
    }

}

models/CrossReference.java

@Entity
public class CrossReference extends Model {
    @Id
    public Integer id;
    public static Finder<Integer, CrossReference> find = new Finder<>(Integer.class, CrossReference.class);

    @ManyToOne
    public Book book;
}
0

I could fix the problem by inserting

@JoinColumn(name="book_id", referencedColumnName = "book_id")

to

public List<Cross> crossReferences;
2
  • Did I say something different? :)
    – V G
    Dec 2, 2013 at 10:27
  • I knew about @JoinColumn already but forgot to set the referencedColumnName. Dec 2, 2013 at 11:51
0

Just a small example, I have a class which contains a reference to itself. Basically it shall be a tree or hierarchical structure. So one parentelement has many child elements and one child element has exactly one parent element.

As long as you name your reference like your class name (e.g. element for Element Class), everything will work...but if you name it something else like parentElement you will face an exception.

Option 1 with reference name = class name to reference

@Entity
public class Element extends Model {

...

  @ManyToOne(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
  private Element element;

  @OneToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
  private List<Criterion> elements = new ArrayList<>();

Option 2 Use mappedBy with other naming, e.g. parentElement

@Entity
public class Element extends Model {

...

  @ManyToOne(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
  private Element parentElement;

  @OneToMany(mappedBy="parentElement", cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
  private List<Criterion> elements = new ArrayList<>();

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.