38

I have two classes defined such that they both contain references to the other object. They look similar to this (this is simplified; in my real domain model class A contains a list of B and each B has a reference back to parent A):

public class A {

    public B b;
    public String bKey;

    @Override
    public int hashCode() {
        final int prime = 31;
        int result = 1;
        result = prime * result + ((b == null) ? 0 : b.hashCode());
        result = prime * result + ((bKey == null) ? 0 : bKey.hashCode());
        return result;
    }
    @Override
    public boolean equals(Object obj) {
        if (this == obj)
            return true;
        if (obj == null)
            return false;
        if (!(obj instanceof A))
            return false;
        A other = (A) obj;
        if (b == null) {
            if (other.b != null)
                return false;
        } else if (!b.equals(other.b))
            return false;
        if (bKey == null) {
            if (other.bKey != null)
                return false;
        } else if (!bKey.equals(other.bKey))
            return false;
        return true;
    }
}

public class B {

    public A a;
    public String aKey;

    @Override
    public int hashCode() {
        final int prime = 31;
        int result = 1;
        result = prime * result + ((a == null) ? 0 : a.hashCode());
        result = prime * result + ((aKey == null) ? 0 : aKey.hashCode());
        return result;
    }
    @Override
    public boolean equals(Object obj) {
        if (this == obj)
            return true;
        if (obj == null)
            return false;
        if (!(obj instanceof B))
            return false;
        B other = (B) obj;
        if (a == null) {
            if (other.a != null)
                return false;
        } else if (!a.equals(other.a))
            return false;
        if (aKey == null) {
            if (other.aKey != null)
                return false;
        } else if (!aKey.equals(other.aKey))
            return false;
        return true;
    }
}

The hashCode and equals have been generated by Eclipse using both fields of both A and B. The problem is that calling the equals or hashCode method on either object results in a StackOverflowError since they both call the other object's equals and hashCode method. For example the following program will fail with StackOverflowError using the above objects:

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        A a = new A();
        B b = new B();
        a.b = b;
        b.a = a;

        A a1 = new A();
        B b1 = new B();
        a1.b = b1;
        b1.a = a1;

        System.out.println(a.equals(a1));
    }

If there is something inherently wrong with having a domain model defined with circular relationships in this way then please let me know. As far as I can tell though this is a fairly common scenario, correct?

What is best practice for defining hashCode and equals in this case? I want to keep all fields in the equals method so that it is a true deep equality comparison on the object but I don't see how I can with this problem. Thanks!

2
  • 4
    Why do you need the children to have references to the parent? This is going to make your life very complicated with respect to serialization
    – I82Much
    Jan 14, 2012 at 16:02
  • 2
    I'm working with a legacy domain model. My serialization leaves out parent relationship in the child essentially and then fixes the relationship on deserialization. Is having circular references not a common thing in domain models? The underlying DB relationship is OneToMany which was reverse engineered by JBoss tools into JPA objects WITH the circular references.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 16:13

4 Answers 4

6

I agree with the comment of I82Much that you should avoid having B referencing their parent: it's information duplication, which usually only leads to trouble, but you might need to do so in your case.

Even if you leave the parent reference in B, as far as hash codes are concerned you should completely ignore the parent reference and only use the true inner variables of B to build the hash code.

The As are just containers and their value is fully determined by their content, which is the values of the contained Bs, and so should their hash keys.

If A is an unordered set, you must be very careful that the hash code you are building from the B values (or B hash codes) is not dependent on some ordering. For example, if the hash code is build by adding and multiplying the hash codes of the contained B's in some sequence, you should first order the hash codes by increasing order before computing the result of the sums/multiplications. Similarly, A.equals(o) must not depend on the ordering of the Bs (if unordered set).

Note that if you are using a java.util.Collection within A, then just fixing the Bs hash code by ignoring the parent reference will automatically give valid A hash codes since the Collections have good hash codes by default (ordering or not).

3
  • I don't quite see how this is information duplication like you say. One may not be strictly dealing with A's whereby you can infer that B's parent is A because it is referenced from A. You may only have a handle on B and need to know something about the A that it is referenced from, correct? That information would not exist if B did not have a reference back to A.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 20:07
  • It depends on what you are doing; maybe you really do need to find the parent of B's. But you should generally design your code such that you can avoid that. If you can't avoid it then you have to be very careful that you don't get into an inconsistent state.
    – toto2
    Jan 14, 2012 at 20:31
  • I would say a doubly-linked list has data duplication and it is useful for efficiency in certain situations. However you can never get into an inconsistent state because the API is such that both sides of the ownership are always modified simultaneously.
    – toto2
    Jan 14, 2012 at 20:33
4

In a typical model, most entities have a unique ID. This ID is useful in various use-cases (in particular: Database retreival/lookup). IIUC, the bKey field is supposed to be such a unique ID. Thus, the common practice for comparing such entities is to compare their ID:

@Override
public boolean equals(Object obj) {
    if (obj == null)
        return false;
    if (!getClass().equals(obj.getClass()))
        return false;
    return this.bKey.equals(((B) obj).bKey);
}


@Override
public int hashCode() { return bKey.hashCode(); }

You may ask: "what happens if two B objects have the same ID but different state (value of their fields are different)". Your code should make sure that such things do not happen. This will be a problem regardless of how you implement equals() or hashCode() because it essentially means that you have two different versions of the same entity in your system and you won't be able to tell which is the correct one.

2
  • This makes sense to me. In my case, however, I wanted a comprehensive equals method for my custom serializer junit tests to make use of. In my unit tests I wanted to make sure that the object was serialized and deserialized in the right way, thus my testing every field. In practice my domain model will probably be fine with making my equals method test the object ID.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 17:44
  • This does help in addressing my best practices question though.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 19:57
1

You could have two flavors of equals -- the override of Object.equals and one that's better suited for recursion. The recursive equality check takes an A or B -- whichever is the other class of this one -- which is the object you're calling the recursive equality on behalf of. If you're calling it on behalf of this.equals, you pass in null. For instance:

A {
    ...
    @Override
    public boolean equals(Object obj) {
        // check for this, null, instanceof...
        A other = (A) obj;
        return recursiveEquality(other, null);
    }

    // package-private, optionally-recursive equality
    boolean recursiveEquality(A other, B onBehalfOf) {
        if (onBehalfOf != null) {
            assert b != onBehalfOf;
            // we got here from within a B.equals(..) call, so we just need
            // to check that our B is the same as the one that called us.
        }
        // At this point, we got called from A.equals(Object). So,
        // need to recurse.
        else if (b == null) {
            if (other.b != null)
                return false;
        }
        // B has a similar structure. Call its recursive-aware equality,
        // passing in this for the onBehalfOf
        else if (!b.recursiveEquality(other.b, this))
            return false;

        // check bkey and return
    }
}

So, following A.equals:

  1. A.equals calls `recursiveEquality(otherA, null)
    1. if this.b != null, we end up in the third if-else block, which calls b.recursiveEquality(other.b, this)
      1. in B.recursiveEquality, we hit the first if-else block, which simply asserts that our A is the same one that was passed to us (ie, that the circular reference isn't broken)
      2. we finish B.recursiveEquality by checking aKey (depending on your invariants, you may want to assert something based on what happened in step 3). B.recursiveEquality returns
    2. we finish A.recursiveEquality by checking bKey, possibly with similar asserts
  2. A.equals returns the result of the recursive equality check
1
  • This will probably work, however, I am looking for domain model best practices vs. a specific a solution to the recursive problem demonstrated.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 19:51
-4

First of all, are you sure you want to override Equals() and GetHashCode()? In most scenearios you should be fine with the default referential equality.

But, let's suppose not. Than, what is the appropriate equality semantics you want?

For example let's say each A has a getB field of type B and each B has a getA field of type A. Let a1 and a2 be two A objects, have the same fields and the same getB (same as in "same memory address") b1. Are a1 and a2 equal? Suppose b1.getA is the same as a1 (same as in "same memory address") but not the same as a2. Do you still want to consider a1 and a2 equal?

If not, don't override anything and use the default referential equality.

If yes, then here is a solution: Let A have a int GetCoreHashCode() function that does not depend on getB element, (but depend on other fields). Let B have a int GetCoreHashCode() function that does not depend on getA element, (but depend on other fields). Now let int GetHashCode() function of A depend upon this.GetCoreHashCode() and getB.GetCoreHashCode() and likewise for B, and you are done.

1
  • This will probably work, however, I am looking for domain model best practices vs. a specific a solution to the recursive problem demonstrated.
    – Tom
    Jan 14, 2012 at 19:53

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