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I have a following problem with entity mapping in JPA. I have two entities, first one is Lookup and the second is Text which represents translations for entities. Now I need to bound Lookup to the Text but I don't want Text to have reference to Lookup. To make this more complicated, Text does not use its primary key in this relationship but a metacode defined in a TXTHEAD_CODE column.

Lookup.java

@Entity
@Table(name = "DATREG")
public class Lookup implements PersistableEntity {

    @Id
    @Column(name = "DATREG_META_CODE")
    private String metaCode;

    @OneToMany
    @JoinTable(name="TXT", 
            joinColumns=@JoinColumn(name="DATREG_META_CODE", referencedColumnName="TXTHEAD_CODE"),
            inverseJoinColumns=@JoinColumn(name="DATREG_META_CODE"))
    private List<Text> text;

Text.java

@Entity
@Table(name = "TXT")
public class Text {

    @Id
    @Column(name = "TXT_ID")
    private Long id;

    @Column(name = "TXTHEAD_CODE")
    private String code;

So I have tried this (and few other variations) but with no result. I also can't create join table in the DB and I don't want bound Lookup to my Text class. So can anyone please tell me if there is some other way?

1 Answer 1

178

My bible for JPA work is the Java Persistence wikibook. It has a section on unidirectional OneToMany which explains how to do this with a @JoinColumn annotation. In your case, i think you would want:

@OneToMany
@JoinColumn(name="TXTHEAD_CODE")
private Set<Text> text;

I've used a Set rather than a List, because the data itself is not ordered.

The above is using a defaulted referencedColumnName, unlike the example in the wikibook. If that doesn't work, try an explicit one:

@OneToMany
@JoinColumn(name="TXTHEAD_CODE", referencedColumnName="DATREG_META_CODE")
private Set<Text> text;
5
  • Wow, it really worked, thank you. I thought that I always need to create a join table if there is only one side of the relationship (the other side does not hold the foreign keys). Commented Aug 21, 2012 at 6:14
  • 6
    Bingo! This "Java Persistence Wikibook" link is what i have been looking for... Thanks for sharing...
    – Ahmet
    Commented Jan 27, 2018 at 10:31
  • I'm trying the same but, the foreign key is not getting set in the child entity in the DB, I'm getting this exception: oracle.jdbc.OracleDatabaseException: ORA-01400: cannot insert NULL into Commented Apr 4, 2020 at 4:53
  • @SandeepKumar What do you mean by "child entity"? The equivalent of Text in this example? I suspect that JPA does not consider the referenced column to be a foreign key, in which case it won't populate it with the ID of the parent; i'm afraid you will have to set it yourself before saving. Commented Apr 6, 2020 at 13:58
  • 1
    I fixed the issue by removing the property from my child class. Now, JPA is implicitly considering the key mentioned in the parent class and inserting the value. Thanks! Commented Apr 6, 2020 at 15:49

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