I'm wondering how to reduce SQL updates with my Hibernate (4) & Oracle setup.
A simple case might be this:
Open a session/transaction, create a new entity Xyz with session.save(), process some business logic, make some changes to Xyz and call session.update(), and let the session close as normal and Hibernate with commit to DB.
When committing, Hibernate will do an insert followed by an update -- but all it really needs to do is a single insert, but with the latest properties of Xyz, in this example.
Does anyone have any ideas/patterns for doing this sort of thing? Or is there any way to change Hibernate's behavior around this? Or what's your opinion on this -- is it a complete anti-pattern?
I know Hibernate is smart enough to omit multiple updates, when one update just overwrites another -- so why not similar for inserts?
This small snippet can reproduce the "issue":
MyEntity e = new MyEntity("xxx");
Session session = sessionFactory.openSession();
session.beginTransaction();
session.save(e); e.setName("yyy");
session.getTransaction().commit();
session.close();
By the way, I have no triggers to worry about.
This example is very simple and the performance problem might seem trivial, but in reality I am dealing with a more complex object (i.e., multiple inserts & updates), and high volumes, so avoiding updates would be great.