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Are you supposed to have one repository per table in JPA? If not, how do you resolve the generics in the repository database?

For example, below is a StoreRepository. It handles CRUD operations on the Store object. If I wanted the repository to save a StoreEvent object as well, how would I go about changing the interface below to accommodate both objects?

@Repository
public interface StoreRepository extends JpaRepository<Store, String> {
    public Store findByGuid(String guid);
}
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1 Answer 1

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As repository is a concept derived from Domain Driven Design, thinking about database tables is the wrong approach. By definition you access aggregate roots from a repository. Effectively a repository is simulating a collection of these.

Now what forms an aggregate root? Probably even more interesting: what does not? That's, of course, highly dependent on your domain, but let me give you an example here. An Order containing LineItems usually is modeled as an aggregate root. This is due to the composition nature of the Order. A LineItem would not exist without a surrounding Order.

Usually the persistence access mechanisms should follow the domain principles. Thus, you'd model both Order and LineItem as @Entity classes but only create an OrderRepository, as they form the aggregate root and effectively control the consistency rules within the object graph.

We also strongly recommend not to use the store specific repository base interfaces as they - as the name suggests - expose store specifics (e.g. flush()) to the clients of which they shouldn't be aware, if possible. Read more on that in my answer here.

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    I am not sure I understand why you suggest that LineItem should be modeled as @Entity if it does not have a life cycle that is independent of its parent entity Order. I believe it should be modeled as @Embeddable in its defining class LineItem and not as @Entity. Apr 17, 2017 at 19:53

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