4

How do I force a specific query to lazy load an attribute, that usually has eager loading? EntityGraphType.FETCH isn't working.

@NamedEntityGraph(name="negGraphName",attributeNodes={
      @NamedAttributeNode("name"),
      @NamedAttributeNode("grup")})
class User{
  private String name;  

  @ManyToOne
  private UserGroup grup;

  @ManyToMany(fetch=FetchType.EAGER)
  protected Set<Authority> authoritiesList;
}

interface UserRepository extends CrudRepository<String, User>{
  @EntityGraph(value="negGraphName", type=EntityGraphType.FETCH)
  @Query("<custom query here>")
  private Collection<User> getUsersInSpecialQuery(@Param("paramName") String paramName);
}

basically, when I call userRepository.getUsersInSpecialQuery() the initial query joins in object, and doesn't join in authority, however then Hibernate anyway initializes the authorities list with A SEPARATE SQL QUERY PER USER RESULT, which is highly inefficient. Also, it initializes DomainObject object graph parent which is not even marked as Eager.

Disabling fetch=FetchType.EAGER on authorityList disabled the additional per-user queries, but I still want it eagerly fetched for all other queries.

EntityGraphType.Fetch's javadoc says:

When the javax.persistence.fetchgraph property is used to specify an entity graph, attributes that are specified by attribute nodes of the entity graph are treated as FetchType.EAGER and attributes that are not specified are treated as FetchType.LAZY

however clearly this is not the case for me


Hibernate : Force lazy-loadding on eager field <-- Doesn't have a solution

Fetch Type LAZY still causes Eager loading Hibernate Spring data <-- claims the problem is that the lazy attribute was loaded by viewing, however in my case, I stepped through in hibernate, and it was during materialization of the User object

2 Answers 2

2

You cant make an EAGER assosciation LAZY. I suggest you make it LAZY and in all queries where you want it EAGERly JOIN FETCH the authoritiesList so they are effectively EAGER then.

Another option is a subentity which is basically the same as your current user entity, mapped to the same DB table but without the relationship you dont want:

@Entity
@Table(name="SAME_TABLE_AS_USER_ENTITY")
class BasicUser{
  private String name;  

  @ManyToOne
  private UserGroup grup;

}

Another option would be inheritance.

2
  • what about EntityGraphType.Fetch. doesn't it specifially say it will only eagerly load the mentioned attributes, and the rest will be lazy-loaded?
    – f.khantsis
    Jan 19, 2017 at 16:03
  • From javax.persistence.QueryHints.HINT_FETCHGRAPH: Hint providing a "fetchgraph" EntityGraph. Attributes explicitly specified as AttributeNodes are treated as FetchType.EAGER (via join fetch or subsequent select). Note: Currently, attributes that are not specified are treated as FetchType.LAZY or FetchType.EAGER depending on the attribute’s definition in metadata, rather than forcing FetchType.LAZY.
    – Zon
    Aug 23, 2019 at 9:32
0

I think I finally understand. spring-data's EntityGraphTypes refer to different things. This enum is just a shortcut for the following jpa query hints

  • javax.persistence.fetchgraph refers to how the query is built,
  • javax.persistance.loadgraph refers to how the objects are populated from the result set.

so there is no answer past what @Robert_Niestroj recommended

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