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In our (ancient) project, we use loads of select queries with HQL on Hibernate version 3.5.6-Final. Because Hibernate will do an auto-commit, because it doesn't know they are select queries, I'm in the process of rewriting all HQL select queries to Hibernate Criteria queries so it won't do in-between commits when we don't want it yet. This is pretty straight-forward in most cases, but I'm currently looking at a query like this, and I'm not sure how to transform it:

Query query = session.createQuery("select municapilityStreet"
  + " from MunicapilityStreet munStreet, Street street"
  + " where munStreet.id = street.MunicapilityStreet.id"
  + " and street.id = :streetId");
query.setParameter(":streetId", streetId);
MunicapilityStreet result = (MunicapilityStreet) query.uniqueResult();
return result;

Here what I have thus far in the process of transforming it:

Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(MunicapilityStreet.class);

// No idea what to set here to only get the "municapilityStreet" as result
criteria.setProjection(??);

// I'm not sure if this is correct. With a criteria on a single table it would have been simply "Id".
// Both tables have the column-name Id, and I'm not sure how to differentiate between them.
criteria.add(Restrictions.eq("Street.Id", streetId));

MunicapilityStreet result = (MunicapilityStreet) criteria.uniqueResult();
return result;

Maybe I should create a different question for each, but converting the above HQL query to a Criteria has three points I'm not sure about how to do:

  1. How to do a select with multiple tables (the from MunicapilityStreet munStreet, Street street part)?
  2. How to have a projection to only return a single table of the two (the select municapilityStreet part)?
  3. How to have an equal-Restriction on a column name of one table, even though both tables have the same column-name (the and street.id = :streetId part)?

1 Answer 1

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I do oppose the rewrite approach, I hope I'm not impolite doing so.

Hibernate allows to control commits (autocommit is by default off), and what you're experiencing are Entitymanager-flushes, they are auto by default and can be disabled too. And, finally, I think, there is no difference if you're running HQL or criteria queries, same machinery underneath.

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  • Is it possible to disable auto-commit for only certain queries, instead of in general? I'm sure things will break if I just disable auto-commit completely. It might solve my current issue, but may cause problems elsewhere where a flush was expected but didn't occur anymore. The problem with this project is that it's active since 2008 with barely any documentation, comments, or git messages (except for the last ~3 years). So rewriting queries is easier to verify I don't break anything else, then disabling auto-commit all-together. If I can disable it per query, that would be great though! Oct 4, 2019 at 8:40
  • 1
    since entity manager is supposed to be used [single threaded] (stackoverflow.com/questions/20997410/…) you should be able to disable it on a per-query-basis (disable, re-enable). I ran into something similar once, and as far as I remember, did it. excluded from warranty ;-) But it is way faster to test than re-writing all queries. Oct 4, 2019 at 8:44
  • Hibernate won't auto-flush when using Criterias for select queries, but when using HQL, Hibernate doesn't know whether it is a select/update/delete/etc., so it will always do an auto-flush with the native queries. At least, that's what I understood from my senior colleague and when looking at the Hibernate source code a bit. (PS: Maybe also relevant: we're using Hibernate version 3.5.6-Final - apparently.) Oct 4, 2019 at 8:56
  • The ones with session.createQuery("some query") are HQL though, right (at least, the docs above state Create a new instance of Query for the given HQL query string.)? So you're saying Hibernate should be able to tell what kind of query it is with session.createQuery("some query"), and shouldn't do auto-flushes when it's a session.createQuery("select ... from ...") or session.createQuery("from ...")? If it is supposed to know based on the String, what could be the causes of the unwanted in between flushes we get now in that case? Where should I search for in the code? Oct 4, 2019 at 9:08
  • that's right, says the spec, but then they're not native (says the spec). If you're sure about your claim, I have nothing at hand now to disprove you. Anyway, autoflush can be disabled explicitly. Oct 4, 2019 at 9:17

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