35

I'm trying to run a query that checks if some conditions are true and returns a simple boolean result as output. What makes it slightly tricky is that one of the conditions is to test for whether no results are returned for a set of criteria.

I'm currently using JPA-2.0 with hibernate as my provider, backed by MySQL. I have gotten an example query working fine in MySQL, but when trying to get it running in JPQL it flops. The MySQL query looks a bit like this:

Select exists(Select statement with criteria) 
  or not exists(Select statement with criteria);

I also got the same output using CASE, but as JPQL doesn't support that statement.

Anyways, when I try to use a similar query in JPQL I get the error:

"unexpected end of subtree"

which from my understanding means that something is missing in the query. Does anyone have any idea how to fix it?

8 Answers 8

29

You can do a boolean query using a case expression.

As of JPA 2.0 (Java EE 6) you can create a TypedQuery .

String query = "select case when (count(*) > 0)  then true else false end from ......"
TypedQuery<Boolean> booleanQuery = entityManager.createQuery(query, Boolean.class);
boolean exists = booleanQuery.getSingleResult();

In JPA 1.0 (Java EE 5) you must use an untyped query.

Query booleanQuery = entityManager.createQuery(query);
boolean exists = (Boolean) booleanQuery.getSingleResult();
3
  • 2
    A more readable way is : "select (count(*) > 0) from ..."
    – Reda
    Sep 1, 2020 at 9:33
  • 2
    @Reda This would still search the whole index/table although the DB could and should stop after it found the first result.
    – T3rm1
    Jan 25, 2022 at 13:16
  • @T3rm1 yes you are right, but unfortunately I don't know if there is another solution to that problem
    – Reda
    Jan 25, 2022 at 15:03
9

This answer is obsolete. Yes, it is possible. Please refer to the correct answer from Rene Link


No, it is not possible.

Refer to the JPQL BNF documentation from oracle.

simple_cond_expression ::= comparison_expression | between_expression | like_expression | in_expression | null_comparison_expression | empty_collection_comparison_expression | collection_member_expression | exists_expression

exists_expression ::= [NOT] EXISTS(subquery)

7

In a project with Hibernate 5.2 (which supports JPA 2.1), and Spring Data Jpa 2.0.6, I successfully used this JPQL query:

@Query("SELECT COUNT(c) > 0 FROM Contract c WHERE c.person.id = :pid")
Boolean existContractForPerson(@Param("pid") Long personId);

In the logs, I read that the produced native query is the following:

select count(contract0_.contract_id)>0 as col_0_0_ from contracts contract0_ where contract0_.fk_person_id=?
3
3

Alternatively you could use a select count(...) and test whether it returns 0. This should be almost as efficient without requiring to write much more code (in fact, the query itself will probably look simpler).

2
  • 8
    Not necessarily. exists(...) will probably exist after finding the first result. count(...) will have to scan many more index/table rows to determine the actual count. Aug 18, 2015 at 7:56
  • 2
    @KonradGarus: It doesn't really matter though, when count(..) is the only solution that will work in JPQL anyway. So, when life gives you lemons... Nov 5, 2016 at 0:42
2

You have mismatched brackets. Try removing the one before the not (and the ones around the first exists):

select exists(Select statement with criteria) 
  or not exists(Select statement with criteria);

You don't need brackets around exists()

2
2

In a project that uses

    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.hibernate</groupId>
        <artifactId>hibernate-core</artifactId>
        <version>4.2.4.Final</version>
    </dependency>
    ...

I successfully used an

exists(select s.primaryKey from Something s)

clause. So it might have changed. It could also be Hibernate-proprietary. Since a lot of people use Hibernate as a persistence provider, I thought I might add this here.

1

It is more efficient for DB not counting all records. Create native query

Spring-Data-JPA

@Query(value = ".....", nativeQuery = true)

or JPA:

@NamedNativeQuery(name=.., query="..", resultClass=..)
1
  • 2
    You are trading theoretical efficiency for potential code breakage, since native query syntax is not verified until runtime.
    – Josh M.
    Jun 12, 2020 at 14:22
0

The solution with count(*) > 0 triggered full table scan in Postgres for me:

EXPLAIN ANALYSE select count(*) > 0 from msg where type = 'ALERT';

Node Type   Entity  Cost            Rows    Time        Condition
Aggregate   [NULL]  462793 - 462793 1       24606.407   [NULL]
Gather      [NULL]  462793 - 462793 3       24606.397   [NULL]
Aggregate   [NULL]  461793 - 461793 1       24560.095   [NULL]
Seq Scan    msg     0.00 - 460781   335954  24489.559   ((type)::text = 'ALERT'::text)

The proper performant way is to short-circuit scan with limit or top keyword. As pagination is not portable you have to resort to setMaxResults():

Query query = EntityManager.createQuery("select 1 from Book where ...", Integer.class);
List<Integer> tinyList = query.setFirstResult(0).setMaxResults(1).getResultList();
if (tinyList.isEmpty()) { ... }

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