Some of this question is related to JPA, but it's more about approaches than technology so hopefully someone will be able to offer advice.
I'm using Spring MVC and Hibernate to power a website that allows users to create products, and product descriptions. I have a Product entity, which has a bidirectional one-to-many relationship with ProductDescription.
If when submitting a form that binds to an instance of Product, and specifies all of its ProductDescriptions, then a malicious user could enter bogus IDs for the ProductDescriptions and 'hijack' other users' data. One solution to this would be to always create the ProductDescriptions anew, so delete them when the form is submitted, and create new ones each time. This seems inefficient because of the extra delete and write operations that would be needed every time the Product is updated (even if the ProductDesciptions haven't changed).
Another alternative would be to check 'ownership' of the child entities before running an update.
How do other people get around this issue? Do most people do delete/insert, or selective update?
Here's an example of the sort of POST submission I'm talking about:
id=1
name=My Product
descriptions[0].id=123
descriptions[0].text=A lovely description of my product
descriptions[0].price=100
descriptions[1].id=123
descriptions[1].text=Another lovely description of my product in another language
descriptions[1].price=50
And an example of the kind of class I'm talking about:
public class Product
{
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
private Integer id;
@OneToMany(mappedBy = "product")
private Set<ProductDescription> descriptions;
private String name;
}
public class ProductDescription
{
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
private Integer id;
private Integer price;
@ManyToOne
private Product product;
private String text;
}