22

To make it short: hibernate doesn't support projections and query by example? I found this post:

The code is this:

User usr = new User();
usr.setCity = 'TEST';
getCurrentSession().createCriteria(User.class)
.setProjection( Projections.distinct( Projections.projectionList()
.add( Projections.property("name"), "name")
.add( Projections.property("city"), "city")))
.add( Example.create(usr))

Like the other poster said, The generated sql keeps having a where class refering to just y0_= ? instead of this_.city.

I already tried several approaches, and searched the issue tracker but found nothing about this.

I even tried to use Projection alias and Transformers, but it does not work:

User usr = new User();
usr.setCity = 'TEST';
getCurrentSession().createCriteria(User.class)
.setProjection( Projections.distinct( Projections.projectionList()
.add( Projections.property("name"), "name")
.add( Projections.property("city"), "city")))
.add( Example.create(usr)).setResultTransformer(Transformers.aliasToBean(User.class));

Has anyone used projections and query by example ?

2
  • could you show the full generated sql? Commented Sep 17, 2008 at 15:56
  • I added a solution that includes the SQL generated when I was having a similar problem.
    – Ryan Cook
    Commented Jun 6, 2009 at 18:45

6 Answers 6

45

The problem seems to happen when you have an alias the same name as the objects property. Hibernate seems to pick up the alias and use it in the sql. I found this documented here and here, and I believe it to be a bug in Hibernate, although I am not sure that the Hibernate team agrees.

Either way, I have found a simple work around that works in my case. Your mileage may vary. The details are below, I tried to simplify the code for this sample so I apologize for any errors or typo's:

Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(MyClass.class)
    .setProjection(Projections.projectionList()
        .add(Projections.property("sectionHeader"), "sectionHeader")
        .add(Projections.property("subSectionHeader"), "subSectionHeader")
        .add(Projections.property("sectionNumber"), "sectionNumber"))
    .add(Restrictions.ilike("sectionHeader", sectionHeaderVar)) // <- Problem!
    .setResultTransformer(Transformers.aliasToBean(MyDTO.class));

Would produce this sql:

select
    this_.SECTION_HEADER as y1_,
    this_.SUB_SECTION_HEADER as y2_,
    this_.SECTION_NUMBER as y3_,
from
    MY_TABLE this_ 
where
    ( lower(y1_) like ? ) 

Which was causing an error: java.sql.SQLException: ORA-00904: "Y1_": invalid identifier

But, when I changed my restriction to use "this", like so:

Criteria criteria = session.createCriteria(MyClass.class)
    .setProjection(Projections.projectionList()
        .add(Projections.property("sectionHeader"), "sectionHeader")
        .add(Projections.property("subSectionHeader"), "subSectionHeader")
        .add(Projections.property("sectionNumber"), "sectionNumber"))
    .add(Restrictions.ilike("this.sectionHeader", sectionHeaderVar)) // <- Problem Solved!
    .setResultTransformer(Transformers.aliasToBean(MyDTO.class));

It produced the following sql and my problem was solved.

select
    this_.SECTION_HEADER as y1_,
    this_.SUB_SECTION_HEADER as y2_,
    this_.SECTION_NUMBER as y3_,
from
    MY_TABLE this_ 
where
    ( lower(this_.SECTION_HEADER) like ? ) 

Thats, it! A pretty simple fix to a painful problem. I don't know how this fix would translate to the query by example problem, but it may get you closer.

5
  • 2
    Paul: I'm glad it helped. I have been surprised that this answer has gone unnoticed for so long as it seems to be a big problem and this solution is not intuitive or documented.
    – Ryan Cook
    Commented Oct 9, 2009 at 15:18
  • The related Hibernate bug is hibernate.onjira.com/browse/HHH-817 and has been marked as fixed in version 3.6.0Beta4 of Hibernate.
    – FGreg
    Commented Dec 11, 2012 at 20:10
  • @RyanCook Hi! This solution works, but I was wondering if there was a workaround with Examples, as we can have as many as 10 filters (i.e 10 Restrictions) and we'd have to verify for each if the field is null or empty).
    – Tarek
    Commented Nov 19, 2013 at 13:10
  • I have kill 2 days in this issue. this keyword solve this very well. Thanks a lot @Ryan
    – Mr. Mak
    Commented Oct 31, 2017 at 13:16
  • I have another issue with Order.asc("sectionHeader"). When I use same property in Projection, Restriction & Order too. !!
    – Mr. Mak
    Commented Oct 31, 2017 at 13:18
15

Can I see your User class? This is just using restrictions below. I don't see why Restrictions would be really any different than Examples (I think null fields get ignored by default in examples though).

getCurrentSession().createCriteria(User.class)
.setProjection( Projections.distinct( Projections.projectionList()
.add( Projections.property("name"), "name")
.add( Projections.property("city"), "city")))
.add( Restrictions.eq("city", "TEST")))
.setResultTransformer(Transformers.aliasToBean(User.class))
.list();

I've never used the alaistToBean, but I just read about it. You could also just loop over the results..

List<Object> rows = criteria.list();
for(Object r: rows){
  Object[] row = (Object[]) r;
  Type t = ((<Type>) row[0]);
}

If you have to you can manually populate User yourself that way.

Its sort of hard to look into the issue without some more information to diagnose the issue.

6

The real problem here is that there is a bug in hibernate where it uses select-list aliases in the where-clause:

http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-817

Just in case someone lands here looking for answers, go look at the ticket. It took 5 years to fix but in theory it'll be in one of the next releases and then I suspect your issue will go away.

0

I'm facing a similar problem. I'm using Query by Example and I want to sort the results by a custom field. In SQL I would do something like:

select pageNo, abs(pageNo - 434) as diff
from relA
where year = 2009
order by diff

It works fine without the order-by-clause. What I got is

Criteria crit = getSession().createCriteria(Entity.class);
crit.add(exampleObject);
ProjectionList pl = Projections.projectionList();
pl.add( Projections.property("id") );
pl.add(Projections.sqlProjection("abs(`pageNo`-"+pageNo+") as diff", new String[] {"diff"}, types ));
crit.setProjection(pl);

But when I add

crit.addOrder(Order.asc("diff"));

I get a org.hibernate.QueryException: could not resolve property: diff exception. Workaround with this does not work either.

PS: as I could not find any elaborate documentation on the use of QBE for Hibernate, all the stuff above is mainly trial-and-error approach

0
ProjectionList pl = Projections.projectionList();
pl.add(Projections.property("id"));
pl.add(Projections.sqlProjection("abs(`pageNo`-" + pageNo + ") as diff", new String[] {"diff"}, types ), diff); ---- solution
crit.addOrder(Order.asc("diff"));
crit.setProjection(pl);
1
  • add aliias after sqlProjection , that will be used in Ordering
    – singh
    Commented Feb 13, 2016 at 15:22
-1

I do not really think so, what I can find is the word "this." causes the hibernate not to include any restrictions in its query, which means it got all the records lists. About the hibernate bug that was reported, I can see it's reported as fixed but I totally failed to download the Patch.

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