Hibernate - Map Mappings



A Map is a java collection that stores elements in key-value pairs and does not allow duplicate elements in the list. The Map interface provides three collection views, which allow a map's contents to be viewed as a set of keys, collection of values, or set of key-value mappings.

A Map is mapped with a <map> element in the mapping table and an unordered map can be initialized with java.util.HashMap.

Define RDBMS Tables

Consider a situation where we need to store our employee records in EMPLOYEE table which will have following structure −

create table EMPLOYEE (
   id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
   first_name VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
   last_name  VARCHAR(20) default NULL,
   salary     INT  default NULL,
   PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

Further, assume each employee can have one or more certificate associated with him/her. We will store certificate related information in a separate table which has following structure −

create table CERTIFICATE (
   id INT NOT NULL auto_increment,
   certificate_type VARCHAR(40) default NULL,
   certificate_name VARCHAR(30) default NULL,
   employee_id INT default NULL,
   PRIMARY KEY (id)
);

There will be one-to-many relationship between EMPLOYEE and CERTIFICATE objects.

Define POJO Classes

Let us implement a POJO class Employee, which will be used to persist the objects related to EMPLOYEE table and having a collection of certificates in List variable.

import java.util.*;

public class Employee {
   private int id;
   private String firstName; 
   private String lastName;   
   private int salary;
   private Map certificates;

   public Employee() {}
   
   public Employee(String fname, String lname, int salary) {
      this.firstName = fname;
      this.lastName = lname;
      this.salary = salary;
   }
   
   public int getId() {
      return id;
   }
   
   public void setId( int id ) {
      this.id = id;
   }
   
   public String getFirstName() {
      return firstName;
   }
   
   public void setFirstName( String first_name ) {
      this.firstName = first_name;
   }
   
   public String getLastName() {
      return lastName;
   }
   
   public void setLastName( String last_name ) {
      this.lastName = last_name;
   }
   
   public int getSalary() {
      return salary;
   }
  
   public void setSalary( int salary ) {
      this.salary = salary;
   }

   public Map getCertificates() {
      return certificates;
   }
   
   public void setCertificates( Map certificates ) {
      this.certificates = certificates;
   }
}

We need to define another POJO class corresponding to CERTIFICATE table so that certificate objects can be stored and retrieved into the CERTIFICATE table.

public class Certificate{
   private int id;
   private String name; 

   public Certificate() {}
   
   public Certificate(String name) {
      this.name = name;
   }
   
   public int getId() {
      return id;
   }
   
   public void setId( int id ) {
      this.id = id;
   }
   
   public String getName() {
      return name;
   }
   
   public void setName( String name ) {
      this.name = name;
   }
}

Define Hibernate Mapping File

Let us develop our mapping file which instructs Hibernate how to map the defined classes to the database tables. The <map> element will be used to define the rule for the Map used.

<?xml version = "1.0" encoding = "utf-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE hibernate-mapping PUBLIC 
"-//Hibernate/Hibernate Mapping DTD//EN"
"http://www.hibernate.org/dtd/hibernate-mapping-3.0.dtd"> 

<hibernate-mapping>
   <class name = "Employee" table = "EMPLOYEE">
      <meta attribute = "class-description">
         This class contains the employee detail. 
      </meta>
      <id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">
         <generator class="native"/>
      </id>
      <map name = "certificates" cascade="all">
         <key column = "employee_id"/>
         <index column = "certificate_type" type = "string"/>
         <one-to-many class="Certificate"/>
      </map>
      <property name = "firstName" column = "first_name" type = "string"/>
      <property name = "lastName" column = "last_name" type = "string"/>
      <property name = "salary" column = "salary" type = "int"/>
   </class>

   <class name = "Certificate" table = "CERTIFICATE">
      <meta attribute = "class-description">
         This class contains the certificate records. 
      </meta>
      <id name = "id" type = "int" column = "id">
         <generator class="native"/>
      </id>
      <property name = "name" column = "certificate_name" type = "string"/>
   </class>

</hibernate-mapping>

You should save the mapping document in a file with the format <classname>.hbm.xml. We saved our mapping document in the file Employee.hbm.xml. You are already familiar with most of the mapping detail but let us see all the elements of mapping file once again −

  • The mapping document is an XML document having <hibernate-mapping> as the root element which contains two <class> elements corresponding to each class.

  • The <class> elements are used to define specific mappings from a Java classes to the database tables. The Java class name is specified using the name attribute of the class element and the database table name is specified using the table attribute.

  • The <meta> element is optional element and can be used to create the class description.

  • The <id> element maps the unique ID attribute in class to the primary key of the database table. The name attribute of the id element refers to the property in the class and the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute holds the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL data type.

  • The <generator> element within the id element is used to generate the primary key values automatically. The class attribute of the generator element is set to native to let hibernate pick up either identity, sequence or hilo algorithm to create primary key depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.

  • The <property> element is used to map a Java class property to a column in the database table. The name attribute of the element refers to the property in the class and the column attribute refers to the column in the database table. The type attribute holds the hibernate mapping type, this mapping types will convert from Java to SQL data type.

  • The <map> element is used to set the relationship between Certificate and Employee classes. We used the cascade attribute in the <map> element to tell Hibernate to persist the Certificate objects at the same time as the Employee objects. The name attribute is set to the defined Map variable in the parent class, in our case it is certificates.

  • The <index> element is used to represents the key parts of the key/value map pair. The key will be stored in the column certificate_type using a type of string.

  • The <key> element is the column in the CERTIFICATE table that holds the foreign key to the parent object ie. table EMPLOYEE.

  • The <one-to-many> element indicates that one Employee object relates to many Certificate objects and, as such, the Certificate object must have a Employee parent associated with it. You can use either <one-to-one>, <many-to-one> or <many-to-many> elements based on your requirement.

Create Application Class

Finally, we will create our application class with the main() method to run the application. We will use this application to save an Employee record alongwith a list of certificates and then we will apply CRUD operations on that record.

import java.util.*;
 
import org.hibernate.HibernateException; 
import org.hibernate.Session; 
import org.hibernate.Transaction;
import org.hibernate.SessionFactory;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;

public class ManageEmployee {
   private static SessionFactory factory; 
   public static void main(String[] args) {
      try{
         factory = new Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory();
      }catch (Throwable ex) { 
         System.err.println("Failed to create sessionFactory object." + ex);
         throw new ExceptionInInitializerError(ex); 
      }
      ManageEmployee ME = new ManageEmployee();
      /* Let us have a set of certificates for the first employee  */
      HashMap set = new HashMap();
      set.put("ComputerScience", new Certificate("MCA"));
      set.put("BusinessManagement", new Certificate("MBA"));
      set.put("ProjectManagement", new Certificate("PMP"));
     
      /* Add employee records in the database */
      Integer empID = ME.addEmployee("Manoj", "Kumar", 4000, set);

      /* List down all the employees */
      ME.listEmployees();

      /* Update employee's salary records */
      ME.updateEmployee(empID, 5000);

      /* List down all the employees */
      ME.listEmployees();

   }

   /* Method to add an employee record in the database */
   public Integer addEmployee(String fname, String lname, int salary, HashMap cert){
      Session session = factory.openSession();
      Transaction tx = null;
      Integer employeeID = null;
      try{
         tx = session.beginTransaction();
         Employee employee = new Employee(fname, lname, salary);
         employee.setCertificates(cert);
         employeeID = (Integer) session.save(employee); 
         tx.commit();
      }catch (HibernateException e) {
         if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
         e.printStackTrace(); 
      }finally {
         session.close(); 
      }
      return employeeID;
   }

   /* Method to list all the employees detail */
   public void listEmployees( ){
      Session session = factory.openSession();
      Transaction tx = null;
      try{
         tx = session.beginTransaction();
         List employees = session.createQuery("FROM Employee").list(); 
         for (Iterator iterator1 = employees.iterator(); iterator1.hasNext();){
            Employee employee = (Employee) iterator1.next(); 
            System.out.print("First Name: " + employee.getFirstName()); 
            System.out.print("  Last Name: " + employee.getLastName()); 
            System.out.println("  Salary: " + employee.getSalary());
            Map ec = employee.getCertificates();
            System.out.println("Certificate: " + 
              (((Certificate)ec.get("ComputerScience")).getName()));
            System.out.println("Certificate: " + 
              (((Certificate)ec.get("BusinessManagement")).getName()));
            System.out.println("Certificate: " + 
              (((Certificate)ec.get("ProjectManagement")).getName()));
         }
         tx.commit();
      }catch (HibernateException e) {
         if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
         e.printStackTrace(); 
      }finally {
         session.close(); 
      }
   }
   /* Method to update salary for an employee */
   public void updateEmployee(Integer EmployeeID, int salary ){
      Session session = factory.openSession();
      Transaction tx = null;
      try{
         tx = session.beginTransaction();
         Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID); 
         employee.setSalary( salary );
         session.update(employee);
         tx.commit();
      }catch (HibernateException e) {
         if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
         e.printStackTrace(); 
      }finally {
         session.close(); 
      }
   }
   /* Method to delete an employee from the records */
   public void deleteEmployee(Integer EmployeeID){
      Session session = factory.openSession();
      Transaction tx = null;
      try{
         tx = session.beginTransaction();
         Employee employee = (Employee)session.get(Employee.class, EmployeeID); 
         session.delete(employee); 
         tx.commit();
      }catch (HibernateException e) {
         if (tx!=null) tx.rollback();
         e.printStackTrace(); 
      }finally {
         session.close(); 
      }
   }
}

Compilation and Execution

Here are the steps to compile and run the above mentioned application. Make sure you have set PATH and CLASSPATH appropriately before proceeding for the compilation and execution.

  • Create hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file as explained in configuration chapter.

  • Create Employee.hbm.xml mapping file as shown above.

  • Create Employee.java source file as shown above and compile it.

  • Create Certificate.java source file as shown above and compile it.

  • Create ManageEmployee.java source file as shown above and compile it.

  • Execute ManageEmployee binary to run the program.

You would get the following result on the screen, and same time records would be created in EMPLOYEE and CERTIFICATE tables.

$java ManageEmployee
.......VARIOUS LOG MESSAGES WILL DISPLAY HERE........

First Name: Manoj  Last Name: Kumar  Salary: 4000
Certificate: MCA
Certificate: MBA
Certificate: PMP
First Name: Manoj  Last Name: Kumar  Salary: 5000
Certificate: MCA
Certificate: MBA
Certificate: PMP

If you check your EMPLOYEE and CERTIFICATE tables, they should have following records −

mysql> select * from EMPLOYEE;
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
| id | first_name | last_name | salary |
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
| 60 | Manoj      | Kumar     |   5000 |
+----+------------+-----------+--------+
1 row in set (0.00 sec)

mysql>select * from CERTIFICATE;
+----+--------------------+------------------+-------------+
| id | certificate_type   | certificate_name | employee_id |
+----+--------------------+------------------+-------------+
| 16 | ProjectManagement  | PMP              |          60 |
| 17 | BusinessManagement | MBA              |          60 |
| 18 | ComputerScience    | MCA              |          60 |
+----+--------------------+------------------+-------------+
3 rows in set (0.00 sec)

mysql>
hibernate_or_mappings.htm
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