I have three tables
CREATE TABLE "ingredient" (
"id" INTEGER GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY(START WITH 1, INCREMENT BY 1) PRIMARY KEY,
"ingredient" VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL
);
CREATE TABLE "pizza" (
"id" INTEGER GENERATED BY DEFAULT AS IDENTITY(START WITH 1, INCREMENT BY 1) PRIMARY KEY,
"pizza" VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL
);
CREATE TABLE "pizza_structure" (
"pizza_id" INT NOT NULL,
"ingredient_id" INT NOT NULL,
"amount" INT NOT NULL
);
how to join them, to get Pizzas structure as a Map
#Entity
#Table(name = "ingredient")
public class Ingredient{
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
private Long id;
private String name;
public Ingredient() {
}
}
#Entity
#Table(name = "pizza")
public class Pizza {
#Id
#GeneratedValue
private Long id;
private String name;
#OneToMany ????
private Map<Ingredient, Integer> pizzaStructure;
public Pizza() {
}
public Pizza(String name, Map<Long, Integer> pizzaStructure) {
this.name = name;
this.pizzaStructure = pizzaStructure;
}
}
do I need to create #Embeddable class PizzaStructure, if yes when how to use it?
now I'm getting an error
Invocation of init method failed; nested exception is org.hibernate.AnnotationException: Use of #OneToMany or #ManyToMany targeting an unmapped class:
how to join them, to get Pizzas structure as a Map
It seems to look like this:
#ElementCollection
#CollectionTable(name = "pizza_structure", joinColumns = {#JoinColumn(name = "pizza_id")})
#Column(name = "amount")
#MapKeyJoinColumn(name = "ingredient_id")
private Map<Ingredient, Integer> pizzaStructure;
do I need to create #Embeddable class PizzaStructure
No.
More info is here: Hibernate User Guide - Maps.
Note that table pizza_structure should have foreign keys to pizza and ingredient tables and also unique constrain of pizza_id and ingredient_id, like this (it's postgresql dialect):
create table pizza_structure
(
pizza_id ... constraint fk_structure_pizza references pizza,
ingredient_id ... constraint fk_structure_ingredient references ingredient,
amount ...,
constraint pizza_structure_pkey primary key (pizza_id, ingredient_id)
);
You have a manyToMany relationship between pizza and ingredient and an additional column in your relationship.
I found a similar question here: JPA 2.0 many-to-many with extra column
(I would comment, but i do not have enough reputation.)
Given these two tables:
CREATE TABLE `soc` (
`id` INT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`name` VARCHAR(32),
PRIMARY KEY (`id`));
CREATE TABLE `soc_attitude` (
`soc_id` INT NOT NULL,
`target_soc_id` INT NOT NULL,
`attitude` INT,
PRIMARY KEY (`soc_id`,`target_soc_id`));
In the Soc class, I want to get all rows matching this.soc_id from the soc_attitude table using a field like this:
private Map<Integer,Integer> attitudes;
Where the key of the map is target_soc_id and the value is attitude.
I got as far as this:
#Entity
#Table(name = "soc")
public class Soc {
#Id
#Column( name="id")
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private Integer id;
#Column(name="name")
private String name;
#ElementCollection
#CollectionTable(name="soc_attitude",joinColumns=#JoinColumn(name="soc_id"))
#Column(name="attitude")
private Map<Integer,Integer> attitudes;
But I think this will make soc_id the key and attitude the value.
What annotations do I use? (using Hibernate 4.3.11.Final)
Use #MapKeyColumn
Try this:
#ElementCollection
#CollectionTable(name="soc_attitude",joinColumns=#JoinColumn(name="soc_id"))
#Column(name="attitude")
#MapKeyColumn(name="target_soc_id")
private Map<Integer,Integer> attitudes;
My entity:
#Entity
#Table(name = "eh_portal")
public class PortalEntity {
#Id
#Column(name = "id", columnDefinition = "CHAR(36)")
private UUID id; //java.util.UUID;
#Column(name = "name")
private String name;
#Column(name = "url")
private String url;
// -- Constructor for Hibernate --
protected PortalEntity() {
}
// -- Constructor for new entity in service code --
public PortalEntity(final UUID id) {
this.id = id;
}
.... getters and setters ommited
}
Respository is Spring DATA JPA:
public interface PortalRepository extends CrudRepository<PortalEntity, UUID> {
}
MYSQL 5 Database table definition:
CREATE TABLE `eh_portal` (
`id` char(36) NOT NULL COMMENT 'UUID',
`name` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
`url` varchar(255) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`),
UNIQUE KEY `url_UNIQUE` (`url`)
) ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8
The problem is, Hibernate is returning obviously wrong data - see screenshots below
Mysql workbench:
Actual web page where I get entities thru Spring Data JPA:
You can see that UUIDs are obviously differrent, while other columns are correct.
What is wrong here? (Spring 4, Hibernate 4, Spring DATA JPA, Mysql 5)
Try using #Type(type="uuid-char").
I having issues in mapping a mysql SET type to Java Set using JPA
To illustrate my question i frame a random example below
Here is a table which has a column genre which is of type Set (i.e:it will be a collection of Strings)
CREATE TABLE `MusicCD` (
`id` int(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
`period` ENUM('Classical', 'Modern','Antique') NOT NULL,
`genre` SET('horror','thriller','comedy','drama','romance') ,
PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
)
Below is the entity class used for the mapping
#Entity
#Table(name = "MusicCD")
class MusicCD {
private long id;
private Period period;
private Set<String> genre;
//other getter setters //
#Column(name = "genre")
#ElementCollection(targetClass = String.class, fetch = FetchType.EAGER)
public Set<String> getGenre() {
return genre;
}
public void setGenre(Set<String> genre) {
this.genre = genre;
}
}
With this mapping there is no exception but the set is empty in the entity object because the get query sent by JPA/hibernate sents query for all fields in table MusicCD but for the genre it sends a separate query to table MusicCD_genre
When i see the sql schema there is a autogenerated table MusicCD_genre which is empty.
Sending a sql select query for genre on MusicCD returns the genres.
So how does the Set data type in sql work and what is the correct annotation to map it?
Update:
I also tried
#TypeDefs({#TypeDef(name = "javaSet", typeClass = HashSet.class)})
and annotate the getter with
#Type(type = "javaSet")
but this doesn't work with EOFException during de-serialization.
This might work by replacing the HashSet with correct type to deserialize to.
I know it's an old question, but I prefer treat these ´MySQL special type´ columns in the getters/setters when the most use of them would be in java code.
#Entity
#Table(name = "MusicCD")
class MusicCD {
/*...*/
#Column(name = "genre")
private String genreStr;
/*...*/
public Set<String> getGenre() {
if(genreStr == null)
return Collections.emptySet();
else
return Collections.unmodifiableSet(
new HashSet<String>(Arrays.asList(genreStr.split(",")))
);
}
public void setGenre(Set<String> genre) {
if(genre == null)
genreStr = null;
else
genreStr = String.join(",", genre);
}
}
I use the immutable version of Set, because that avoids trying alter the set values without actually alter the DB.
I'm facing what I think is a simple problem with Hibernate, but can't solve it (Hibernate forums being unreachable certainly doesn't help).
I have a simple class I'd like to persist, but keep getting:
SEVERE: Field 'id' doesn't have a default value
Exception in thread "main" org.hibernate.exception.GenericJDBCException: could not insert: [hibtest.model.Mensagem]
at org.hibernate.exception.SQLStateConverter.handledNonSpecificException(SQLStateConverter.java:103)
at org.hibernate.exception.SQLStateConverter.convert(SQLStateConverter.java:91)
[ a bunch more ]
Caused by: java.sql.SQLException: Field 'id' doesn't have a default value
[ a bunch more ]
The relevant code for the persisted class is:
package hibtest.model;
import javax.persistence.Entity;
import javax.persistence.GeneratedValue;
import javax.persistence.Id;
import javax.persistence.Inheritance;
import javax.persistence.InheritanceType;
#Entity
#Inheritance(strategy = InheritanceType.JOINED)
public class Mensagem {
protected Long id;
protected Mensagem() { }
#Id
#GeneratedValue
public Long getId() {
return id;
}
public Mensagem setId(Long id) {
this.id = id;
return this;
}
}
And the actual running code is just plain:
SessionFactory factory = new AnnotationConfiguration()
.configure()
.buildSessionFactory();
{
Session session = factory.openSession();
Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();
Mensagem msg = new Mensagem("YARR!");
session.save(msg);
tx.commit();
session.close();
}
I tried some "strategies" within the GeneratedValue annotation but it just doesn't seem to work. Initializing id doesn't help either! (eg Long id = 20L).
Could anyone shed some light?
EDIT 2: confirmed: messing with#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.XXX) doesn't solve it
SOLVED: recreating the database solved the problem
Sometimes changes made to the model or to the ORM may not reflect accurately on the database even after an execution of SchemaUpdate.
If the error actually seems to lack a sensible explanation, try recreating the database (or at least creating a new one) and scaffolding it with SchemaExport.
If you want MySQL to automatically produce primary keys then you have to tell it when creating the table. You don't have to do this in Oracle.
On the Primary Key you have to include AUTO_INCREMENT. See the example below.
CREATE TABLE `supplier`
(
`ID` int(11) NOT NULL **AUTO_INCREMENT**,
`FIRSTNAME` varchar(60) NOT NULL,
`SECONDNAME` varchar(100) NOT NULL,
`PROPERTYNUM` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`STREETNAME` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`CITY` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`COUNTY` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`COUNTRY` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`POSTCODE` varchar(50) DEFAULT NULL,
`HomePHONENUM` bigint(20) DEFAULT NULL,
`WorkPHONENUM` bigint(20) DEFAULT NULL,
`MobilePHONENUM` bigint(20) DEFAULT NULL,
`EMAIL` varchar(100) DEFAULT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (`ID`)
)
ENGINE=InnoDB DEFAULT CHARSET=latin1;
Here's the Entity
package com.keyes.jpa;
import java.io.Serializable;
import javax.persistence.*;
import java.math.BigInteger;
/**
* The persistent class for the parkingsupplier database table.
*
*/
#Entity
#Table(name = "supplier")
public class supplier implements Serializable
{
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
#Id
**#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)**
#Column(name = "ID")
private long id;
#Column(name = "CITY")
private String city;
#Column(name = "COUNTRY")
private String country;
#Column(name = "COUNTY")
private String county;
#Column(name = "EMAIL")
private String email;
#Column(name = "FIRSTNAME")
private String firstname;
#Column(name = "HomePHONENUM")
private BigInteger homePHONENUM;
#Column(name = "MobilePHONENUM")
private BigInteger mobilePHONENUM;
#Column(name = "POSTCODE")
private String postcode;
#Column(name = "PROPERTYNUM")
private String propertynum;
#Column(name = "SECONDNAME")
private String secondname;
#Column(name = "STREETNAME")
private String streetname;
#Column(name = "WorkPHONENUM")
private BigInteger workPHONENUM;
public supplier()
{
}
public long getId()
{
return this.id;
}
public void setId(long id)
{
this.id = id;
}
public String getCity()
{
return this.city;
}
public void setCity(String city)
{
this.city = city;
}
public String getCountry()
{
return this.country;
}
public void setCountry(String country)
{
this.country = country;
}
public String getCounty()
{
return this.county;
}
public void setCounty(String county)
{
this.county = county;
}
public String getEmail()
{
return this.email;
}
public void setEmail(String email)
{
this.email = email;
}
public String getFirstname()
{
return this.firstname;
}
public void setFirstname(String firstname)
{
this.firstname = firstname;
}
public BigInteger getHomePHONENUM()
{
return this.homePHONENUM;
}
public void setHomePHONENUM(BigInteger homePHONENUM)
{
this.homePHONENUM = homePHONENUM;
}
public BigInteger getMobilePHONENUM()
{
return this.mobilePHONENUM;
}
public void setMobilePHONENUM(BigInteger mobilePHONENUM)
{
this.mobilePHONENUM = mobilePHONENUM;
}
public String getPostcode()
{
return this.postcode;
}
public void setPostcode(String postcode)
{
this.postcode = postcode;
}
public String getPropertynum()
{
return this.propertynum;
}
public void setPropertynum(String propertynum)
{
this.propertynum = propertynum;
}
public String getSecondname()
{
return this.secondname;
}
public void setSecondname(String secondname)
{
this.secondname = secondname;
}
public String getStreetname()
{
return this.streetname;
}
public void setStreetname(String streetname)
{
this.streetname = streetname;
}
public BigInteger getWorkPHONENUM()
{
return this.workPHONENUM;
}
public void setWorkPHONENUM(BigInteger workPHONENUM)
{
this.workPHONENUM = workPHONENUM;
}
}
Take a look at GeneratedValue's strategy. It typically looks something like:
#GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.IDENTITY)
you must be using update in your hbm2ddl property. make the changes and update it to Create so that it can create the table.
<property name="hbm2ddl.auto">create</property>
It worked for me.
Dropping the table from the database manually and then re-running the application worked for me. In my case table was not created properly(with constraints) I guess.
I had this issue. My mistake was i had set the insertable and updatable fileds as false and was trying to set the field in the request. This field is set as NON NULL in DB.
#ManyToOne
#JoinColumn(name="roles_id", referencedColumnName = "id", insertable = false, updatable = false, nullable=false)
#JsonBackReference
private Role role;
Later I changed it to - insertable = true, updatable = true
#ManyToOne
#JoinColumn(name="roles_id", referencedColumnName = "id", insertable = true, updatable = true, nullable=false)
#JsonBackReference
//#JsonIgnore
private Role role;
It worked perfectly later.
I came here because of the error message, turns out I had two tables with the same name.
I had the same problem. I found the tutorial Hibernate One-To-One Mapping Example using Foreign key Annotation and followed it step by step like below:
Create database table with this script:
create table ADDRESS (
id INT(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
street VARCHAR(250) NOT NULL,
city VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
country VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id)
);
create table STUDENT (
id INT(11) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
name VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
entering_date DATE NOT NULL,
nationality TEXT NOT NULL,
code VARCHAR(30) NOT NULL,
address_id INT(11) NOT NULL,
PRIMARY KEY (id),
CONSTRAINT student_address FOREIGN KEY (address_id) REFERENCES ADDRESS (id)
);
Here is the entities with the above tables
#Entity
#Table(name = "STUDENT")
public class Student implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 6832006422622219737L;
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private int id;
}
#Entity
#Table(name = "ADDRESS")
public class Address {
#Id #GeneratedValue
#Column(name = "ID")
private long id;
}
The problem was resolved.
Notice: The primary key must be set to AUTO_INCREMENT
Another suggestion is to check that you use a valid type for the auto-generated field. Remember that it doesn't work with String, but it works with Long:
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
public Long id;
#Constraints.Required
public String contents;
The above syntax worked for generating tables in MySQL using Hibernate as a JPA 2.0 provider.
Just add not-null constraint
I had the same problem. I just added not-null constraint in xml mapping. It worked
<set name="phone" cascade="all" lazy="false" >
<key column="id" not-null="true" />
<one-to-many class="com.practice.phone"/>
</set>
Maybe that is the problem with the table schema. drop the table and rerun the application.
In addition to what is mentioned above, do not forget while creating sql table to make the AUTO INCREMENT as in this example
CREATE TABLE MY_SQL_TABLE (
USER_ID INTEGER NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT PRIMARY KEY,
FNAME VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL,
LNAME VARCHAR(20) NOT NULL,
EMAIL VARCHAR(50) NOT NULL
);
When your field is not nullable it requires a default value to be specified on table creation. Recreate a table with AUTO_INCREMENT properly initialized so DB will not require default value since it will generate it by itself and never put NULL there.
CREATE TABLE Persons (
Personid int NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
LastName varchar(255) NOT NULL,
FirstName varchar(255),
Age int,
PRIMARY KEY (Personid)
);
https://www.w3schools.com/sql/sql_autoincrement.asp
I solved it changuing #GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY) by #GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
By the way i didn't need to put it to create, just:
spring.jpa.hibernate.ddl-auto: update
Please check whether the Default value for the column id in particular table.if not make it as default
I had the same problem. I was using a join table and all I had with a row id field and two foreign keys. I don't know the exact caused but I did the following
Upgraded MySQL to community 5.5.13
Rename the class and table
Make sure I had hashcode and equals methods
#Entity
#Table(name = "USERGROUP")
public class UserGroupBean implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
#Column(name = "USERGROUP_ID")
private Long usergroup_id;
#Column(name = "USER_ID")
private Long user_id;
#Column(name = "GROUP_ID")
private Long group_id;
The same exception was thrown if a DB table had an old unremoved column.
For example:
attribute_id NOT NULL BIGINT(20), and attributeId NOT NULL BIGINT(20),
After removing the not used attribute, in my case contractId, the problem was resolved.
This happened to me with a #ManyToMany relationship. I had annotated one of the fields in the relationship with #JoinTable, I removed that and used the mappedBy attribute on #ManyToMany instead.
I tried the code and in my case the code below solve the issue. I had not settled the schema properly
#Entity
#Table(name="table"
,catalog="databasename"
)
Please try to add ,catalog="databasename" the same as I did.
,catalog="databasename"
In my case,
I altered that offending tables and the field "id" in question I made it AUTO_INCREMENT, I still need to figure out why on deployment time it was not making it "AUTO_INCREMENT" so that I have to do it by myself!
What about this:
<set name="fieldName" cascade="all">
<key column="id" not-null="true" />
<one-to-many class="com.yourClass"/>
</set>
I hope it helps you.
Try to change Long object type to long primitive type (if using primitives is ok for you).
I had the same problem and changing type helped me.
I had this issue, by mistake I had placed #Transient annotation above that particular attribute. In my case this error make sense.
"Field 'id' doesn't have a default value" because you didn't declare GenerationType.IDENTITY in GeneratedValue Annotation.
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private int id;
This issue is because sometimes you need to again update/create the database or sometimes if you have added the field in db table but not not entity class then it can not insert any null value or zero so this error came.
So check both side.Db and Entity class.
i have got such error in GCP cloud sql when model field didn't match correct table field in db.
Example:
when in model field is fieldName
table in db should have field field_name
Fixing table field name helped me.
I solved similar problem, when I altered the database column type , and did not add auto_increment. After adding back auto_increment in the alter table command (as in my original table creation) it worked
In my case I have not added the below property in my application.properties file:
spring.jpa.database-platform = org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5InnoDBDialect
And added the following annotation to my entity class's Id column:
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
And after adding this I have also drop my table manually from datatbase and run my project again that creates a new table with all default constraints for the table.
To delete just delete your schema is a really bad suggestion. There is a problem and it's best to find and fix it.
In my case I was using Envers this creates an Audit table for when entries are updated. But this audit table does not get updated itself it seems when the schema updates (At least not ID and it's relationships)
I just eddited the audit tables offending property and done. Everything back to normal.
To find what the issue is turn the following properties on in application.properties file
spring.jpa.show-sql=true
spring.jpa.properties.hibernate.format_sql=true
logging.level.org.hibernate.SQL=DEBUG
logging.level.org.hibernate.type.descriptor.sql.BasicBinder=TRACE
This will show you what SQL it is trying to executing and hopefully it will provide clarity on real issue.
Add a method hashCode() to your Entity Bean Class and retry it