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Hibernate (framework)

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Hibernate ORM
Developer(s)Red Hat
Initial release23 May 2001; 23 years ago (2001-05-23)
Stable release
6.6.3.Final / November 21, 2024; 28 days ago (2024-11-21)[1]
Repository
Written inJava
Operating systemCross-platform (JVM)
PlatformJava Virtual Machine
TypeObject–relational mapping
LicenseGNU Lesser General Public License
Websitehibernate.org/orm/

Hibernate ORM (or simply Hibernate) is an object–relational mapping[2]: §1.2.2, [12]  tool for the Java programming language. It provides a framework for mapping an object-oriented domain model to a relational database. Hibernate handles object–relational impedance mismatch problems by replacing direct, persistent database accesses with high-level object handling functions.

Hibernate is free software that is distributed under the GNU Lesser General Public License 2.1.

Hibernate's primary feature is mapping from Java classes to database tables, and mapping from Java data types to SQL data types. Hibernate also provides data query and retrieval facilities. It generates SQL calls and relieves the developer from the manual handling and object conversion of the result set.

Mapping

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The mapping of Java classes to database tables is implemented by the configuration of an XML file or by using Java Annotations. When using an XML file, Hibernate can generate skeleton source code for the persistence classes. This is auxiliary when annotations are used. Hibernate can use the XML file or the Java annotations to maintain the database schema.

There are provided facilities to arrange one-to-many and many-to-many relationships between classes.[2]: 140–171  In addition to managing associations between objects, Hibernate can also manage reflexive associations wherein an object has a one-to-many relationship with other instances of the class type.

Hibernate supports the mapping of custom value types. This makes the following scenarios possible:

  • Overriding the default SQL type when mapping a column to a property.
  • Mapping Java Enums to columns as though they were regular properties.[2]: 89–90 
  • Mapping a single property to multiple columns.

Definition: Objects in an object-oriented application follow OOP principles, while objects in the back-end follow database normalization principles, resulting in different representation requirements. This problem is called "object–relational impedance mismatch". Mapping is a way of resolving the object–relational impedance mismatch problem.

Mapping informs the ORM tool of what Java class object to store in which database table.

Hibernate Query Language (HQL)

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Hibernate provides a SQL inspired language called Hibernate Query Language (HQL) for writing SQL-like queries against Hibernate's data objects. Criteria Queries are provided as an object-oriented alternative to HQL. Criteria Query is used to modify the objects and provide the restriction for the objects.[2]: 347–349  HQL (Hibernate Query Language) is the object-oriented version of SQL. It generates database independent queries so that there is no need to write database-specific queries. Without this capability, changing the database would require individual SQL queries to be changed as well, leading to maintenance issues.

Persistence

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Hibernate provides transparent persistence for Plain Old Java Objects (POJOs).[2]: 37–38  The only strict requirement for a persistent class is a no-argument constructor,[2]: 39  though not necessarily public. Proper behavior in some applications also requires special attention to the equals(Object obj) and hashCode() methods in the Object classes.[3] Hibernate recommends providing an identifier attribute, and this is planned to be a mandatory requirement in a future release.[4]

Collections of data objects are typically stored in Java collection classes, such as implementations of the Set and List interfaces. Java generics, introduced in Java 5, are also supported. Hibernate can be configured to lazy load associated collections.[2]: 289–293  Lazy loading is the default as of Hibernate 3.

Related objects can be configured to cascade operations from one object to the other. For example, a parent Album class object can be configured to cascade its save and delete operations to its child Track class objects.

Integration

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Hibernate can be used both in standalone Java applications and in Java EE applications using servlets, EJB session beans, and JBI service components. It can also be included as a feature in other programming languages. For example, Adobe integrated Hibernate into version 9 of ColdFusion (which runs on J2EE app servers) with an abstraction layer of new functions and syntax added into CFML.

Entities and components

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In Hibernate jargon, an entity is a stand-alone object in Hibernate's persistent mechanism which can be manipulated independently of other objects.[2]: 62–74  In contrast, a component is subordinate to an entity and can be manipulated only with respect to that entity. For example, an Album object may represent an entity; but the Tracks object associated with the Album objects would represent a component of the Album entity, if it is assumed that Tracks can only be saved or retrieved from the database through the Album object. Unlike J2EE, Hibernate can switch databases.

History

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Hibernate was started in 2001 by Gavin King with colleagues from Cirrus Technologies as an alternative to using EJB2-style entity beans. The original goal was to offer better persistence capabilities than those offered by EJB2; by simplifying the complexities and supplementing certain missing features.

In early 2003, the Hibernate development team began Hibernate2 releases, which offered many significant improvements over the first release.

JBoss, Inc. (now part of Red Hat) later hired the lead Hibernate developers in order to further its development.

In 2005, Hibernate version 3.0 was released. Key features included a new Interceptor/Callback architecture, user defined filters, and JDK 5.0 Annotations (Java's metadata feature). As of 2010, Hibernate 3 (version 3.5.0 and up) was a certified implementation of the Java Persistence API 2.0 specification via a wrapper for the Core module which provides conformity with the JSR 317 standard.[5]

In Dec 2011, Hibernate Core 4.0.0 Final was released. This includes new features such as multi-tenancy support, introduction of ServiceRegistry (a major change in how Hibernate builds and manages "services"), better session opening from SessionFactory, improved integration via org.hibernate.integrator.spi.Integrator and auto discovery, internationalization support, message codes in logging, and a more distinction between the API, SPI or implementation classes.[6]

In December 2012, Hibernate ORM 4.1.9 Final was released.[7]

In Mar 2013, Hibernate ORM 4.2 Final was released.[8]

In December 2013, Hibernate ORM 4.3.0 Final was released.[9] It features Java Persistence API 2.1.

In September 2015, Hibernate ORM 5.0.2 Final was released. It has improved bootstrapping, hibernate-java8, hibernate-spatial, Karaf support.

In November 2018, Hibernate ORM 5.1.17 Final was released. This is the final release of the 5.1 series.

In October 2018, Hibernate ORM 5.3 Final was released. It featured Java Persistence API 2.2 inheritance caching.

In December 2018, Hibernate ORM 5.4.0 Final was released.[10]

In October 2022, Hibernate ORM 6.1.4 Final was released.[11]

Application programming interface

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The Hibernate API is provided in the Java package org.hibernate.[12]

org.hibernate.SessionFactory interface

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The org.hibernate.SessionFactory interface is the native equivalent version of the JPA's standard EntityManagerFactory.[2]: 26 

org.hibernate.Session interface

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The org.hibernate.Session interface[13] represents a Hibernate session, i.e., the main point of the manipulation performed on the database entities. The latter activities include (among the other things) managing the persistence state (transient, persisted, detached[clarification needed]) of the objects, fetching the persisted ones from the database and the management of the transaction demarcation[clarification needed].

A Session is intended to last as long as the logical transaction on the database. Due to the latter feature, Session implementations are not expected to be thread safe nor to be used by multiple clients.

Software components

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The Hibernate software includes the following components:[14]

  • Hibernate ORM (known as Hibernate Core before release 4.1[15]) – the base software for an object–relational mapping solution for Java environments[16]
  • Hibernate Annotations (merged into Hibernate Core/ORM since version 3.6[17]) – metadata that governs the transformation of data between the object-oriented model and the relational database model according to the JSR 317 Java Persistence API (JPA 2)[18]
  • Hibernate EntityManager (merged into Hibernate Core/ORM since version 5.2[19])– together with Hibernate Annotations, a wrapper that implements a JSR 317 Java Persistence API (JPA 2) persistence solution[20]
  • Hibernate Envers – auditing and versioning of persistent classes[21]
  • Hibernate OGM (Object/Grid Mapper) – an extension to store data in a NoSQL store[22]
  • Hibernate Shards – horizontal partitioning for multiple relational databases[23]
    • While Hibernate Shards is not compatible with 4.x releases of Hibernate Core, some of the Shards capability was integrated into Core in the 4.0 release
  • Hibernate Search – integrates the full text library functionality from Apache Lucene in the Hibernate and JPA model[24]
  • Hibernate Tools – a set of tools implemented as a suite of Eclipse plugins and Ant tasks included in JBoss Developer Studio[25]
  • Hibernate Validator – the reference implementation of JSR 303 Bean Validation[26][2]: 49–51 
  • Hibernate Metamodel Generator – an annotation processor that creates JSR 317 Java Persistence API (JPA 2) static metamodel classes using the JSR 269 Pluggable Annotation Processing API[27]
  • NHibernate – an object–relational mapping solution for the .NET Framework[28]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Hibernate - 6.6 series". Retrieved 11 December 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Bauer, King & Gregory 2015.
  3. ^ "Equals and HashCode". JBoss Community. Archived from the original on 2013-12-16. Retrieved 2013-12-16.
  4. ^ "Hibernate User Guide: 2.5.5. Provide identifier attribute". JBoss Community.
  5. ^ "Hibernate 3.5.0-Final release". In Relation To... April 2010.
  6. ^ "Releases - Hibernate ORM". hibernate.org.
  7. ^ "In Relation To... Hibernate ORM 4.1.9.Final Released". Archived from the original on 2013-01-29. Retrieved 2012-12-13.
  8. ^ "GC: Hibernate-core-4.2.0.Final.jar - GrepCode Java Project Source". Archived from the original on 2014-12-05. Retrieved 2014-11-27.
  9. ^ "GC: Hibernate-core-4.3.0.Final.jar - GrepCode Java Project Source". Archived from the original on 2014-12-05. Retrieved 2014-11-27.
  10. ^ "Releases - Hibernate ORM". hibernate.org.
  11. ^ Boriero, Andrea (5 October 2022). "Hibernate ORM 6.1.4.Final released". In Relation To. Retrieved 2022-10-11.
  12. ^ "Hibernate JavaDocs". docs.jboss.org.
  13. ^ "Session (Hibernate JavaDocs)". docs.jboss.org.
  14. ^ "Hibernate: Relational Persistence for Java and .NET". JBoss Community.
  15. ^ "Hibernate ORM 4.1.0 Release". JBoss Community. 9 February 2012.
  16. ^ "HIBERNATE - Relational Persistence for Idiomatic Java". JBoss Community.
  17. ^ "No more hibernate-annotations module". JBoss Community. 5 April 2012.
  18. ^ "Hibernate Annotations". JBoss Community.
  19. ^ "hibernate-entitymanager merged into hibernate-core". JBoss Community.
  20. ^ "Hibernate EntityManager". JBoss Community.
  21. ^ "Hibernate Envers – Easy Entity Auditing". JBoss Community.
  22. ^ "Hibernate OGM". JBoss Community.
  23. ^ "Hibernate Shards". JBoss Community.
  24. ^ "Hibernate Search". JBoss Community.
  25. ^ "Hibernate Tools for Eclipse and Ant". JBoss Community.
  26. ^ "Hibernate Validator". JBoss Community.
  27. ^ "Hibernate Metamodel Generator". JBoss Community.
  28. ^ "NHibernate". NHibernate Forge. Archived from the original on 2012-07-12. Retrieved 2011-04-26.

Bibliography

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