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Showing posts with label environment configuration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment configuration. Show all posts

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Easy Tricks for JPA, Spring and Hibernate


Java frameworks have evolved, making us write less code and ship faster! Here, I will discuss some neat tricks to address common concerns in Hibernate and Spring.

1. Auto Scan JPA entities. This is an old trick!

Listing entities (via <class> element)  in persistence.xml isn't needed any more. You may drop it all together and use Spring's packagesToScan feature. Sample spring configuration below.

<bean id="entityManagerFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean">
 <property name="persistenceUnitName" value="HelloService" />
 <property name="packagesToScan" value="com.x.y.z" />
 <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" />
 <property name="jpaVendorAdapter">
  <bean class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaVendorAdapter">
   <property name="showSql" value="true" />
   <property name="databasePlatform" value="org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5Dialect" />
  </bean>
 </property>
</bean>

2.Entities often have audit columns like the following:


@Column(name = "created_by", updatable = false)
protected String createdBy;

@Column(name = "creation_date", updatable = false)
protected Date createdOn;

@Column(name = "last_updated_by")
protected String lastUpdatedBy;

@Column(name = "last_updated")
protected Date lastUpdatedOn;

And providing those values require either writing pre-insert/update Hibernate listeners or writing setters. How about sprinkling some annotations to get the job done? I mean ...

@Column(name = "created_by", updatable = false)
@ModifiedBy
protected String createdBy;

@Column(name = "creation_date", updatable = false)
@CreationTimestamp
protected Date createdOn;

@Column(name = "last_updated_by")
@ModifiedBy
protected String lastUpdatedBy;

@Column(name = "last_updated")
@UpdateTimestamp
protected Date lastUpdatedOn; 
It is quite simple. Read this: http://docs.jboss.org/hibernate/orm/4.3/topical/html/generated/GeneratedValues.html

3. Applications are deployed in different environments and configuring those are often messy and by messy I mean repetitive. Spring property place holder has a neat trick by using property of property to dynamically create the property key for each environment.

Sample common properties file for all environments.

# ec2.properties is a properties for all environment.  
awsAccountId=${${env}.awsAccountId}
availabilityZone=${${env}.availabilityZone}
keyName=${${env}.dev}
expiry=${${env}.expiry}
instanceType=${${env}.instanceType}

dev.awsAccountId = 11111111111
dev.availabilityZone = us-east-1a
dev.keyName = dev
dev.expiry = 360000
dev.instanceType = m1.small

beta.awsAccountId = 222222222222
beta.availabilityZone = us-east-1a
beta.keyName = beta
beta.expiry = 360000
beta.instanceType = m1.large
Here is how you will use this file in spring context configuration -

<bean id="ec2Settings"  class="x.y.z.EC2Settings">  
 <property name="accountId" value="${awsAccountId}" />  
 <property name="zone" value="${availabilityZone}" />  
 <property name="key" value="${keyName}" />  
 <property name="expiry" value="${expiry}" />
 <property name="instanceType" value="${instanceType}" />  
</bean>