i am wondering how i would be able to annotate an interface
@Entity
@Table(name = "FOLDER_TABLE")
public class Folder implements Serializable, Hierarchy {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
@Column(name = "folder_id", updatable = false, nullable = false)
private int fId;
@Column(name = "folder_name")
private String folderName;
@OneToMany(cascade = CascadeType.ALL)
@JoinTable(name = "FOLDER_JOIN_FILE_INFORMATION_TABLE", joinColumns =
{ @JoinColumn(name = "folder_id") }, inverseJoinColumns =
{ @JoinColumn(name = "file_information_id") })
private List< Hierarchy > fileInformation = new ArrayList< Hierarchy >();
}
above and below are 2 classes that implement an interface called Hierarchy, the folder class has a list of Hierarchyies being a folder or a fileinformation class
@Entity
@Table(name = "FILE_INFORMATION_TABLE")
public class FileInformation implements Serializable, Hierarchy {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
@Column(name = "file_information_id", updatable = false, nullable = false)
private int ieId;
@Column (name = "location")
private String location;
}
I have searched the web for someway to annotate or a workaround but I cannot map the interface which is simply this
public interface Hierarchy {
}
I get a mapping exception on the List of hierarchies with a folder but I don't know how to
map the class correctly.
You can map interfaces in Hibernate, as part of inheritance hierarchies. This is quite surely possible with XML mapping, as it is described in Chapter 9 of the Hibernate reference, among others.
Annotation based mapping is a different story though. I am not so familiar with it, but Java Persistence with Hibernate includes examples for this too. Adapted to your case, it would look like
@MappedSuperclass
public interface Hierarchy {
}
@Entity
@Table(name = "FOLDER_TABLE")
public class Folder implements Serializable, Hierarchy { ... }
@Entity
@Table(name = "FILE_INFORMATION_TABLE")
public class FileInformation implements Serializable, Hierarchy { ... }
This mapping would use a table per concrete class with implicit polymorphism.
However, other sources suggest that annotation support for interfaces may not be working / stable yet:
- there is a related open bug report on using the
@Entity
annotation with interfaces, which also includes some patches,
- here is a related (fairly old) thread, describing a workaround using XML mapping.
So you may need to experiment, including changing your inheritance mapping strategy, maybe turning the interface into an abstract class (if it's possible - since a class can only extend a single base class)...
A little Googling turned up...
You can use interfaces internally but
you can't map interfaces in hibernate,
you have to map classes, regardless of
whether you are using xml mapping or
annotation mapping. hibernate is
handling lifecycle of your persistent
objects so it needs to know what class
to instantiate so you need to provide
this information to it... I am not
even sure how what you suggesting
would even look like? how would you
provide implementation for given
interface to hibernate at runtime to
instantiate?
http://forum.springsource.org/showthread.php?t=67420
So it looks like you are out of luck.