1.What is ORM ?
ORM stands for object/relational mapping. ORM
is the automated persistence of objects in a Java application to the tables in
a relational database.
2.What does ORM consists of ?
An ORM solution consists of the followig four
pieces:
- API for
performing basic CRUD operations
- API to express
queries refering to classes
- Facilities to
specify metadata
- Optimization
facilities : dirty checking,lazy associations fetching
3.What are the ORM levels ?
The ORM levels are:
- Pure relational
(stored procedure.)
- Light objects
mapping (JDBC)
- Medium object
mapping
- Full object
Mapping (composition,inheritance, polymorphism, persistence by
reachability)
4.What is Hibernate?
Hibernate is a pure Java object-relational
mapping (ORM) and persistence framework that allows you to map plain old Java
objects to relational database tables using (XML) configuration files.Its
purpose is to relieve the developer from a significant amount of relational data
persistence-related programming tasks.
5.Why do you need ORM tools like hibernate?
The main advantage of ORM like hibernate is
that it shields developers from messy SQL. Apart from this, ORM provides
following benefits:
- Improved
productivity
- High-level
object-oriented API
- Less Java code
to write
- No SQL to write
- Improved
performance
- Sophisticated
caching
- Lazy loading
- Eager loading
- Improved
maintainability
- A lot less code
to write
- Improved
portability
- ORM framework
generates database-specific SQL for you
6.What Does Hibernate Simplify?
Hibernate simplifies:
- Saving and
retrieving your domain objects
- Making database
column and table name changes
- Centralizing pre
save and post retrieve logic
- Complex joins
for retrieving related items
- Schema creation
from object model
7.What is the need for Hibernate xml mapping file?
Hibernate mapping file tells Hibernate which
tables and columns to use to load and store objects. Typical mapping file look
as follows:
8.What are the most common methods of Hibernate configuration?
The most common methods of Hibernate
configuration are:
- Programmatic
configuration
- XML
configuration (hibernate.cfg.xml)
9.What are the important tags of hibernate.cfg.xml?
Following are the important tags of
hibernate.cfg.xml:
10.What are the Core interfaces are of Hibernate framework?
The five core interfaces are used in just
about every Hibernate application. Using these interfaces, you can store and
retrieve persistent objects and control transactions.
- Session
interface
- SessionFactory
interface
- Configuration
interface
- Transaction
interface
- Query and
Criteria interfaces
11.What role does the Session interface play in Hibernate?
The Session interface is the primary interface used by Hibernate
applications. It is a single-threaded, short-lived object representing a
conversation between the application and the persistent store. It allows you to
create query objects to retrieve persistent objects.
Session session = sessionFactory.openSession();
Session session = sessionFactory.openSession();
Session interface role:
- Wraps a JDBC
connection
- Factory for
Transaction
- Holds a
mandatory (first-level) cache of persistent objects, used when navigating
the object graph or looking up objects by identifier
12.What role does the SessionFactory interface play in Hibernate?
The application obtains Session instances from a SessionFactory.
There is typically a single SessionFactory for the whole applicationå¹¼reated
during application initialization. The SessionFactory caches generate SQL
statements and other mapping metadata that Hibernate uses at runtime. It also
holds cached data that has been read in one unit of work and may be reused in a
future unit of work
SessionFactory sessionFactory = configuration.buildSessionFactory();
SessionFactory sessionFactory = configuration.buildSessionFactory();
13.What is the general flow of Hibernate communication with RDBMS?
The general flow of Hibernate communication
with RDBMS is :
- Load the
Hibernate configuration file and create configuration object. It will
automatically load all hbm mapping files
- Create session
factory from configuration object
- Get one session
from this session factory
- Create HQL Query
- Execute query to
get list containing Java objects
14.What is Hibernate Query Language (HQL)?
Hibernate offers a query language that
embodies a very powerful and flexible mechanism to query, store, update, and
retrieve objects from a database. This language, the Hibernate query Language
(HQL), is an object-oriented extension to SQL.
15.How do you map Java Objects with Database tables?
- First we need to
write Java domain objects (beans with setter and getter).
- Write hbm.xml,
where we map java class to table and database columns to Java class
variables.
Example :
<hibernate-mapping>
<class name="com.test.User" table="user">
<property column="USER_NAME" length="255"
name="userName" not-null="true" type="java.lang.String"/>
<property column="USER_PASSWORD" length="255"
name="userPassword" not-null="true" type="java.lang.String"/>
</class>
</hibernate-mapping>
<class name="com.test.User" table="user">
<property column="USER_NAME" length="255"
name="userName" not-null="true" type="java.lang.String"/>
<property column="USER_PASSWORD" length="255"
name="userPassword" not-null="true" type="java.lang.String"/>
</class>
</hibernate-mapping>
16.What�s the difference between load() and get()?
load() vs. get() :-
load()
|
get()
|
Only use the load() method
if you are sure that the object exists.
|
If you are not sure that the object exists, then use one of
the get()methods.
|
load() method will throw an exception if the
unique id is not found in the database.
|
get() method will return null if the unique
id is not found in the database.
|
load() just returns a proxy by default and
database won�t be hit until the proxy is first invoked.
|
get() will hit the database
immediately.
|
17.What is the difference between and merge and update ?
Use update() if you are sure
that the session does not contain an already persistent instance with the same
identifier, and merge() if you want to
merge your modifications at any time without consideration of the state of the
session.
18.How do you define sequence generated primary key in hibernate?
Using <generator> tag.
Example:-
Example:-
<id column="USER_ID" name="id" type="java.lang.Long">
<generator class="sequence">
<param name="table">SEQUENCE_NAME</param>
<generator>
</id>
<generator class="sequence">
<param name="table">SEQUENCE_NAME</param>
<generator>
</id>
19.Define cascade and inverse option in one-many mapping?
cascade - enable operations to cascade to
child entities.
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
20.What do you mean by Named � SQL query?
Named SQL queries are defined in the mapping
xml document and called wherever required.
Example:
Example:
<sql-query name =
"empdetails">
<return alias="emp" class="com.test.Employee"/>
SELECT emp.EMP_ID AS {emp.empid},
emp.EMP_ADDRESS AS {emp.address},
emp.EMP_NAME AS {emp.name}
FROM Employee EMP WHERE emp.NAME LIKE :name
</sql-query>
<return alias="emp" class="com.test.Employee"/>
SELECT emp.EMP_ID AS {emp.empid},
emp.EMP_ADDRESS AS {emp.address},
emp.EMP_NAME AS {emp.name}
FROM Employee EMP WHERE emp.NAME LIKE :name
</sql-query>
Invoke Named Query :
List people = session.getNamedQuery("empdetails")
.setString("TomBrady", name)
.setMaxResults(50)
.list();
.setString("TomBrady", name)
.setMaxResults(50)
.list();
21.How do you invoke Stored Procedures?
<sql-query name="selectAllEmployees_SP" callable="true">
<return alias="emp" class="employee">
<return-property name="empid" column="EMP_ID"/>
<return alias="emp" class="employee">
<return-property name="empid" column="EMP_ID"/>
<return-property name="name" column="EMP_NAME"/>
<return-property name="address" column="EMP_ADDRESS"/>
{ ? = call selectAllEmployees() }
</return>
</sql-query>
22.Explain Criteria API
Criteria is a simplified API for retrieving
entities by composing Criterion objects. This is a very convenient approach for
functionality like "search" screens where there is a variable number
of conditions to be placed upon the result set.
Example :
Example :
List employees = session.createCriteria(Employee.class)
.add(Restrictions.like("name", "a%") )
.add(Restrictions.like("address", "Boston"))
.addOrder(Order.asc("name") )
.list();
.add(Restrictions.like("name", "a%") )
.add(Restrictions.like("address", "Boston"))
.addOrder(Order.asc("name") )
.list();
23.Define HibernateTemplate?
org.springframework.orm.hibernate.HibernateTemplate is
a helper class which provides different methods for querying/retrieving data
from the database. It also converts checked HibernateExceptions into unchecked
DataAccessExceptions.
24.What are the benefits does HibernateTemplate provide?
The benefits of HibernateTemplate are :
- HibernateTemplate, a Spring
Template class simplifies interactions with Hibernate Session.
- Common functions
are simplified to single method calls.
- Sessions are
automatically closed.
- Exceptions are
automatically caught and converted to runtime exceptions.
25.How do you switch between relational databases without code changes?
Using Hibernate SQL Dialects , we can switch
databases. Hibernate will generate appropriate hql queries based on the dialect
defined.
26.If you want to see the Hibernate generated SQL statements on console, what should we do?
In Hibernate configuration file set as follows:
<property name="show_sql">true</property>
<property name="show_sql">true</property>
27.What are derived properties?
The properties that are not mapped to a
column, but calculated at runtime by evaluation of an expression are called
derived properties. The expression can be defined using the formula attribute
of the element.
28.What is component mapping in Hibernate?
- A component is
an object saved as a value, not as a reference
- A component can
be saved directly without needing to declare interfaces or identifier
properties
- Required to
define an empty constructor
- Shared references not supported
29.What is the difference between sorted and ordered collection in hibernate?
sorted collection vs. order collection :-
sorted collection
|
order collection
|
A sorted collection is sorting a collection by utilizing the
sorting features provided by the Java collections framework. The sorting
occurs in the memory of JVM which running Hibernate, after the data being
read from database using java comparator.
|
Order collection is sorting a collection by specifying the
order-by clause for sorting this collection when retrieval.
|
If your collection is not large, it will be more efficient way
to sort it.
|
If your collection is very large, it will be more efficient
way to sort it .
|
31.What is the advantage of Hibernate over jdbc?
Hibernate Vs. JDBC :-
JDBC
|
Hibernate
|
With JDBC, developer has to write code to map an object
model's data representation to a relational data model and its corresponding
database schema.
|
Hibernate is flexible and powerful ORM solution to map Java
classes to database tables. Hibernate itself takes care of this mapping using
XML files so developer does not need to write code for this.
|
With JDBC, the automatic mapping of Java objects with database
tables and vice versa conversion is to be taken care of by the developer
manually with lines of code.
|
Hibernate provides transparent persistence and developer does
not need to write code explicitly to map database tables tuples to
application objects during interaction with RDBMS.
|
JDBC supports only native Structured Query Language (SQL).
Developer has to find out the efficient way to access database, i.e. to
select effective query from a number of queries to perform same task.
|
Hibernate provides a powerful query language Hibernate Query
Language (independent from type of database) that is expressed in a familiar
SQL like syntax and includes full support for polymorphic queries. Hibernate
also supports native SQL statements. It also selects an effective way to
perform a database manipulation task for an application.
|
Application using JDBC to handle persistent data (database
tables) having database specific code in large amount. The code written to
map table data to application objects and vice versa is actually to map table
fields to object properties. As table changed or database changed then it’s
essential to change object structure as well as to change code written to map
table-to-object/object-to-table.
|
Hibernate provides this mapping itself. The actual mapping
between tables and application objects is done in XML files. If there is
change in Database or in any table then the only need to change XML file
properties.
|
With JDBC, it is developer’s responsibility to handle JDBC
result set and convert it to Java objects through code to use this persistent
data in application. So with JDBC, mapping between Java objects and database
tables is done manually.
|
Hibernate reduces lines of code by maintaining object-table
mapping itself and returns result to application in form of Java objects. It
relieves programmer from manual handling of persistent data, hence reducing
the development time and maintenance cost.
|
With JDBC, caching is maintained by hand-coding.
|
Hibernate, with Transparent Persistence, cache is set to
application work space. Relational tuples are moved to this cache as a result
of query. It improves performance if client application reads same data many
times for same write. Automatic Transparent Persistence allows the developer
to concentrate more on business logic rather than this application code.
|
In JDBC there is no check that always every user has updated
data. This check has to be added by the developer.
|
Hibernate enables developer to define version type field to application,
due to this defined field Hibernate updates version field of database table
every time relational tuple is updated in form of Java class object to that
table. So if two users retrieve same tuple and then modify it and one user
save this modified tuple to database, version is automatically updated for
this tuple by Hibernate. When other user tries to save updated tuple to
database then it does not allow saving it because this user does not have
updated data.
|
32.What are the Collection types in Hibernate ?
- Bag
- Set
- List
- Array
- Map
33.What are the ways to express joins in HQL?
HQL provides four ways of expressing (inner
and outer) joins:-
- An implicit association
join
- An ordinary join
in the FROM clause
- A fetch join in the
FROM clause.
- A theta-style join
in the WHERE clause.
34.Define cascade and inverse option in one-many mapping?
cascade - enable operations to cascade to
child entities.
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
35.What is Hibernate proxy?
The proxy attribute enables lazy initialization of
persistent instances of the class. Hibernate will initially return CGLIB
proxies which implement the named interface. The actual persistent object will
be loaded when a method of the proxy is invoked.
36.How can Hibernate be configured to access an
instance variable directly and not through a setter method ?
By mapping the property with
access="field" in Hibernate metadata. This forces hibernate to bypass
the setter method and access the instance variable directly while initializing
a newly loaded object.
37.How can a whole class be mapped as immutable?
Mark the class as mutable="false"
(Default is true),. This specifies that instances of the class are (not)
mutable. Immutable classes, may not be updated or deleted by the application.
38.What is the use of dynamic-insert and dynamic-update attributes in a class mapping?
Criteria is a simplified API for retrieving
entities by composing Criterion objects. This is a very convenient approach for
functionality like "search" screens where there is a variable number
of conditions to be placed upon the result set.
- dynamic-update (defaults
to false): Specifies
that UPDATE SQL should
be generated at runtime and contain only those columns whose values have
changed
- dynamic-insert (defaults
to false): Specifies
that INSERT SQL should
be generated at runtime and contain only the columns whose values are not
null.
39.What do you mean by fetching strategy ?
A fetching strategy is the strategy Hibernate
will use for retrieving associated objects if the application needs to navigate
the association. Fetch strategies may be declared in the O/R mapping metadata,
or over-ridden by a particular HQL or Criteria query.
40.What is automatic dirty checking?
Automatic dirty checking is a feature that
saves us the effort of explicitly asking Hibernate to update the database when
we modify the state of an object inside a transaction.
41.What is transactional write-behind?
Hibernate uses a sophisticated algorithm to
determine an efficient ordering that avoids database foreign key constraint
violations but is still sufficiently predictable to the user. This feature is
called transactional write-behind.
42.What are Callback interfaces?
Callback interfaces allow the application to
receive a notification when something interesting happens to an object—for
example, when an object is loaded, saved, or deleted. Hibernate applications
don't need to implement these callbacks, but they're useful for implementing
certain kinds of generic functionality.
43.What are the types of Hibernate instance states ?
Three types of instance states:
- Transient -The
instance is not associated with any persistence context
- Persistent -The
instance is associated with a persistence context
- Detached -The
instance was associated with a persistence context which has been closed –
currently not associated
44.What are the differences between EJB 3.0 & Hibernate
Hibernate Vs EJB 3.0 :-
Hibernate
|
EJB 3.0
|
Session–Cache or collection of loaded objects
relating to a single unit of work
|
Persistence Context-Set of entities that
can be managed by a given EntityManager is defined by a persistence
unit
|
XDoclet Annotations used to support
Attribute Oriented Programming
|
Java 5.0 Annotations used to support
Attribute Oriented Programming
|
Defines HQL for expressing queries to the
database
|
Defines EJB QL for expressing
queries
|
Supports Entity Relationships through
mapping files and annotations in JavaDoc
|
Support Entity Relationships through
Java 5.0 annotations
|
Provides a Persistence Manager API exposed
via the Session, Query, Criteria, and Transaction API
|
Provides and Entity Manager Interface for
managing CRUD operations for an Entity
|
Provides callback support through
lifecycle, interceptor, and validatable interfaces
|
Provides callback support through
Entity Listener and Callback methods
|
Entity Relationships are unidirectional.
Bidirectional relationships are implemented by two unidirectional
relationships
|
Entity Relationships are bidirectional or unidirectional
|
45.What are the types of inheritance models in Hibernate?
There are three types of inheritance models in
Hibernate:
- Table per class
hierarchy
- Table per
subclass
- Table per
concrete class