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Introduction to EclipseLink Application Development (ELUG)

Elug draft icon.png For the latest EclipseLink documentation, please see http://www.eclipse.org/eclipselink/documentation/


Contents

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This section describes how to build an EclipseLink application, including suggested development processes, architectures, and technologies.

To ensure the best design for your EclipseLink application, we recommend that you follow an iterative step-by-step development process. The flexibility of EclipseLink lets you use any development tool.


Typical Development Stages

This section describes the general development stages of an EclipseLink application. The following figure illustrates the EclipseLink development process.


EclipseLink Development Process

EclipseLink Development Process


Design the Application (1)

Define your application requirements, select an architecture, and determine the target platform. See Designing Your Application with EclipseLink for more information. Remember, EclipseLink works with any architecture and any platform.

When designing the application, you should also create an object model for the application. See Persisting Objects for more information. It is important to create the object model before using EclipseLink to map objects, because defining persistent mappings for an incorrect or rapidly changing model can be very difficult.


Develop the Application (2, 3, 4)

Create the Java classes and decide how the classes should be implemented by the data source. When working with a legacy system, decide how the classes relate to the existing data. If there is no legacy data source to integrate, decide how to store each class in the data source and create the required schema. Alternatively, you may use EclipseLink to create your initial tables.

You have several choices in how you map your classes. When using JPA you can use either annotations or XML. You can code or write the XML by hand, or use an IDE that supports JPA such as Eclipse Dali, or Oracle JDeveloper. When using EclipseLink's native API's, MOXy or EIS you can use the EclipseLink Workbench.

Using the Workbench, create descriptors and mappings for the persistent classes. Use EclipseLink sessions to manipulate the persistent classes, including querying and changing data. See EclipseLink Development Tools Overview for more information.

Avoid mapping all your model's classes in a single iteration. Start with a small subset of your classes. Build and test their mappings, then gradually add classes and relationships. This lets you catch common problems before they proliferate through your entire design.

Your runtime application code can use JPA, the native EclipseLink API's, or JAXB when using MOXy. For JPA write Java code to use the EntityManager. For native EclipseLink API write Java code to use EclipseLink sessions. Sessions are used to query for database objects and write objects to the database. See Introduction to EclipseLink Sessions for more information.


Deploy the Application (5)

Generate, package, then deploy the necessary files to your application server. The required information will vary, depending on your environment and architecture. See Introduction to EclipseLink Application Deployment for more information.


Maintain the Application (6)

EclipseLink includes many options that can enhance application performance. You can customize most aspects of EclipseLink to suit your requirements. Use advanced EclipseLink features or write custom querying routines to access the database in specific ways, and to optimize performance. See Optimization and Customization of an EclipseLink Application for more information.

Designing Your Application with EclipseLink

When you design your application, you must choose how and where to use EclipseLink. You can use EclipseLink to perform a variety of persistence and data transformation functions (see How to Use EclipseLink in Your Application Design) on a variety of Java-supporting platforms (see Target Platforms). When you design your application architecture, keep these capabilities in mind (see Selecting an Architecture with EclipseLink).


How to Use EclipseLink in Your Application Design

This section describes the basic ways in which you can use EclipseLink, including the following usage types:


Relational Database Usage

You can use EclipseLink to persist Java objects to relational databases that support SQL data types accessed using JDBC.

For more information, see How to Build Relational Projects for a Relational Database.


Object-Relational Data Type Database Usage

You can use EclipseLink to persist Java objects to object-relational data type databases that support data types specialized for object storage (such as Oracle Database) accessed using JDBC.

For more information, see How to Build Relational Projects for an Object-Relational Data Type Database.


Oracle XML Database (XDB) Usage

You can use EclipseLink to persist XML documents to an Oracle XML database using EclipseLink direct-to-XMLType mappings.

For more information, see Introduction to Relational Projects and Direct-to-XMLType Mapping.


Enterprise Information System (EIS) Usage

You can use EclipseLink to persist Java objects to an EIS data source using a JCA adapter.

In this scenario, the application invokes EIS data source-defined operations by sending EIS interactions to the JCA adapter. Operations can take (and return) EIS records. Using EclipseLink EIS descriptors and mappings, you can easily map Java objects to the EIS record types supported by your JCA adapter and EIS data source.

This usage is common in applications that connect to legacy data sources and is also applicable to Web services.

For more information, see Introduction to EIS Projects.


XML Usage

You can use EclipseLink for in-memory, nonpersistent Java object-to-XML transformation with XML Schema (XSD) based XML documents and JAXB.

You can use the EclipseLink JAXB compiler with your XSD to generate both JAXB-specific artifacts (such as content and element interfaces, implementation classes, and object factory class) and EclipseLink-specific artifacts (such as sessions and project XML files and Workbench project). For more information, see EclipseLink Support for Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB).

This usage has many applications, including messaging and Web services.

For more information, see Introduction to XML Projects.


EclipseLink Database Web Services Usage

You can use EclipseLink Database Web Services (DBWS) (introduced in Release 1.1) to automatically generate JAX-WS 2.0 compliant Web services that expose database operations such as queries, DML statements, and stored procedures and stored functions. Using EclipseLink DBWS services, you can provide Java EE-compliant, client-neutral access to a relational database without having to write Java code.

EclipseLink DBWS services use document literal format as the WSDL specification defines and use wrapped elements (see the JAX-RPC 1.1 specification).

EclipseLink DBWS services have been tested with the Web services stack in Oracle WebLogic 10.3. For testing purposes, you can also deploy EclipseLink DBWS services as a Java SE 6 'containerless' Endpoint.

You can use EclipseLink DBWS services with any database that providers a JDBC driver that returns DatabaseMetaData (tested on Oracle, MySQL, and so on).

For more information, see the following:

Target Platforms

EclipseLink supports any enterprise architecture that uses Java, including the following:

  • Java EE
  • Spring
  • OSGI
  • Java Web servers such as Tomcat
  • Java clients such as Java SE and Web browsers
  • Server Java platforms

Application packaging requirements of the specific target platform (for deployment in the host Java or Java EE environment) influences how you use and configure EclipseLink. For example, you package a Java EE application in an Enterprise Archive (EAR) file. Within the EAR file, there are several ways to package persistent entities within Web Archive (WAR) and Java Archive (JAR). How you configure EclipseLink depends, in part, on how you package the application and how you use the host application server class loader.

For detailed information about supported application server versions, custom integration, and configuration requirements, see Integrating EclipseLink with an Application Server.

Selecting an Architecture with EclipseLink

This section describes some of the key aspects of application architecture that apply to EclipseLink and discusses the various options available for each, including the following:


Tiers

This section describes choices you need to make when deciding on how to separate client and server functionality in your application architecture.

These choices can be summarized as follows:


Three Tier

We recommend a three-tier application architecture. With a three-tier architecture, we recommend using EclipseLink JPA or EclipseLink Server and Client Sessions and the EclipseLink unit of work.

For more information, see Considering Three-Tier Architecture.


Java EE or Non-Java EE

You can use EclipseLink in a Java EE or non-Java EE application architecture. We recommend that you use a Java EE application architecture.

With a Java EE application, you should use External Connection Pools. You may consider using JPA, EJB session beans, and Java Transaction API (JTA) integration.

With a non-Java EE application, you should use Internal Connection Pools. You may still consider using JPA.


Client

In a three-tier application architecture, you can implement any of the following types of client:

  • Web client – We recommend that you implement a Web client.
  • XML/Web service client – With this client type, you can use EclipseLink XML .
  • Java (fat) client – With this client type, you can choose the means of communicating with the server:
    • EJB session beans – We recommend this approach. You may consider using the UnitOfWork method mergeClone to handle merging deserialized objects (see Merging Changes in Working Copy Clones). The disadvantage of this approach is that your application must handle serialization. Avoid serializing deep object graphs. You should use indirection, also known in JPA as lazy loading. Consider using the data-transfer-object pattern.
    • XML/Web service – Use EclipseLink XML .
    • RMI – You may consider using an EclipseLink remote session . The disadvantage of this approach is that a remote session is stateful and may not scale well.

See also Service Layer.


Two Tier

With a two-tier application architecture, we recommend using JPA or EclipseLink Database Sessions and the EclipseLink unit of work. The disadvantages of this architecture are that it is not Web-enabled and does not scale well to large deployments.

For more information, see Considering Two-Tier Architecture.

Service Layer

This section describes choices you need to make when deciding on how to encapsulate your application's business logic (or service).

These choices can be summarized as follows:

See also:


EJB Session Beans

We recommend using EJB session beans.

With EJB session beans, you should use JTA integration and External Connection Pools. You can use JPA or the EclipseLink native API. If using JPA you can inject your JPA EntityManager into your SessionBeans. If using the native API, you should acquire a unit of work using Server method getActiveUnitOfWork (see How to Acquire a Unit of Work with an External Transaction Service). If your session bean and client are not in the same JVM, you may consider using UnitOfWork method mergeClone to handle merging deserialized objects.

For more information, see Considering EJB Session Bean Facade Architecture.


Stateful

If you are using stateful session beans, then note that a reference to a client session cannot be passivated. In this case, you must reacquire a client session on activate or per request.


Stateless

If you are using stateless session beans, you must acquire new client session for each request.


JPA Entities

We recommend you use JPA.

Java Persistence API (JPA) is a specification for persistence in Java EE and Java SE applications. In JPA, a persistent class is referred to as an entity. An entity is a plain old Java object (POJO) class that is mapped to the database and configured for usage through JPA using annotations, persistence XML, or both.

With JPA, when your application is running inside a container, all of the benefits of the container support and ease of use apply. Note that you can configure the same application to run outside the container.

You can use EJB Session Beans as the means for your application to interact with JPA.

EclipseLink JPA is a standards compliant JPA persistence provider built on the EclipseLink foundation library. EclipseLink JPA offers a variety of vendor extensions (annotations and persistence properties) that give you full access to the underlying EclipseLink API to take advantage of additional functionality and performance benefits.

For more information, see the following:


Plain Old Java Objects (POJO)

If you choose to build your service layer with non-EJB Java objects with a Java EE application server, you should use External Connection Pools, and may consider using JTA integration (see JTA Controlled Transactions). If you use a non-Java EE Web server, you should use Internal Connection Pools.

Data Access

This section describes choices you need to make when deciding on what type of data your application architecture must support.

These choices can be summarized as follows:

See also Locking.


Data Type

You can use EclipseLink to manage any of the following types of data:


Multiple Data Sources

If your application architecture must access more than one data source, we recommend that you use a session broker and JTA integration (see JTA Controlled Transactions) for two-phase commit.

Alternatively, you may use multiple sessions.


Isolating Data Access

If your application architecture requires that some data be restricted to a private cache and isolated from the EclipseLink shared session cache, we recommend that you use an Isolated Client Session. You can also use an isolated session with the Oracle Virtual Private Database (VPD) feature.


Historical Data Access

If your data source maintains past or historical versions of objects, we recommend that you use an EclipseLink historical session Historical Session to access this historical data so that you can express read queries conditional on how your objects are changing over time.


Caching

This section describes choices you need to make when deciding on how to use the EclipseLink cache in your application architecture.

These choices can be summarized as follows:

See also Locking.


Cache Type

Choose a Cache Type appropriate for the type of data your application processes. For example, consider a weak identity map for volatile data (see Guidelines for Configuring the Cache and Identity Maps).


Refreshing

Consider how your application architecture may be affected by stale data (see Handling Stale Data): for example, consider using query or descriptor refresh options) or Cache Invalidation, consider using an isolated session's cache (see Isolated Client Sessions) for volatile data.

Avoid using No Identity Map for objects that are involved in relationships or that require object identity.


Cache Coordination

EclipseLink provides a distributed cache coordination feature that allows multiple, possibly distributed, instances of a session to broadcast object changes among each other so that each session's cache is kept up to date (see Cache Coordination). Before using cache coordination, ensure that it is appropriate for your application (see When to Use Cache Coordination).


Protocol

You can configure a coordinated cache to broadcast changes using any of the following communication protocols:

Synchronization

You can configure synchronization strategy that a coordinated cache uses to determine what it broadcasts when an object changes. You can configure this at the project level or descriptor level level as follows:

  • Invalidate changed objects – Propagate an object invalidation that marks the object as invalid in all other sessions. This tells other sessions that they must update their cache from the data source the next time this object is read. We recommend using this synchronization strategy.
  • Synchronize changes – Propagate a change notification that contains each changed attribute.
  • Synchronize changes and new objects – Propagate a change notification that contains each changed attribute. For new objects, propagate an object creation (along with all the new instance's attributes).

Locking

This section describes choices you need to make when deciding on how to use EclipseLink locking options in your application architecture. We strongly recommend always using a locking policy in a concurrent system (see Configuring Locking Policy).

These choices can be summarized as follows:

If you are building a three-tier application, be aware of how that architecture affects the way you use locking (see Locking in a Three-Tier Application).

For more information, see Descriptors and Locking.


Optimistic Locking

We recommend using EclipseLink optimistic locking. With optimistic locking, all users have read access to the data. When a user attempts to write a change, the application checks to ensure the data has not changed since the user read the data.

You can use Optimistic Version Locking or Optimistic Field Locking locking policies. We recommend using version locking policies.


Pessimistic Locking

With pessimistic locking, the first user who accesses the data with the purpose of updating it locks the data until completing the update. The disadvantage of this approach is that it may lead to reduced concurrency and deadlocks.

Consider using pessimistic locking support at the query level (see Configuring Named Query Options).

Building and Using the Persistence Layer

EclipseLink requires that classes must meet certain minimum requirements before they can become persistent. EclipseLink also provides alternatives to most requirements. EclipseLink uses a nonintrusive approach by employing a metadata architecture that allows for minimal object model intrusions.

This section includes the following information:


Implementation Options

When implementing your persistence layer using EclipseLink, consider the following options:


Using EclipseLink JPA Metatdata, Annotations, and XML

We recommend using JPA metadata.

When using JPA, you can specify persistence layer components using any combination of standard JPA annotations and persistence.xml, EclipseLink JPA annotation extensions, and EclipseLink JPA persistence.xml extensions.

For more information, see the following:


Using EclipseLink Metatdata XML

Persistence layer components may be generated as metadata from the Workbench.

When using the native API, we recommend using the Workbench to create the necessary metadata (stored as XML). You can easily export and update the project.xml and sessions.xml files. This reduces development effort by eliminating the need to regenerate and recompile Java code each time you change the project. With Workbench, you write Java code only for your own application classes and any necessary amendment methods. For information about the XML structure of the project.xml and sessions.xml files, refer to the appropriate XML schemas (XSD) in the ECLIPSELINK_HOME/xsds directory.

Workbench provides Ant tasks that you can use to integrate Workbench with your automated builds.

For more information, see the following:


Using EclipseLink Metadata Java API

Persistence layer components may be coded or generated as Java from Workbench.

To use Java code, you must manually write code for each element of the EclipseLink project including: project, login, platform, descriptors, and mappings. This may be more efficient if your application is model-based and relies heavily on code generation. Depending on the type of project you are creating, the Workbench can export Java code for projects, tables, and your model source.

EclipseLink provides Ant tasks that you can use to integrate Workbench with your automated builds.

For more information, see the following:


Using Method and Direct Field Access

You can configure EclipseLink to access the fields (data members) of a class by using a getter/setter method (also known as property access) or by accessing the field itself directly. We recommend using field access.

When considering using method or direct field access in EclipseLink, consider the following.

If you use method access in EclipseLink, ensure you have no side effects in the getter/setter methods used for persistence. Setter methods that set the inverse relationship, or that access the value being sent can disable optimizations such as lazy loading, and can potentially corrupt your object model. If you require side effects in your getter/setter methods, consider using separate methods for persistence than your application uses, or use field access.

If you enable change tracking for your class and use method acess, then EclipseLink tracks changes accordingly when the setter methods are called. If you access the field directly, EclipseLink may not detect the change (EclipseLink will detect the changes made within the class if the field is named the same as the property, but not direct field changes made from external classes).

Similarly, if you enable change tracking for your class and use field access, then EclipseLink tracks changes accordingly when the field is set within the class (direct field changes made from external classes are not detected).

For more information, see the following:


Using Weaving Technique

Weaving is a technique of manipulating the byte-code of compiled Java classes.

EclipseLink uses weaving to enhance both JPA entities and Plain Old Java Object (POJO) classes for such things as lazy loading, change tracking, fetch groups, and internal optimizations.

For more information, see Using Weaving.


Persistent Class Requirements

The following requirements apply to plain Java objects:

  • You can use direct access on private or protected attributes. For more, see Configuring Method or Direct Field Accessing at the Mapping Level.
  • When using nontransparent indirection, the attributes must be of the type ValueHolderInterface rather than the original attribute type. The value holder does not instantiate a referenced object until it is needed.
  • EclipseLink provides transparent indirection for Collection, List, Set, and Map attribute types for any collection mappings. Using transparent indirection does not require the use of the ValueHolderInterface or any other object model requirements.

If you are using weaving, the ValueHolderInterface is not required. For more information, see Using Weaving.

See Indirection (Lazy Loading) for more information on indirection and transparent indirection.


Persistence Layer Components

Typically, the EclipseLink persistence layer contains the following components:


Mapping Metadata

The EclipseLink application metadata model is based on the EclipseLink project. The project includes descriptors, mappings, and various policies that customize the run-time capabilities. You associate this mapping and configuration information with a particular data source and application by referencing the project from a session.

For more information, see the following:


Session

A session is the primary interface between the client application and EclipseLink, and represents the connection to the underlying data source.

EclipseLink offers several different session types, each optimized for different design requirements and architectures. The most commonly used session is the server session, a session that clients access on the server through a client session. The server session provides a shared cache and shared connection resources. You define a session with session metadata.

For EclipseLink JPA projects, the EntityManager represents (wraps) the EclipseLink session.

For more information, see the following:


Cache

By default, an EclipseLink session provides an object-level cache that guarantees object identity and enhances performance by reducing the number of times the application needs to access the data source. EclipseLink provides a variety of cache options, including locking, refresh, invalidation, isolation, and coordination. Using cache coordination, you can configure EclipseLink to synchronize changes with other instances of the deployed application. You configure most cache options at the session level. You can also configure cache options on a per-query basis or on a descriptor to apply to all queries on the reference class.

For more information, see Introduction to Cache.


Queries and Expressions

EclipseLink provides several object and data query types, and offers flexible options for query selection criteria, including the following:

  • EclipseLink expressions
  • JPQL (Java Persistence Query Language)
  • SQL
  • Stored procedures
  • Query by example

With these options, you can build any type of query. We recommend using named queries over dynamic application queries. Named queries are held in the project metadata and referenced by name. This simplifies application development and encapsulates the queries to reduce maintenance costs.

Regardless of the architecture or persistent entity type, you are free to use any of the query options. Queries can be defined through JPA annotations, XML or code. If using the native EclipseLink metadata the Workbench provides the simplest way to define queries. Alternatively, you can build queries in code, using the EclipseLink API.

For more information, see Introduction to EclipseLink Queries and Introduction to EclipseLink Expressions.


Transactions

EclipseLink provides the ability to write transactional code isolated from the underlying database and schema by using a unit of work, a specific transactional session.

The unit of work isolates changes in a transaction from other threads until it successfully commits the changes to the database. Unlike other transaction mechanisms, the unit of work automatically manages changes to the objects in the transaction, the order of the changes, and changes that might invalidate other EclipseLink caches. The unit of work manages these issues by calculating a minimal change set, ordering the database calls to comply with referential integrity rules and deadlock avoidance, and merging changed objects into the shared cache. In a clustered environment, the unit of work also synchronizes changes with the other servers in the coordinated cache.

If an application uses JPA, you do not access the unit of work API directly, but you still benefit from its' features: the integration between the EclipseLink runtime and JPA transactions or JTA transactions use the unit of work to the application's best advantage.

For more information, see Introduction to EclipseLink Transactions.

How to Use the Persistence Layer

At run time, your application uses the EclipseLink metadata (see Working with EclipseLink Metadata).

For a JPA project, your application loads a persistence.xml file at run time using the Persistence class, or injection. Using the EntityManager, your application accesses the EclipseLink runtime and the mapping metadata.

For a POJO project using the native API, your application loads a sessions.xml file at run time using the session manager (see Acquiring and Using Sessions at Run Time). The sessions.xml file contains a reference to the mapping metadata project.xml file. Using the session, your application accesses the EclipseLink runtime and the project.xml mapping metadata.

Deploying the Application

Application packaging (for deployment in the host Java or Java EE environment) influences EclipseLink use and configuration. For example, you package a Java EE application in an EAR file. Within the EAR file, there are several ways to package persistent entities within WAR and JAR. How you configure EclipseLink depends, in part, on how you package the application and how you use the class loader of the host application server.

This section discusses packaging and deployment from an EclipseLink perspective. However, if you deploy your application to a Java EE container, you must configure elements of your application to enable EclipseLink container support.

This section includes the following information:

For more information, see Overview of EclipseLink Application Deployment.


About Deployments

The EclipseLink approach to deployment involves packaging application files into a single file, such as a JAR file, or an EAR file. This approach lets you create clean and self-contained deployments that do not require significant file management.

After creating these files, deploy the project.


How to Use EclipseLink in a Java EE Application

The typical deployment process involves the following steps:

  1. Build the project elements, including beans, classes, and data sources.
  2. Define the application mappings in JPA annotations or XML, or native metadata using the Workbench.
  3. Build the application deployment files.
  4. Package and deploy the application.
  5. Add code to the client application to enable it to access the EclipseLink application.

Optimizing and Customizing the Application

EclipseLink provides a diverse set of features to optimize performance including the following:

  • Enhancing queries
  • Tuning the cache
  • Scaling to multiple server configuration

You enable or disable most features in the descriptors or session, making any resulting performance gains global.

Using EclipseLink EIS, you can integrate an EclipseLink application with legacy data sources using a JCA adapter. This is the most efficient way to customize an EclipseLink application to accommodate unusual or nonstandard systems.

Using EclipseLink XML, you can integrate an EclipseLink application with legacy data sources using a Web service.

See Optimization and Customization of an EclipseLink Application for details on optimizing and customizing EclipseLink.


Troubleshooting the Application

See for information on troubleshooting all aspects of an EclipseLink application including development and deployment.


Persisting Objects

This section includes a brief description of relational mapping and provides important information and restrictions to guide object and relational modeling. This information is useful when building EclipseLink applications.

This section includes information on the following:

These sections contain additional detail on these features, and explain how to implement and use them with EclipseLink.


Application Object Model

Object modeling refers to the design of the Java classes that represent your application objects. With EclipseLink, you can use your favorite integrated development environment (IDE) or Unified Modeling Language (UML) modeling tool to define and create your application object model.

Any class that registers a descriptor with an EclipseLink database session is called a persistent class. EclipseLink does not require that persistent classes provide public accessor methods for any private or protected attributes stored in the database. Refer to Persistent Class Requirements for more information.


Data Storage Schema

Your data storage schema refers to the design that you implement to organize the persistent data in your application. This schema refers to the data itself–not the actual data source (such as a relational database or nonrelational legacy system).

During the design phase of the EclipseLink application development process (see Typical Development Stages), you should decide how to implement the classes in the data source. When integrating existing data source information, you must determine how the classes relate to the existing data. If no legacy information exists to integrate, decide how you will store each class, then create the necessary schema.

You can also use the Workbench or database schema manager to create the necessary information. If using JPA you can have the schema created automatically when you first access your application.

Primary Keys and Object Identity

When making objects persistent, each object requires an identity to uniquely identify it for storage and retrieval. Object identity is typically implemented using a unique primary key. This key is used internally by EclipseLink to identify each object, and to create and manage references. Violating object identity can corrupt the object model.

In a Java application, object identity is preserved if each object in memory is represented by one, and only one, object instance. Multiple retrievals of the same object return references to the same object instance–not multiple copies of the same object.

EclipseLink supports multiple identity maps to maintain object identity (including composite primary keys). Refer to Cache Type and Object Identity for additional information.


Mappings

EclipseLink uses the metadata produced by the Workbench (see Working with EclipseLink Metadata) to describe how objects and beans map to the data source. This approach isolates persistence information from the object model–you are free to design their ideal object model, and DBAs are free to design their ideal schema.

You use the Workbench to create and manage the mapping information. At run time, EclipseLink uses the metadata to seamlessly and dynamically interact with the data source, as required by the application.

EclipseLink provides an extensive mapping hierarchy that supports the wide variety of data types and references that an object model might contain. For more information, see Introduction to Mappings.


Foreign Keys and Object Relationships

A foreign key is a combination of columns that reference a unique key, usually the primary key, in another table. Foreign keys can be any number of fields (similar to primary key), all of which are treated as a unit. A foreign key and the primary parent key it references must have the same number and type of fields.

Foreign keys represents relationships from a column or columns in one table to a column or columns in another table. For example, if every Employee has an attribute address that contains an instance of Address (which has its own descriptor and table), the one-to-one mapping for the address attribute would specify foreign key information to find an address for a particular Employee.

Refer to Configuring Table and Field References (Foreign and Target Foreign Keys) for more information.


Inheritance

Object-oriented systems allow classes to be defined in terms of other classes. For example: motorcycles, sedans, and vans are all kinds of vehicles. Each of the vehicle types is a subclass of the Vehicle class. Similarly, the Vehicle class is the superclass of each specific vehicle type. Each subclass inherits attributes and methods from its superclass (in addition to having its own attributes and methods).

Inheritance provides several application benefits, including the following:

  • Using subclasses to provide specialized behaviors from the basis of common elements provided by the superclass. By using inheritance, you can reuse the code in the superclass many times.
  • Implementing abstract superclasses that define generic behaviors. This abstract superclass may define and partially implement behavior, while allowing you to complete the details with specialized subclasses.

Refer to Configuring Inheritance for a Child (Branch or Leaf) Class Descriptor and Configuring Inherited Attribute Mapping in a Subclass for detailed information on using inheritance with EclipseLink.


Concurrency

To have concurrent clients logged in at the same time, the server must spawn a dedicated thread of execution for each client. Java EE application servers do this automatically. Dedicated threads enable each client to work without having to wait for the completion of other clients. EclipseLink ensures that these threads do not interfere with each other when they make changes to the identity map or perform database transactions. Using the EclipseLink UnitOfWork class, your client can make transactional changes in an isolated and thread safe manner. The unit of work manages clones for the objects you modify to isolate each client's work from other concurrent clients and threads. The unit of work is essentially an object-level transaction mechanism that maintains all of the ACID (Atomicity, Consistency, Isolation, Durability) transaction principles as a database transaction. For more information on the unit of work, see Introduction to EclipseLink Transactions.

EclipseLink supports configurable optimistic and pessimistic locking strategies to let you customize the type of locking that the EclipseLink concurrency manager uses. For more information, see Descriptors and Locking.


Caching

EclipseLink caching improves application performance by automatically storing data returned as objects from the database for future use. This caching provides several advantages:

  • Reusing Java objects that have been previously read from the database minimizes database access
  • Minimizing SQL calls to the database when objects already exist in the cache
  • Minimizing network access to the database
  • Setting caching policies a class-by-class and bean-by-bean basis
  • Basing caching options and behavior on Java garbage collection

EclipseLink supports several caching polices to provide extensive flexibility. You can fine-tune the cache for maximum performance, based on individual application performance. Refer to Cache for more information.


Nonintrusive Persistence

The EclipseLink nonintrusive approach of achieving persistence through a metadata architecture (see Working with EclipseLink Metadata) means that there are almost no object model intrusions.

To persist Java objects, EclipseLink does not require any of the following:

  • Persistent superclass or implementation of persistent interfaces
  • Store, delete, or load methods required in the object model
  • Special persistence methods
  • Generating source code into or wrapping the object model

See Building and Using the Persistence Layer for additional information on this nonintrusive approach.


Indirection

An indirection object takes the place of an application object so the application object is not read from the database until it is needed. Using indirection, or lazy loading in JPA, allows EclipseLink to create stand-ins for related objects. This results in significant performance improvements, especially when the application requires the contents of only the retrieved object rather than all related objects.

Without indirection, each time the application retrieves a persistent object, it also retrieves all the objects referenced by that object. This may result in lower performance for some applications.


Note: We recommend that you use indirection in all situations.


EclipseLink provides several indirection models, such as proxy indirection, transparent indirection, and value holder indirection.

See Indirection (Lazy Loading) for more information.


Mutability

Mutability is a property of a complex field that specifies whether or not the field value may be changed or not changed as opposed to replaced.

An immutable mapping is one in which the mapped object value cannot change unless the object ID of the object changes: that is, unless the object value is replaced by another object value altogether.

A mutable mapping is one in which the mapped object value can change without changing the object ID of the object.

By default, EclipseLink assumes the following:

  • all TransformationMapping instances are mutable;
  • all JPA @Basic mapping types, except Serializable types, are immutable (including Date and Calendar types);
  • all JPA @Basic mapping Serializable types are mutable.

Whether a value is immutable or mutable largely depends on how your application uses your persistent classes. For example, by default, EclipseLink assumes that a persistent field of type Date is immutable: this means that as long as the value of the field has the same object ID, EclipseLink assumes that the value has not changed. If your application uses the set methods of the Date class, you can change the state of the Date object value without changing its object ID. This prevents EclipseLink from detecting the change. To avoid this, you can configure a mapping as mutable: this tells EclipseLink to examine the state of the persistent value, not just its object ID.

You can configure the mutability of the following:

  • TransformationMapping instances;
  • any JPA @Basic mapping type (including Date and Calendar types) individually;
  • all Date and Calendar types.

Mutability can affect change tracking performance. For example, if a transformation mapping maps a mutable value, EclipseLink must clone and compare the value in a unit of work (see Configuring Copy Policy). If the mapping maps a simple immutable value, you can improve unit of work performance by configuring mapping as immutable.

Mutability also affects weaving. EclipseLink can only weave an attribute change tracking policy for immutable mappings.

For more information, see the following:

Working with EclipseLink Metadata

The EclipseLink metadata is the bridge between the development of an application and its deployed run-time environment. Capture the metadata using:

  • JPA annotations, persistence.xml, orm.xml, and EclipseLink JPA annotation and persistence.xml property extensions: the EclipseLink JPA persistence provider interprets all these sources of metadata to create an in-memory EclipseLink session and project at run time.
  • The Workbench (see Creating Project Metadata and Creating Session Metadata) to create EclipseLink sessions.xml and project.xml files which you pass to the EclipseLink run-time environment.
  • Java and the EclipseLink API (this approach is the most labor-intensive).

The metadata lets you pass configuration information into the run-time environment. The run-time environment uses the information in conjunction with the persistent classes (Java objects, JPA entities, or EJB entity beans) and the code written with the EclipseLink API, to complete the application.

Using EclipseLink JPA, you also have the option of specifying your metadata using EclipseLink sessions.xml and project.xml while accessing your persistent classes using JPA and an EntityManger. For more information, see What You May Need to Know About EclipseLink JPA Overriding Mechanisms.


EclipseLink Metadata

EclipseLink Metadata


This section describes the following:


Advantages of the EclipseLink Metadata Architecture

The EclipseLink metadata architecture provides many important benefits, including the following:

  • Stores mapping information in XML descriptors–not in the domain model objects
  • By using the metadata, EclipseLink does not intrude in the object model or the database schema
  • Allows you to design the object model as needed, without forcing any specific design
  • Allows DBAs to design the database as needed, without forcing any specific design
  • Does not rely on code-generation (which can cause serious design, implementation, and maintenance issues)
  • Is unintrusive: adapts to the object model and database schema, rather than requiring you to design their object model or database schema to suit EclipseLink

Using EclipseLink JPA, you have the flexibility of expressing persistence metadata using standard JPA annotations, deployment XML, or both and you can optionally take advantage of EclipseLink JPA annotation and persistence.xml property extensions.


Creating Project Metadata

An EclipseLink project contains the mapping metadata that the EclipseLink runtime uses to map objects to a data source. The project is the primary object used by the EclipseLink runtime.

This section describes the principal contents of project metadata, including the following:

Using EclipseLink JPA, the EclipseLink runtime constructs an in-memory project based on any combination of JPA annotations, persistence.xml, orm.xml, and EclipseLink JPA annotation and persistence.xml property extensions. The use of a project.xml file is optional (see What You May Need to Know About EclipseLink JPA Overriding Mechanisms).

For more information about creating project.xml metadata, see project.xml File.


Descriptors and Mappings

EclipseLink maps persistent entities to the database in the application, using the descriptors and mappings you build with theWorkbench. These tools support several approaches to project development, including the following:

  • Importing classes and tables for mapping
  • Importing classes and generating tables and mappings
  • Importing tables and generating classes and mappings
  • Creating both class and table definitions

Workbench supports all these options. The most common solution is to develop the persistent entities using a development tool, such as an integrated development environment (IDE), or a modeling tool, and to develop the relational model through appropriate relational design tools. You then use the Workbench to construct mappings that relate these two models.

Although the Workbench offers the ability to generate persistent entities or the relational model components for an application, this utilities are intended only to assist in rapid initial development strategies–not complete round-trip application development.

For more information, see Introduction to Descriptors and Introduction to Mappings.


Amending Descriptors

An amendment method lets you implement an EclipseLink feature that is not currently supported by the Workbench. Simply write a Java method to amend the descriptor after it is loaded, and specify the method in the Workbench for inclusion in the project metadata. See Configuring Amendment Methods for detailed information on implementing an amendment method for an EclipseLink descriptor.


Data Source Login Information

For POJO projects, you configure a session login in the session metadata that specifies the information required to access the data source (see Creating Session Metadata).

For more information, see Projects and Login.


Creating Session Metadata

An EclipseLink session contains a reference to a particular project.xml file, plus the information required to access the data source. The session is the primary object used by your application to access the features of the EclipseLink runtime. In a POJO project, your application acquires and accesses a session directly (see POJO Applications and Session Metadata).

Using EclipseLink JPA, the EclipseLink runtime constructs an in-memory session based on any combination of JPA annotations, persistence.xml, orm.xml, and EclipseLink JPA annotation and persistence.xml property extensions. The use of a sessions.xml file is optional (see What You May Need to Know About EclipseLink JPA Overriding Mechanisms).


Deploying Metadata

The project.xml and sessions.xml file are packaged for deployment differently according to the type of application you are deploying.

For more information, see the following:

Using EclipseLink JPA, you also have the option of specifying your metadata using EclipseLink sessions.xml and project.xml while accessing your persistent classes using JPA and an EntityManger. For more information, see What You May Need to Know About EclipseLink JPA Overriding Mechanisms.


Using Weaving

Weaving is a technique of manipulating the byte-code of compiled Java classes. EclipseLink uses weaving to enhance both JPA entities and Plain Old Java Object (POJO) classes for such things as lazy loading, change tracking, fetch groups, and internal optimizations.

This section describes the following:


Configuring Dynamic Weaving Using the EclipseLink Agent

Use this option to weave applicable class files one at a time, as they are loaded at run time. For more information, see How to Configure Dynamic Weaving for JPA Entities Using the EclipseLink Agent.


To Configure Dynamic Weaving Using the EclipseLink Agent

For information, see the following:

Configuring Static Weaving

Consider this option to weave all applicable class files at build time so that you can deliver prewoven class files. For more information, see How to Configure Static Weaving for JPA Entities.

Alternatively, you can weave classes at run time. For more information, see Configuring Dynamic Weaving Using the EclipseLink Agent.

Note that for weaving, you use a persistence.xml file in both JPA and POJO applications.

For information on packaging and deployment of POJO applications, see Packaging a POJO Application for Weaving.


Disabling Weaving Using EclipseLink Persistence Unit Properties

To disable weaving, you use persistence unit properties in both JPA and POJO applications. For more information, see How to Disable Weaving Using EclipseLink Persistence Unit Properties.

For information on packaging and deployment of POJO application, see Packaging a POJO Application for Weaving.


Packaging a POJO Application for Weaving

To package a POJO application for weaving, you create a JAR that contains a sessions.xml file and a persistence.xml file.


To Package a POJO Application for Weaving

  1. For any one to one or many to one relationship you want to be woven for lazy loading, enable ValueHolder indirection.
  2. Create a sessions.xml file for your application.
    For more information, see Introduction to EclipseLink Sessions.
  3. Create a persistence.xml file for your application and reference your sessions.xml file, as the following example shows.
    persistence.xml File for an EclipseLink JPA Application
    <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
    <persistence version="1.0"
      xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence"
      xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
      xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_1_0.xsd">
        <persistence-unit name="appname">
            <exclude-unlisted-classes>false</exclude-unlisted-classes>
            <properties>
    
                <property
                    name="eclipselink.session-name"
                    value="appname-session"
                />
                <property
                    name="eclipselink.sessions-xml"
                    value="sessions.xml"
                />
            </properties>
        </persistence-unit>
    </persistence>
    
  4. Create a JAR file that contains your POJO classes, project deployment XML file (the specific name is user defined),sessions.xml file, and persistence.xml file, as the following example shows.
    Put the project deployment XML, persistence.xml and sessions.xml files in a META-INF directory.
    JAR File for a POJO Application
    appname.jar
        META-INF
            persistence.xml
            sessions.xml
            project.xml
        *.java
    
  5. Weave the JAR.
    For more information, see the following:

What You May Need to Know About Weaving and POJO Classes

EclipseLink uses weaving to enable the following for POJO classes:

EclipseLink weaves all the POJO classes in the JAR you create when you package a POJO application for weaving. For more information, see Packaging a POJO Application for Weaving.

EclipseLink weaves all the classes defined in the persistence.xml file. That is the following:

  • all the classes you list in the persistence.xml file;
  • all classes relative to the JAR containing the persistence.xml file if element <exclude-unlisted-classes> is false.


What You May Need to Know About Weaving and Java EE Application Servers

The default EclipseLink weaving behavior applies in any Java EE JPA-compliant application server using the EclipseLink JPA persistence provider.To change this behavior, modify your persistence.xml (for your JPA entities or POJO classes) to use EclipseLink JPA properties, EclipseLink JPA annotations, or both.

For lazy loading (indirection) differences between Java EE and Java SE applications, see EclipseLink JPA Support for Lazy Loading by Mapping Type.

Considering Three-Tier Architecture

The three-tier Web application architecture generally includes the connection of a server-side Java application to the database through a JDBC connection (see the Three Tier Architecture figure). In this pattern, EclipseLink resides within a Java server (a Java EE server or a custom server), with several possible server integration points. The application can support Web clients such as servlets, Java clients, and generic clients using XML or Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA).

The three-tier application is a common architecture in which EclipseLink resides within a Java server (either a Java EE server or a custom server). In this architecture, the server session provides clients with shared access to JDBC connections and a shared object cache. Because it resides on a single JVM, this architecture is simple and easily scalable. The EclipseLink persistent entities in this architecture are generally Java objects.

This architecture often supports Web-based applications in which the client application is a Web client, a Java client, or a server component.


Three Tier Architecture
Three Tier Architecture

Although not all three-tier applications are Web-based, this architecture is ideally suited to distributed Web applications. In addition, although it is also common to use EJB in a Web application, this EclipseLink architecture does not.


Example Implementations

Examples of three-tier architecture implementation include the following:

  • A Model-View-Controller Model 2 architectural design pattern that runs in a Java EE container with servlets and JSP that uses EclipseLink to access data without EJB.
  • A Swing or Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT) client that connects to a server-side Java application through RMI, without an application server or container.


Advantages and Disadvantages

The three-tier Web application architecture offers the following advantages:

  • High performance, lightweight persistent objects
  • High degree of flexibility in deployment platform and configuration

The disadvantage of this architecture is it is less standard than EJB.


Variation Using Remote Sessions

EclipseLink includes a session type called remote session. The session offers the full session API and contains a cache of its own, but exists on the client system rather than on the EclipseLink server. Communications can be configured to use RMI or RMI-Internet Inter-Object Request Broker Protocol (IIOP).

Remote session operations require a corresponding client session on the server.

Although this is an excellent option for you if you wish to simplify the access from the client tier to the server tier, it is less scalable than using a client session and does not easily allow changes to server-side behavior.

For more information, see Remote Sessions.


Technical Challenges

The three-tier application with a stateless client presents several technical challenges, including the following:

  • Transaction management in a stateless environment
    A common design practice is to delimit client requests within a single unit of work (transactional session). In a stateless environment, this may affect how you design the presentation layer. For example, if a client requires multiple pages to collect information for a transaction, then the presentation layer must retain the information from page to page until the application accumulates the full set of changes or requests. At that point, the presentation layer invokes the unit of work to modify the database.
  • Optimistic locking in a stateless environmentIn a stateless environment, take care to avoid processing out-of-date (stale) data
    A common strategy for avoiding stale data is to implement optimistic locking, and store the optimistic lock values in the object.
    This solution requires careful implementation if the stateless application serializes the objects, or sends the contents of the object to the client in an alternative format. In this case, transport the optimistic lock values to the client in the HTTP contents of an edit page. You must then use the returned values in any write transaction to ensure that the data did not change while the client was performing its work.
    For more information about locking, see Configuring Locking Policy.
  • External JDBC pools
    By default, EclipseLink manages its own connection pools. You can also configure EclipseLink to use connection pooling offered by the host application server. This feature is useful for shared connection pools and is required for JTA/JTS integration (see Configuring External Connection Pooling).
  • JTA/JTS Integration
    JTA and JTS are standard Java components that enable sessions to participate in distributed transactions. You must configure EclipseLink to use JTA/JTS to use session beans in the architecture (see Integrating the Unit of Work with an External Transaction Service).
  • Cache coordination
    If you choose to use multiple servers to scale your application, you may require EclipseLink Cache Coordination.


Considering Two-Tier Architecture

A two-tier application generally includes a Java client that connects directly to the database through EclipseLink. The two-tier architecture is most common in complex user interfaces with limited deployment. The database session provides EclipseLink support for two-tier applications.

For more information, see Introduction to EclipseLink Sessions.


Two-Tier Architecture
Two-Tier Architecture

Although the two-tier architecture is the simplest EclipseLink application pattern, it is also the most restrictive, because each client application requires its own session. As a result, two-tier applications do not scale as easily as other architectures.

Two-tier applications are often implemented as user interfaces that directly access the database (see Two-Tier Architecture). They can also be non-interface processing engines. In either case, the two-tier model is not as common as the three-tier model.

The following are key elements of an efficient two-tier (client-server) architecture with EclipseLink:

  • Minimal dedicated connections from the client to the database
  • An isolated object cache


Example Implementations

An example of a two-tier architecture implementation is a Java user interface (Swing/AWT) and batch data processing.


Advantages and Disadvantages

The advantage of the two-tier design is its simplicity. The EclipseLink database session that builds the two-tier architecture provides all the EclipseLink features in a single session type, thereby making the two-tier architecture simple to build and use.

The most important limitation of the two-tier architecture is that it is not scalable, because each client requires its own database session.


Technical Challenges

The current trend toward multitiered Web applications makes the two-tier architecture less common in production systems, but no less viable. Because there is no shared cache in a two-tier system, you risk encountering stale data if you run multiple instances of the application. This risk increases as the number of individual database sessions increases.

To minimize this problem, EclipseLink offers support for several data locking strategies. These include pessimistic locking and several variations of optimistic locking. For more information, see Configuring Locking Policy.


Considering EJB Session Bean Facade Architecture

This architecture is an extension of the three-tier pattern, with the addition of EJB session beans wrapping the access to the application tier. Session beans provide public API access to application operations, enabling you to separate the presentation tier from the application tier. The architecture also lets you use session beans within a Java EE container.This type of architecture generally includes JTA integration, and serialization of data to the client.


Three-Tier Architecture Using Session Beans and Java Objects
Three-Tier Architecture Using Session Beans and Java Objects

A common extension to the three-tier architecture is to combine session beans and persistent Java objects managed by EclipseLink. The resulting application includes session beans and Java objects on an EclipseLink three-tier architecture (see the Three-Tier Architecture Using Session Beans and Java Objects figure).

The three-tier architecture creates a server session and shares it between the session beans in the application. When a session bean needs to access an EclipseLink session, the bean obtains a client session from the shared server session. This architecture has the following key features:

  • Session beans delimit transactions.
    Configure EclipseLink to work with a JTA system and its associated connection pool.
  • Accessing the persistent objects on the client side causes them to be serialized.
    Ensure that when the objects re-emerge on the server side, they properly merge into the cache to maintain identity.


Example Implementation

An example of the EJB session bean facade architecture implementation is a Model-View-Controller Model 2 architectural design pattern that runs in a Java EE container with servlets and JSP and uses the session bean enabled by EclipseLink to access data without EJB.


Advantages and Disadvantages

The EJB session bean facade architecture is a popular and effective compromise between the performance of persistent Java objects, and the benefits of EJB for standardized client development and server scalability. It offers the following advantages:

  • Less overhead than an EJB CMP application
    EclipseLink shares access to the project, descriptor, and login information across the beans in the application.
  • Future compatibility with other servers
    This design isolates login and EJB server-specific information from the beans, which lets you migrate the application from one application server to another without major recoding or rebuilding.
  • Shared read cacheThis design offers increased efficiency by providing a shared cache for reading objects.

The key disadvantage of this model is the need to transport the persistent model to the client. If the model involves complex object graphs in conjunction with indirection (lazy loading), this can present many challenges with inheritance, indirection, and relationships.


What Are Session Beans

Session beans model a process, operation, or service and as such, are not persistent entities. However, session beans can use persistence mechanisms to perform the services they model.

Under the session bean model, a client application invokes methods on a session bean that, in turn, performs operations on Java objects enabled by EclipseLink. Session beans execute all operations related to EclipseLink on behalf of the client.

The EJB specifications describe session beans as either stateless or stateful.

  • Stateful beans maintain a conversational state with a client; that is, they retain information between method calls issued by a particular client. This enables the client to use multiple method calls to manipulate persistent objects.
  • Stateless beans do not retain data between method calls. When the client interacts with stateless session beans, it must complete any object manipulations within a single method call.


Technical Challenges

Your application can use both stateful and stateless session beans with an EclipseLink client session or database session. When you use session beans with an EclipseLink session, the type of bean used affects how it interacts with the session:

  • Stateless session beans and the EclipseLink session
    Stateless beans store no information between method calls from the client.
    As a result, reestablish the connection of the bean to the session for each client method call. Each method call through EclipseLink obtains a client session, makes the appropriate calls, and releases the reference to the client session.
  • Stateful session beans and the EclipseLink session
    Your EJB server configuration includes settings that affect the way it manages beans–settings designed to increase performance, limit memory footprint, or set a maximum number of beans. When you use stateful beans, the server may deactivate a stateful session bean enabled by EclipseLink out of the JVM memory space between calls to satisfy one of these settings. The server then reactivates the bean when required, and brings it back into memory.
    This behavior is important, because an EclipseLink session instance does not survive passivation. To maintain the session between method calls, release the session during the passivation process and re-obtain it when you reactivate the bean.
  • External JDBC pools
    By default, EclipseLink manages its own connection pools. For the session bean architecture, you must configure EclipseLink to use connection pooling offered by the host application server. This feature is useful for shared connection pools and is required for JTA/JTS integration (see Configuring External Connection Pooling).
  • JTA/JTS integration
    JTA and JTS are standard Java components that enable sessions to participate in distributed transactions. You must configure EclipseLink to use JTA/JTS to use session beans in the architecture (see Integrating the Unit of Work with an External Transaction Service).
  • Cache coordination
    If you choose to use multiple servers to scale your application, you may require EclipseLink Cache Coordination.


What Is a Unit of Work Merge

You can use a unit of work to enable your client application to modify objects on the database. The unit of work merge functions employ mappings to copy the values from the serialized object into the unit of work, and to calculate changes.

For more information, see Merging Changes in Working Copy Clones.


Considering JPA Entity Architecture

A part of the EJB 3.0 specification, the Java Persistence API (JPA) is a lightweight, POJO-based framework for Java persistence. JPA focuses on object relational mapping and contains a full object relational mapping specification supporting the use of Java language metadata annotations and/or XML descriptors to define the mapping between Java objects and a relational database. Object relational mapping with the JPA is completely metadata-driven. JPA supports a SQL-like query language for both static and dynamic queries. It also supports the use of pluggable persistence providers.

JPA includes the following concepts:

  • Entity–any application-defined object with the following characteristics can be an entity:
    • it can be made persistent;
    • it has a persistent identity (a key that uniquely identifies an entity instance and distinguishes it from other instances of the same entity type. An entity has a persistent identity when there is a representation of it in a data store);
    • it is partially transactional in a sense that a persistence view of an entity is transactional (an entity is created, updated and deleted within a transaction, and a transaction is required for the changes to be committed in the database). However, in-memory entities can be changed without the changes being persisted.
    • it is not a primitive, a primitive wrapper, or built-in object. An entity is a fine-graned object that has a set of aggregated state that is typically stored in a single place (such as a row in a table), and have relationships to other entities.
  • Entity metadata–describes every entity. Metadata could be expressed as annotations (specifically defined types that may be attached to or place in front of Java programming elements) or XML (descriptors).
  • Entity manager–enables API calls to perform operations on an entity. Until an entity manager is used to create, read, or write an entity, the entity is just a regular nonpersistent Java object. When an entity manager obtains a reference to an entity, that entity becomes managed by the entity manager. The set of managed entity instances within an entity manager at any given time is called its persistence context–only one Java instance with the same persistent identity may exist in a persistence context at any time.
    You can configure an entity manager to be able to persist or manage certain types of objects, read or write to a particular database, and be implemented by a specific persistence provider. The persistence provider supplies the backing implementation engine for JPA, including the EntityManager interface implementation, the Query implementation, and the SQL generation.Entity managers are provided by an EntityManagerFactory. The configuration for an entity manager is bound to the EntityManagerFactory, but it is defined separately as a persistence unit. You name persistence units to allow differentiation between EntityManagerFactory objects. This way your application obtains control over which configuration to use for operations on a specific entity. The configuration that describes the persistence unit is defined in a persistence.xml file.
    The following description expresses relationships between JPA concepts:
    • Persistence creates one or more EntityManagerFactory objects;
    • each EntityManagerFactory is configured by one persistence unit;
    • EntityManagerFactory creates one or more EntityManager objects;
    • one or more EntityManager manages one PersistenceContext.

For more information, see the following:


Example Implementations

An example of the entity beans with bean-managed persistence implementation is a Model-View-Controller Model 2 architectural design pattern that runs in a Java EE container, with servlets and JSP that access session beans and EJB 3.0-compliant entities using the EclipseLink-based JPA persistence provider.


Advantages and Disadvantages

The use of EclipseLink JPA entities offers the following advantages:

  • POJO persistence–in JPA, persistent objects are POJOs.
  • Object relational mapping is completely metadata-driven.
  • The persistence API exists as a separate layer from the persistent objects and does not intrude upon them.
  • Using the query framework you can query across entities and their relationships without having to use concrete foreign keys or database columns.

Also, you can define queries statically in metadata or create them dynamically by passing query criteria on construction. Queries can return entities as results.

  • Entities are mobile–objects are able to move from one JVM to another and back, and at the same time be usable by the application.
  • You can configure persistence features through the use of Java SE 5 annotations, or XML, or a combination of both. You may also rely on defaults.
  • If your application is running inside a container, the container provides support and ease of use; you can configure the same application to run outside a container.

Considering Web Services Architecture

A Web services architecture is similar to the Three-Tier Architecture or Session Bean Architecture architecture, however, in a Web services architecture, you encapsulate business logic (the service) in a Web service instead of (or in addition to) using session beans. In a Web services architecture, clients communicate with your application using SOAP messages (XML over HTTP).


Figure 2-6 Web Services Architecture
Web Services Architecture

As in any architecture, you can use EclipseLink to persist objects to relational or EIS data sources. However, in a Web services architecture, you can also use EclipseLink to map your object model to an XML schema for use with the Web service or as the Web service XML serializer.


Example Implementations

An example of a Web services architecture implementation is the use of a Web service to expose parts of an existing application to a remote client (typically another application) by way of SOAP messages. In this application, you can use EclipseLink XML to unmarshall XML messages to Java objects to facilitate requests and marshall Java object responses back into XML for transmission to the client.


Advantages and Disadvantages

Using EclipseLink in Web services architecture has many advantages, including, but not limited to, the following:

  • you can map XML messages to an existing Java object model;
  • you can achieve a high level of complexity of mapping support;
  • compliance with the JAXB standards;
  • providing a scalable, high-performing solution.

One debatable disadvantage is this solution's complexity over a simple RMI session bean service.


Technical Challenges

As with any technology, there are technical challenges associated with the use of EclipseLink in Web services architecture. These technical challenges are mostly related to special-case scenarios, such as when you need to implement a custom serializer because you have both the Java objects and the schema.

For more information, see XML Mappings.


Considering EclipseLink Database Web Services (DBWS)Architecture

EclipseLink DBWS allows you to access relational database artifacts through a web service. EclipseLink DBWS includes two components: a design-time tooling component and a runtime provider component. The runtime provider uses EclipseLink to bridge between the database and the XML SOAP Messages used by a Web Service client.

Using DBWS requires JDK 1.6 (or higher).

See DBWS for more information.

Considering EclipseLink Service Data Objects (SDO) Architecture

An EclipseLink SDO architecture uses the SDO 2.1 framework for data application and development. The EclipseLink implementation provides additional features beyond the SDO specification provides and is primarily used for converting Java objects to XML. See EclipseLink Support for Java Architecture for XML Binding (JAXB) for more information.


Example Implementation

The EclipseLink implementation can be used with application similar to JAXB or OX mappings. Typical implementations include:

  • Reading in XML with no Types or Properties (metadata) defined. In this case the user is returned a graph of DataObjects that can be accesses much like a DO
  • Reading in XML with Types and Properties defined, but no generated classes. In this case the user is returned a graph of DataObjects with associated Types that allow the user to introspect the objects. In this case the user is using a very dynamic but still typed, object model.
  • Reading in XML with Types and Properties defined using generated classes. In this case the user is returned a graph of bean like objects. This is very similar to JAXB except that the user will have access to both the static and dynamic APIs.


Advantages and Disadvantages

Using EclipseLink with SDO has many advantages, including, but not limited to the following:

  • generation of Java SDO classes from an XML schema;
  • generation of SDO types and properties at runtime, to create dynamic SDOs;
  • generation of an XML XML schema that corresponds to the types and properties of your SDO model; ability to capture and marshall (to XML) the set of changes made to an SDO object graph in an SDO Change Summary.



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