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Difference between revisions of "EclipseLink/DesignDocs/340192"

(Design)
 
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= Flex Columns Extension =
 
= Flex Columns Extension =
  
This feature allows mappings to be added to preexisting (unmapped) columns in a table.
+
== Why use this feature? ==
  
The Schema is designed to include preallocated columns that can be used to map additional data. In this example, Customer table might look like this:
+
# You are building an application where some mappings are common to all users and some mappings are user-specific
 +
# You want to add mappings to your application after it is made available to a customer (even post-deployment)
 +
# You want to use the same EntityManagerFactory to work with your data even after the mappings have changed
 +
# You can provide an additional source of metadata to be used by the application ( an xml-based source is provided, or you can build your own)
 +
 
 +
An example of the type of user this is designed for is a Software-as-a-Service provider who designs a generic application that can be provided to users and allow them to customize the application to make use of data that is particular to their domain.
 +
 
 +
== What basic steps do I have to take to use this feature ==
 +
 
 +
1. Design a standard JPA Application
 +
 
 +
2. Decide which Entities will allow flexible mappings, annotate them as such and provide facilities to store the addional data.
 +
 
 +
<source lang="java">
 +
 
 +
  @Entity
 +
  @VirtualAccessMethods
 +
  public class Customer{
 +
 
 +
...
 +
 
 +
    @Transient
 +
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
 +
 
 +
    public <T> T get(String name) {
 +
        return (T) extentions.get(name);
 +
    }
 +
 
 +
    public Object set(String name, Object value) {
 +
        return extensions.put(name, value);
 +
    }
 +
</source>
 +
 
 +
 
 +
3. When you design your schema, provide enough extra columns in your tables to accomodate the number of flexible mappings you will allow.  e.g. The following table has 3 predefined columns and 3 columns designed to accomodate mappings added after design (FLEX_COL1, FLEX_COL2, FLEX_COL3)
  
 
* CUSTOMER
 
* CUSTOMER
Line 12: Line 46:
 
** VARCHAR FLEX_CO31
 
** VARCHAR FLEX_CO31
  
The columns starting with the String "FLEX_COL" are flexible and may have mappings that point to after initial application design. For instance at after the application has been designed, a user may add a mapping called "company" that maps to FLEX_COL1.
+
4. Deploy your application
  
The use case for a scenario like this is:
+
5. To provide additional mappings, provide an eclipselink-orm.xml file that contains the additional mappings.
  
* One company develops an application with the goal of making it available to a customer. The application contains all the functionality necessary for basic use of the application
+
<source lang="xml">
* The application is deployed and made available to the customer.  The customer can then tweak the application by adding mappings to data that is specific to their business
+
   
 +
  <basic name="idNumber" access="VIRTUAL" attribute-type="String">
 +
      <column name="FLEX_1"/>
 +
      <access-methods get-method="get" set-method="set"/>
 +
    </basic>
  
This kind of application works well in concert with a multi-tenant application where the initial application is developed and then each tenant can add mappings that are particular to their business.
+
</source>
 +
 
 +
6. Use persistence unit properties to get your application to use the file:
 +
 
 +
<source lang='xml'>
 +
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="XML"/>
 +
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>
 +
</source>
  
 
= Requirements =
 
= Requirements =
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* Extensions MUST be compatible with our multi-tenant features.  (i.e. Extensions must be able to make use of our Multi-tenant features to be definable on a tenant by tenant basis)
 
* Extensions MUST be compatible with our multi-tenant features.  (i.e. Extensions must be able to make use of our Multi-tenant features to be definable on a tenant by tenant basis)
 
* BasicMappings MUST be supported
 
* BasicMappings MUST be supported
* Extensibility MUST be configurable using traditional JPA means (annotations, eclispelink-orm.xml)
+
* Extensibility MUST be configurable using traditional JPA means (annotations, eclipselink-orm.xml)
 
* It MUST be possible to use JPA Queries to query based on the extensions
 
* It MUST be possible to use JPA Queries to query based on the extensions
 
* Extensions SHOULD be supported through the JPA metamodel
 
* Extensions SHOULD be supported through the JPA metamodel
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Extensions will be supported using our VIRTUAL access type.  Virtual Access type allows properties to be set through a getter that takes an attribute name as an argument and a setter that takes an argument name and a value as an argument.
 
Extensions will be supported using our VIRTUAL access type.  Virtual Access type allows properties to be set through a getter that takes an attribute name as an argument and a setter that takes an argument name and a value as an argument.
  
VIRTUAL access does not currently allow annotation-based configuration.  As part of this feature, annotations will be added to indicate that an Entity uses VIRTUAL access.  Those annotations will be used to enable Extensions.
+
VIRTUAL access does not currently allow annotation-based configuration.  As part of this feature, annotations will be added to configure the methods used by Virtual access.  These annotations will have the same effect as using the eclipselink-orm.xml construct <access-methods> at a class level.  They will default which methods are used by virtual mappings.  EclipseLink will weave these methods if weaving is enabled.  This weaving will provide equivalent functionality to weaving for PROPERTY and FIELD access. (e.g. change tracking, fetch groups, etc)  
 
+
The annotations indicating use of VIRTUAL access will be used to determine which methods EclipseLink can weave.  This weaving will provide equivalent functionality to weaving for PROPERTY and FIELD access. (e.g. change tracking, fetch groups, etc)
+
  
 
DDL generation for tables with flexible columns will be addressed in a separate feature that addresses flexible DDL generation as a complete feature.
 
DDL generation for tables with flexible columns will be addressed in a separate feature that addresses flexible DDL generation as a complete feature.
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* Field Access for non extension fields
 
* Field Access for non extension fields
 
* Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
 
* Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
 +
* get(String) and set(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
  
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   @Entity
 
   @Entity
   @VirtualProperties()
+
   @VirtualAccessMethods
 
   public class Address {
 
   public class Address {
  
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     }
 
     }
  
     public Object set(String name, String value) {
+
     public Object set(String name, Object value) {
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
     }
 
     }
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* Field Access for non extension fields
 
* Field Access for non extension fields
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
* @VirtualProperties annotation overrides method to be used for get and for set.
+
* @VirtualAccessMethods annotation overrides method to be used for get and for set.
 +
* getExtension(String) and setExtension(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods
 
* XML for extended mapping indicates which get and set method to use
 
* XML for extended mapping indicates which get and set method to use
  
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<source lang="java">
 
<source lang="java">
 
   @Entity
 
   @Entity
   @VirtualProperties(get="getExtension", set="setExtension")
+
   @VirtualAccessMethods(get="getExtension", set="setExtension")
 
   public class Address {
 
   public class Address {
  
Line 108: Line 153:
 
     }
 
     }
  
     public Object setExtension(String name, String value) {
+
     public Object setExtension(String name, Object value) {
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
     }
 
     }
Line 118: Line 163:
 
<source lang="xml">
 
<source lang="xml">
 
   
 
   
   <basic name="name" attribute-type="String">
+
   <basic name="name" access="VIRTUAL" attribute-type="String">
 
       <column name="FLEX_1"/>
 
       <column name="FLEX_1"/>
 
       <access-methods get-method="getExtension" set-method="setExtension"/>
 
       <access-methods get-method="getExtension" set-method="setExtension"/>
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* Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
 
* Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - no @Transient required because of Property access
 
* extensions mapped in a portable way - no @Transient required because of Property access
 +
* get(String) and set(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods
 +
  
 
<source lang="java">
 
<source lang="java">
 
   @Entity
 
   @Entity
   @VirtualProperties
+
   @VirtualAccessMethods
 
   public class Address {
 
   public class Address {
  
Line 149: Line 196:
 
     }
 
     }
  
     public Object set(String name, String value) {
+
     public Object set(String name, Object value) {
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
         return extensions.put(name, value);
 
     }
 
     }
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EclipseLink will initially ship with the capability of connecting to two types of metadata repository.
 
EclipseLink will initially ship with the capability of connecting to two types of metadata repository.
  
# Database Table - information about extensions is stored in a database table
+
# XML (high priority) - information about extensions is stored in XML
# XML - information about extensions is stored in XML
+
# Database Table (medium priority) - information about extensions is stored in a database table
  
 
Additionally, the user will be able to provide an implementation of the class that access the metadata repository.
 
Additionally, the user will be able to provide an implementation of the class that access the metadata repository.
Line 177: Line 224:
  
 
<source lang="xml">
 
<source lang="xml">
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository" value="XMLFile"/>
+
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="XML"/>
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository.xml-file.url" value="foo://bar"/>
+
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>
 
</source>
 
</source>
 
==== Database ====
 
 
<source lang="xml">
 
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository" value="Database"/>
 
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository.database.url" value="jdbc:mysql://localhost/metadata"/>
 
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository.database.user" value="username"/>
 
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository.database.password" value="password"/>
 
</source>
 
 
''Note: additional information such as table name, may be required.''
 
  
 
==== User-Specified ====
 
==== User-Specified ====
  
 
<source lang="xml">
 
<source lang="xml">
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-repository" value="com.foo.MetadataRepository"/>
+
   <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="com.foo.MetadataRepository"/>
 
   <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.location" value="foo://bar"/>
 
   <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.location" value="foo://bar"/>
 
   <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.extra-data" value="foo-bar"/>
 
   <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.extra-data" value="foo-bar"/>
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== Configuration ==
 
== Configuration ==
  
''Please use the examples above for intial discussion of configuration XML and annotations.  Full specification will be provided in this document after an initial discussion.  Note also, that the configuration options to allow a mapping to use VIRTUAL access have been available in EclipseLink for several releases.  We will be using those configuration options as they exist and any changes to those will be handled as bugs in that feature rather than through this design document.''
+
Please use the examples above as a guideline configuration XML and annotations.  Note that the configuration options to allow a mapping to use VIRTUAL access have been available in EclipseLink for several releases.  We will be using those configuration options as they exist and any changes to those will be handled as bugs rather than through this design document.''
  
 
== Weaving ==
 
== Weaving ==
  
The intial VIRTUAL access feature did not include weaving of the get and set methods.  As part of the extensions feature will will add weaving of get and set methods that use virtual access.  The initial implementation will only support Basic mappings and throw an exception at Transformer construction time if weaving is requested for a VIRTUAL mapping that is not Basic.
+
The intial VIRTUAL access feature did not include weaving of the get and set methods.  As part of the extensions feature will will add weaving of get and set methods that use virtual access.  The initial implementation will not support OneToOne mappings and throw an exception at Transformer construction time if weaving is requested for a VIRTUAL mapping that is OneToOne.
  
 
=== Get method ===
 
=== Get method ===
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     }
 
     }
  
 +
</source>
 +
 +
To allow weaving, RelationalDescriptor will have a list virtual methods added.  This list will be used at transformer-construction time to allow EclipseLink to know which methods it should weave.
 +
 +
<source lang="java">
 +
 +
    /** The methods that are used by virtual attributes as getter methods and setter methods. 
 +
    * These will be used by our weaver to properly weave those methods
 +
    **/
 +
    protected List<VirtualAccessMethods> virtualMethods = null;
 
</source>
 
</source>
  
 
== EntityManagerFactory ==
 
== EntityManagerFactory ==
  
''EntityManagerFactory work is still in the early design phase.  The following is provided for discussion''
+
=== Bootstrap ===
new API:
+
* refresh() - refreshes the underlying session by rebootstrapping.
+
  
 +
EntityManagerFactory bootstrapping occurs withing EntityManagerSetupImpl.  In the predeploy method, there is code that obtains the orm.xml files that contain metadata.  At that point, the metadata repository will be consulted.  It will provide additional metadata information in the same format as is obtained from the orm.xml file.
 +
 +
=== Refresh ===
  
 
A mechanism will be provided that allows a user to tell a Metadata repository to refresh.  That mechanism will take two forms.
 
A mechanism will be provided that allows a user to tell a Metadata repository to refresh.  That mechanism will take two forms.
  
# A direct refresh API call.  This call will clear all session information from the EntityManagerFactory without removing that information from existing EntityManagers and cause the EntityManagerFactory to rebootstrap.  The rebootstrap will cause the metadata repository to be consulted and any new mapping information will be retrieved.
+
# A direct refresh API call
 
# A RemoteCommandManager command that causes all subscribed EntityManagerFactories to refresh themselves as described above.
 
# A RemoteCommandManager command that causes all subscribed EntityManagerFactories to refresh themselves as described above.
  
 +
Refresh will be supported by adding an additional proxy to our EntityManagerFactory archtecture.
  
 +
'''Current:''' EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession
  
=== EntityManagerFactoryWrapper ===
+
'''New:''' EntityManagerFactoryWrapper implements EntityManagerFactory -> EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession
  
'''Current:''' EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession
+
EntityManagerFactoryWrapper will implement:
  
'''New:''' EntityManagerFactoryWrapper -> EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession
+
<source lang='java'>
 +
  public void refreshMetadata()
 +
</source>
  
 
In both cases, a live EntityManager holds a reference to EntityManagerFactoryImpl
 
In both cases, a live EntityManager holds a reference to EntityManagerFactoryImpl
  
When a call is made to refresh on the MetadataRepository, refresh will be called on EntityManagerFactoryWrapper.  EntityManagerFactoryWrapper will bootstrap a new EntityManagerFactoryImpl and use it as the basis for any new EntityManagers.  The old EntityManagerFactoryImpl will continue to be available until the last EntityManager is no longer used, at which point we will rely on garbage collection to clean it up.
+
When a call is made to refreshMetadata(), EntityManagerFactoryWrapper will bootstrap a new EntityManagerFactoryImpl and use it as the basis for any new EntityManagers.  The old EntityManagerFactoryImpl will continue to be available until the last EntityManager is no longer used, at which point we will rely on garbage collection to clean it up.
  
=== Bootstrapping ===
+
== Metadata Source ==
  
Bootstrapping using the MetadataRepository will be very similar to the current bootstrapping processIn EntityManagerSetupImpl.predeploy(), the MetadataProcessor builds the session based on the existing XML files.  During that proces, the MetadataProcessor will extract the new mapping information from the MetadataRepository by asking for an eclipselink-orm.xml representation of it.  That file will be used as an override for other orm.xml files used in bootstrapping process.
+
An implementation of MetadataSoruce will access metadata for extensionsMetadata is accessed in the form of an eclipselink-orm.xml file.
  
 +
<source lang='java'>
  
== Metadata Repository ==
+
package org.eclipse.persistence.jpa.metadata;
  
''MetadataRepository is still in the early design phase.  The following is provided for discussion''
+
public interface MetadataSource{
  
Abstract class MetadataRepository will contain 3 types of abstract API
+
    /**
 +
    * ADVANCED:
 +
    * In most cases, this method should not be overridden.  The implementation of
 +
    * this method uses getEntityMappingsReader() to obtain a reader that will
 +
    * that reads a stream in the eclipselink-orm.xml format
 +
    * Advanced implementations of MetadataRepository have to option of overriding
 +
    * this method.
 +
    * @return XMLEntityMappings which are then merged in using existing metadata
 +
    * processing at bootstrap time when creating an entityManager
 +
    */
 +
    public XMLEntityMappings getMetadata(Properties properties, ClassLoader loader)
  
* API to retrieve extensions
+
</source>
** XMLEntityMappings getEntityMappings(Properties, ClassLoader) - returns XMLEntityMappings which are then merged in using existing metadata processing at bootstrap time when creating an entityManager
+
** java.io.Reader getEntityMappingsReader()- returns an InputStreamReader to an eclipselink-orm.xml document that maps the extensions, which can then be used by getEntityMappings implementations.  This may not be used in some MetadataRepository implementations. 
+
  
 +
Additionally, an adapter class will be provided that implements MetadataSource containing stubbed out methods.  Customers will be encouraged to implement a MetadataSource by subclasing the adapter class rather than directly implementing the interface.  This strategy will allow them to tranaparently absorb any new versions of the interface in new EclipseLink versions.
  
* API to store extensions and cause them to be used
+
=== XMLMetadataSource ===
** addMapping(DatabaseMapping, Descriptor)
+
** notify() - notify send a message to all known MetadataRepositories to indicate they should refresh.  (RemoteCommandManager message)
+
* Configuration API
+
** setLocation(String location) - the location of the store, a URL.  This could represent the a file system location where the repository is, a database connection URL, or any other location
+
  
DatabaseMetadataRepository will be a subclass of MetadataRepository containing additional configuration API
+
The first implementation of MetadataSource provided by EclipseLink will access a simple XML File.
  
* setUser(String)
+
It will provide an implementation of getMetadata(properties, classlaoder) that uses the property "eclipselink.metadata-repository.xml-file.url", specified like this:
* setPassword(String)
+
* setDriver(String)
+
* API to configure which table to access and how the table is configured
+
* getColumn(columnNamePrefix, tableName, dataType) - get an unused column from the given table that can store dataType and has a name staring with the columnNamePrefix. This will be used by users to build the DatabaseMappings to add.
+
XMLMetadataRepository will also be a subclass of MetadataRepository providing file-based XML lookup
+
  
= Old Design =
+
<source lang='xml'>
 +
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>
 +
</source>
  
Please ignore the design below. It has been kept around until any useful parts of it can be incorporated in the update design.
+
To create an input stream on the eclipselink-orm.xml file at URL: "foo://bar"/" and build an XMLEntityMappings using our existing EclipseLink ORM parsing code.
  
== FlexExtensionManager ==
+
=== Writing to a metadata repository ===
  
Each ClassDescriptor may have an ExtensionManager.  For extensible types, the ExtensionManager will be non-null and will be set either by annotation, xml, or explicitly on the descriptor.  Different types of ExtensionManager are possible.  The flex column behavior is managed by a FlexExtensionManager.
+
In the initial implementation writing to the metadata repository will be left up to the user.
  
FlexExtensionManager holds the following state:
+
== Remote Command Manager ==
  
* extensionsAccessor - an Accessor that gives it access to the Map on the domain class that holds the extensions.  e.g. the Map annotated as @FlexExtensions
+
A Command for RemoteCommandManager will be implemented that triggers a refreshMetadata() call on all subscribed EntityManagerFactories.
* availableFields - the list of DatabaseField that it believes can be used for new extensions
+
* usedFields - the list of DatabaseField that it believes is used for existing extensions
+
* shouldCreateNonExistingColumns - a boolean used to enable the additional feature that will allow ALTER schema language to create new columns (more to come)
+
  
 +
'''Design is in progress and will be added as it becomes available'''
  
== Extension Data ==
+
= Future Enhancements =
  
Extension data will be persisted to the database.  Each extension will be represented by an ExtensionProperty holding the following data:
+
== Weaving of OneToOne mappings ==
  
* String - entityType - the name of the Entity it represents
+
Implement support for weaving of non-basic VIRTUAL mappings
* DatabaseField - field - a DatabaseField representing the column used by this extension
+
* Class - type - the target class of the mapping
+
* String - name - the name of the extension
+
* mapping - a reference to the mapping for this extension
+
  
An project containing an Extensible type will have a descriptor added to it for ExtensionProperty.  Any time an Extension is added, its ExtensionProperty will be persisted.  The table will contain the following information:
+
* Handle OneToOneMappings
 +
* Handle indirection
  
* ENTITY_TYPE (PK) - Directly mapped from entityType
+
== Allow metadata to be updated with an in-memory structure ==
* COLUMN_NAME (PK) - Name of the field stored in field
+
* TARGET_TYPE - Class name of the class represented by type
+
* NAME - Directly mapped from name
+
  
At descriptor initialization time, a ReadAllQuery will be issued for all ExtensionProperties with an ENTITY_TYPE.  These will be stored by the ExtensionManager and used to build the appropritate mappings.
+
From GlassFish team:
  
== Adding Extensions ==
+
# Programmatic  API to call into EclipseLink to "push" the extension definitions.
 +
# The data exchanged between the caller and EclipseLink via API should be in a format that just refers to extension information and not a generic data structure.
 +
# The API call should be on an EclipseLink artifact that does not trigger deploy. That is it should be on an artifact at EMF level.
  
Extensions are added through a call to extensionManager.addExtension(name, type).  When addExtension is called, the following will occur:
+
== Database Metadata Source ==
  
# a check will be made to ensure the extension does not already exist in the descriptor and an exception will be thrown if it does
+
Provide an implementation of Metadata Source that reads from a database.
# the list of available fields will be checked for a field that can represent the type that is passed in
+
# If no field is available either the Column Creation feature will be used, or an exception will be thrown.
+
# the availableFields and usedFields lists will be updated
+
# An instance of ExtensionProperty will be created and persisted, if persisting fails for any reason, an exception will be thrown and the availableFields and usedFields lists will be reset
+
# A mapping will be created to represent the ExtensionProperty and it will be added to the descriptor
+
  
=== Mapping Types ===
+
== Writing to a metadata Source ==
  
Extensions may only be the following types of mappings
+
Provide API to write to the XMLFile and DatabaseMetadata Sources.
  
* Basic
+
== Configuration of muliple getter and setter methods ==
* OneToOne (single foreign key)
+
  
==== MapValueAttributeAccessor ====
+
* Allow annotations and xml to specify a list of methods for VIRTUAL mappings to weave
  
Since all extensions will be stored in the same map, mappings cooresponding with those extensions will use a MapValueAttributeAccessor. 
+
= Appendices =
  
MapValueAttributeAccessor will have knowledge of the map holding the extensions and a call to getAttributeValueFromObject will retreive the value from the map based on the extension's property name and a call to setAttributeValueInObject will put a value in the map based on the property name.
+
== Appendix 1: Alternatives Considered ==
  
==== Basic Mappings ====
+
http://wiki.eclipse.org/EclipseLink/DesignDocs/335601
  
The initial iteration will allow Basic mappings.  Basic mappings are fairly easy to implement as they are a simple coorespondance between a field and value in the map.  A basic mapping will be constructed with the appropriate data and added to the descriptor
+
== Appendix 2: Annotations ==
 
+
==== OneToOne Mappings ====
+
 
+
OneToOne mappings to Objects with a single primary key will be supported.  The flex column will be used as the foreign key. 
+
 
+
== Extension Propogation ==
+
 
+
Extensions will be refreshed from the database each time an EntityManagerFactory or EntityManager is created.
+
 
+
No Push style notification via our RemoteCommandManager or other mechanism is currently planned.
+
 
+
== DDL Generation ==
+
 
+
DDL generation will allow the creation of the extension table and also include any known extension columns to domain tables
+
 
+
== Column Creation ==
+
 
+
See <URL for Column Creation doc here>
+
 
+
= Future Enhancemts =
+
 
+
== Virtual Access access the extensions field directly ==
+
 
+
* Field Access for non extension fields
+
* Virtual Access for extension fields uses @Extensions annotation on attribute that will hold the extensions.  This assumes an enhancement to allow Virtual access to operate on a field
+
* extensions mapped in a non portable way - @Extensions
+
* Preexisting table assumed.  @FlexExtensions annotation omitted
+
  
 
<source lang="java">
 
<source lang="java">
  @Entity
 
  @Extensible(FLEX)
 
  public class Address {
 
  
    @Id
+
/**
    private int id;
+
* Specifies that this class contains virtual attributes.
 
+
* This annotation is used in an EclipseLink-specific way to define
    @Extensions
+
* access methods used by mappings with accessType=VIRTUAL.
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
+
* The xml-equivalent is the <access-methods> tag
 
+
*/
    public int getId(){
+
@Documented
        return id;
+
@Target(TYPE)
    }
+
 
+
...
+
 
+
</source>
+
 
+
= Appendices =
+
 
+
== Apendix 1: Annotations ==
+
 
+
<source lang="java">
+
@Target({TYPE})  
+
 
@Retention(RUNTIME)
 
@Retention(RUNTIME)
public @interface FlexExtensions {
+
public @interface VirtualAccessMethods {
    /**
+
    * (Optional) Specify number of columns.  This is used to automatically generate a default set of columns.
+
    * Unnecessary if columns is specified
+
    */
+
    int numberOfColumns default 10;
+
  
 
     /**
 
     /**
     * The string to prefix to the name of automatically generated columns.
+
     * (Optional) The name of the getter method to use for the virtual property
     * e.g. the first flex column could be "FLEX_COL1" and the second, "FLEX_COL2" etc
+
     * This method must take a single java.lang.String parameter and return a java.lang.Object.
 +
    * If setMethod is specified, getMethod must be specified
 
     */
 
     */
     String columnNamePrefix default "FLEX_COL";
+
     String get() default "get";
 
+
   
 
     /**
 
     /**
     * The string to prefix to the name of automatically generated columns.
+
     * (Optional) The name of the setter method to use for the virtual property
     * e.g. the first flex column could be "FLEX_COL1" and the second, "FLEX_COL2" etc
+
     * This method must take a java.lang.String parameter and a java.lang.Object parameter.
 +
    * If getMethod is specified, setMethod must be specified
 
     */
 
     */
     String defaultColumnType default VARCHAR(255);
+
     String set() default "set";
 
+
    /**
+
    * When set to true this will activate a feature that executes ALTER table statements to
+
    * make the required columns available if they do not exist
+
    */
+
    boolean createNonExistingColumns default false;
+
 
+
    /**
+
    *  (Optional) The table that holds the extensions to use.  This table can be shared.
+
    */
+
    Table table;
+
 
+
    /**
+
    * (Optional) Define column overrides
+
    */
+
    FlexColumn[] columns
+
}
+
 
+
@Target({TYPE})
+
@Retention(RUNTIME)
+
public @interface FlexColumn {
+
 
+
    /**
+
    * Mandatory - the index of the column to override.  Between 1 and numberOfColumns.
+
    * Exception will be thrown for numbers < 1 or > numberOfColumns
+
    */
+
    int index;
+
 
+
    /**
+
    * Column name - used to override default column names
+
    */
+
    String name;
+
 
+
    /**
+
    * Column type - used to override default column type
+
    */
+
    String type default VARCHAR(255)
+
 
}
 
}
 
</source>
 
</source>
  
== Appendix 2: eclipselink-orm ==
+
== Appendix 3: eclipselink-orm ==
  
<source lang="java">
+
No changes were made to eclipseLink-orm.xml
 
+
  <xsd:complexType name="attributes">
+
    <xsd:annotation>
+
      <xsd:documentation>
+
 
+
        This element contains the entity field or property mappings.
+
        It may be sparsely populated to include only a subset of the
+
        fields or properties. If metadata-complete for the entity is true
+
        then the remainder of the attributes will be defaulted according
+
        to the default rules.
+
 
+
      </xsd:documentation>
+
    </xsd:annotation>
+
    <xsd:sequence>
+
    ...
+
    <xsd:element name="flex-extensions" type="orm:flex-extensions" minOccurs="0"/>
+
 
+
<!-- **************************************************** -->
+
 
+
<xsd:complexType name="flex-extensions">
+
  <xsd:annotation>
+
    <xsd:documentation>
+
      ...
+
    </xsd:documentation>
+
  </xsd:annotation>
+
  <xsd:sequence>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="number-of-columns" type="xsd:integer"/>
+
    <xsd:element name="column-name-prefix" type="xsd:string"/>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="default-column-type" type="xsd:string"/>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="create-non-existing-columns" type="xsd:boolean"/>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="extension-table" type="eclipselink-orm:table"/>
+
    <xsd:element name="flex-columns" type="eclipselink-orm:flex-column" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
+
  </xsd:sequence>
+
</xsd:complexType>
+
 
+
<xsd:complexType name="flex-column">
+
  <xsd:annotation>
+
    <xsd:documentation>
+
      ...
+
    </xsd:documentation>
+
  </xsd:annotation>
+
  <xsd:sequence>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="index" type="xsd:integer"/>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="name" type="xsd:string"/>
+
    <xsd:attribute name="type" type="xsd:string"/>
+
  </xsd:sequence>
+
</xsd:complexType>
+
 
+
 
+
</source>
+

Latest revision as of 12:24, 11 January 2012

Flex Columns Extension

Why use this feature?

  1. You are building an application where some mappings are common to all users and some mappings are user-specific
  2. You want to add mappings to your application after it is made available to a customer (even post-deployment)
  3. You want to use the same EntityManagerFactory to work with your data even after the mappings have changed
  4. You can provide an additional source of metadata to be used by the application ( an xml-based source is provided, or you can build your own)

An example of the type of user this is designed for is a Software-as-a-Service provider who designs a generic application that can be provided to users and allow them to customize the application to make use of data that is particular to their domain.

What basic steps do I have to take to use this feature

1. Design a standard JPA Application

2. Decide which Entities will allow flexible mappings, annotate them as such and provide facilities to store the addional data.

  @Entity
  @VirtualAccessMethods
  public class Customer{
 
...
 
    @Transient
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
 
    public <T> T get(String name) {
        return (T) extentions.get(name);
    }
 
    public Object set(String name, Object value) {
        return extensions.put(name, value);
    }


3. When you design your schema, provide enough extra columns in your tables to accomodate the number of flexible mappings you will allow. e.g. The following table has 3 predefined columns and 3 columns designed to accomodate mappings added after design (FLEX_COL1, FLEX_COL2, FLEX_COL3)

  • CUSTOMER
    • INTEGER ID
    • VARCHAR NAME
    • VARCHAR FLEX_COL1
    • VARCHAR FLEX_COL2
    • VARCHAR FLEX_CO31

4. Deploy your application

5. To provide additional mappings, provide an eclipselink-orm.xml file that contains the additional mappings.

 
   <basic name="idNumber" access="VIRTUAL" attribute-type="String">
      <column name="FLEX_1"/>
      <access-methods get-method="get" set-method="set"/>
    </basic>

6. Use persistence unit properties to get your application to use the file:

  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="XML"/>
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>

Requirements

  • Users MUST be able to add mappings after initial deployment
  • Extensions MUST be persistent. (i.e. Extensions must continue to exist if an application goes down and comes back up)
  • Extensions MUST be shared amoung all EntityManagers configured to use them
  • Extensions MUST be compatible with our multi-tenant features. (i.e. Extensions must be able to make use of our Multi-tenant features to be definable on a tenant by tenant basis)
  • BasicMappings MUST be supported
  • Extensibility MUST be configurable using traditional JPA means (annotations, eclipselink-orm.xml)
  • It MUST be possible to use JPA Queries to query based on the extensions
  • Extensions SHOULD be supported through the JPA metamodel
  • OneToOneMappings SHOULD be supported
  • It MAY be possible to add extensions without logging in the session. (See ER 341429.)

Configuration

Metadata

Extensions will be supported using our VIRTUAL access type. Virtual Access type allows properties to be set through a getter that takes an attribute name as an argument and a setter that takes an argument name and a value as an argument.

VIRTUAL access does not currently allow annotation-based configuration. As part of this feature, annotations will be added to configure the methods used by Virtual access. These annotations will have the same effect as using the eclipselink-orm.xml construct <access-methods> at a class level. They will default which methods are used by virtual mappings. EclipseLink will weave these methods if weaving is enabled. This weaving will provide equivalent functionality to weaving for PROPERTY and FIELD access. (e.g. change tracking, fetch groups, etc)

DDL generation for tables with flexible columns will be addressed in a separate feature that addresses flexible DDL generation as a complete feature.

Examples

Example 1

  • Field Access for non extension fields
  • Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
  • get(String) and set(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods
  • extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
  @Entity
  @VirtualAccessMethods
  public class Address {
 
    @Id
    private int id;
 
    @Transient
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
 
    public int getId(){
        return id;
    }
 
    public <T> T get(String name) {
        return (T) extentions.get(name);
    }
 
    public Object set(String name, Object value) {
        return extensions.put(name, value);
    }
 
...

Example 2

  • Field Access for non extension fields
  • extensions mapped in a portable way - @Transient
  • @VirtualAccessMethods annotation overrides method to be used for get and for set.
  • getExtension(String) and setExtension(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods
  • XML for extended mapping indicates which get and set method to use


  @Entity
  @VirtualAccessMethods(get="getExtension", set="setExtension")
  public class Address {
 
    @Id
    private int id;
 
    @Transient
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
 
    public int getId(){
        return id;
    }
 
    public <T> T getExtension(String name) {
        return (T) extensions.get(name);
    }
 
    public Object setExtension(String name, Object value) {
        return extensions.put(name, value);
    }
 
...
 
   <basic name="name" access="VIRTUAL" attribute-type="String">
      <column name="FLEX_1"/>
      <access-methods get-method="getExtension" set-method="setExtension"/>
    </basic>

Example 3

  • Property Access for non extension fields
  • Virtual Access for extension fields uses defaults (get(String), set(String, Object))
  • extensions mapped in a portable way - no @Transient required because of Property access
  • get(String) and set(String, Object) method will be woven even if no mappings use them because of the presence of @VirtualAccessMethods


  @Entity
  @VirtualAccessMethods
  public class Address {
 
    private int id;
 
    private Map<String, Object> extensions;
 
    @Id
    public int getId(){
        return id;
    }
 
    public <T> T get(String name) {
        return (T) extensions.get(name);
    }
 
    public Object set(String name, Object value) {
        return extensions.put(name, value);
    }
 
...

EntityManagerFactory and Metadata Repository

Extensions will be added at bootstrap time through access to a metadata repository. A Metadata Repository will accessed through a class that provides methods to retrieve the metadata it holds.

The user will specifiy the class to use and any configuration information for the metadata repository through persistence unit properties. As an EntityManagerFactory bootstraps, if metadata repository information is provided, the EMF will check the metadata repository for additional mapping information and integrate it into the metadata it uses to bootstrap.

EclipseLink will initially ship with the capability of connecting to two types of metadata repository.

  1. XML (high priority) - information about extensions is stored in XML
  2. Database Table (medium priority) - information about extensions is stored in a database table

Additionally, the user will be able to provide an implementation of the class that access the metadata repository.

Each metadata repository access class will specify an individual set of properties to use to connect to the repository

Examples

XML File

  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="XML"/>
  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>

User-Specified

  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source" value="com.foo.MetadataRepository"/>
  <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.location" value="foo://bar"/>
  <property name="com.foo.MetadataRepository.extra-data" value="foo-bar"/>

Note: The implementer of com.foo.MetadataRepository will be free to choose the properties that their implementation requires.

Design

Configuration

Please use the examples above as a guideline configuration XML and annotations. Note that the configuration options to allow a mapping to use VIRTUAL access have been available in EclipseLink for several releases. We will be using those configuration options as they exist and any changes to those will be handled as bugs rather than through this design document.

Weaving

The intial VIRTUAL access feature did not include weaving of the get and set methods. As part of the extensions feature will will add weaving of get and set methods that use virtual access. The initial implementation will not support OneToOne mappings and throw an exception at Transformer construction time if weaving is requested for a VIRTUAL mapping that is OneToOne.

Get method

Original

    public <T> T get(String name) {
        return (T) getExtensions().get(name);
    }

Weaved

    public Object get(String name)
    {
        _persistence_checkFetched(name);
        return getExtensions().get(name);
    }

Set method

Original

    public Object set(String name, Object value)
    {
        return getExtensions().put(name, value);
    }

Weaved

    public Object set(String name, Object value)
    {
        Object obj = null;
        if(_persistence_listener != null)
        {
            obj = get(name);
        } else
        {
            _persistence_checkFetchedForSet(name);
        }
        _persistence_propertyChange(name, obj, value);
        return getExtensions().put(name, value);
    }

To allow weaving, RelationalDescriptor will have a list virtual methods added. This list will be used at transformer-construction time to allow EclipseLink to know which methods it should weave.

    /** The methods that are used by virtual attributes as getter methods and setter methods.  
     * These will be used by our weaver to properly weave those methods 
     **/
    protected List<VirtualAccessMethods> virtualMethods = null;

EntityManagerFactory

Bootstrap

EntityManagerFactory bootstrapping occurs withing EntityManagerSetupImpl. In the predeploy method, there is code that obtains the orm.xml files that contain metadata. At that point, the metadata repository will be consulted. It will provide additional metadata information in the same format as is obtained from the orm.xml file.

Refresh

A mechanism will be provided that allows a user to tell a Metadata repository to refresh. That mechanism will take two forms.

  1. A direct refresh API call
  2. A RemoteCommandManager command that causes all subscribed EntityManagerFactories to refresh themselves as described above.

Refresh will be supported by adding an additional proxy to our EntityManagerFactory archtecture.

Current: EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession

New: EntityManagerFactoryWrapper implements EntityManagerFactory -> EntityManagerFactoryImpl -> ServerSession

EntityManagerFactoryWrapper will implement:

  public void refreshMetadata()

In both cases, a live EntityManager holds a reference to EntityManagerFactoryImpl

When a call is made to refreshMetadata(), EntityManagerFactoryWrapper will bootstrap a new EntityManagerFactoryImpl and use it as the basis for any new EntityManagers. The old EntityManagerFactoryImpl will continue to be available until the last EntityManager is no longer used, at which point we will rely on garbage collection to clean it up.

Metadata Source

An implementation of MetadataSoruce will access metadata for extensions. Metadata is accessed in the form of an eclipselink-orm.xml file.

package org.eclipse.persistence.jpa.metadata;
 
public interface MetadataSource{
 
    /**
     * ADVANCED:
     * In most cases, this method should not be overridden.  The implementation of
     * this method uses getEntityMappingsReader() to obtain a reader that will
     * that reads a stream in the eclipselink-orm.xml format
     * Advanced implementations of MetadataRepository have to option of overriding
     * this method.
     * @return XMLEntityMappings which are then merged in using existing metadata 
     * processing at bootstrap time when creating an entityManager
     */
    public XMLEntityMappings getMetadata(Properties properties, ClassLoader loader)

Additionally, an adapter class will be provided that implements MetadataSource containing stubbed out methods. Customers will be encouraged to implement a MetadataSource by subclasing the adapter class rather than directly implementing the interface. This strategy will allow them to tranaparently absorb any new versions of the interface in new EclipseLink versions.

XMLMetadataSource

The first implementation of MetadataSource provided by EclipseLink will access a simple XML File.

It will provide an implementation of getMetadata(properties, classlaoder) that uses the property "eclipselink.metadata-repository.xml-file.url", specified like this:

  <property name="eclipselink.metadata-source.xml.url" value="foo://bar"/>

To create an input stream on the eclipselink-orm.xml file at URL: "foo://bar"/" and build an XMLEntityMappings using our existing EclipseLink ORM parsing code.

Writing to a metadata repository

In the initial implementation writing to the metadata repository will be left up to the user.

Remote Command Manager

A Command for RemoteCommandManager will be implemented that triggers a refreshMetadata() call on all subscribed EntityManagerFactories.

Design is in progress and will be added as it becomes available

Future Enhancements

Weaving of OneToOne mappings

Implement support for weaving of non-basic VIRTUAL mappings

  • Handle OneToOneMappings
  • Handle indirection

Allow metadata to be updated with an in-memory structure

From GlassFish team:

  1. Programmatic API to call into EclipseLink to "push" the extension definitions.
  2. The data exchanged between the caller and EclipseLink via API should be in a format that just refers to extension information and not a generic data structure.
  3. The API call should be on an EclipseLink artifact that does not trigger deploy. That is it should be on an artifact at EMF level.

Database Metadata Source

Provide an implementation of Metadata Source that reads from a database.

Writing to a metadata Source

Provide API to write to the XMLFile and DatabaseMetadata Sources.

Configuration of muliple getter and setter methods

  • Allow annotations and xml to specify a list of methods for VIRTUAL mappings to weave

Appendices

Appendix 1: Alternatives Considered

http://wiki.eclipse.org/EclipseLink/DesignDocs/335601

Appendix 2: Annotations

/**
 * Specifies that this class contains virtual attributes.
 * This annotation is used in an EclipseLink-specific way to define
 * access methods used by mappings with accessType=VIRTUAL.
 * The xml-equivalent is the <access-methods> tag
 */
@Documented
@Target(TYPE)
@Retention(RUNTIME)
public @interface VirtualAccessMethods {
 
    /**
     * (Optional) The name of the getter method to use for the virtual property
     * This method must take a single java.lang.String parameter and return a java.lang.Object.
     * If setMethod is specified, getMethod must be specified
     */
    String get() default "get";
 
    /**
     * (Optional) The name of the setter method to use for the virtual property
     * This method must take a java.lang.String parameter and a java.lang.Object parameter.
     * If getMethod is specified, setMethod must be specified
     */
    String set() default "set";
}

Appendix 3: eclipselink-orm

No changes were made to eclipseLink-orm.xml

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