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EclipseLink/UserGuide/SDO/Introduction to EclipseLink SDO (ELUG)

< EclipseLink‎ | UserGuide
Revision as of 10:05, 1 May 2009 by Liza.rekadze.oracle.com (Talk | contribs) (How to Define Metadata with XSDHelper)

This section introduces EclipseLink implementation of Service Data Objects (SDO) specification, as well as provides information on how you can use it in your application development.


Using SDO Metadata

SDO metadata is represented as Type and Property objects. You define the metadata at run time either programmatically, or from an XML schema ( using the XSDHelper).


Using Type

SDO Type acts similarly to a Class in Java, and provides much of the same metadata as the Java Reflection API provides for Java classes.

In EclipseLink, a SDOType wraps an object-XML mapping (OXM) descriptor.

A Type can have supertypes, which corresponds to the EclipseLink concept of inheritance policy (see Inheritance Policy in Descriptor API).

To create types programmatically, you populate a DataObject with them.

To load types from an XML schema, use the XSDHelper class, as the following example shows:

HelperContext ctx = HelperProvider.getDefaultContext();
FileInputStream is = new FileInputStream("test.xsd");
ctx.getXSDHelper().define(is, null);

For more information, see the default Type API.


What You May Need to Know About Open Sequenced Type

You can define SDO types as open sequenced types. If, when creating a DataObject, you define a Type as a sequenced type (that is, isSequenced is true), then the created DataObject is put at the end of the Sequence.

If you define a Type as open (that is, its open is true), it will have to accept additional DataObject's properties (the ones not specified by their Type).

For more information, see EclipseLink OpenSequencedType API.

What You May Need to Know About DataObjectType for Data Types

For information, see EclipseLink SDODataObjectType API.


Using Property

A DataObject is made up of Property values. SDO Property acts similarly to a property in Java and provides much of the same metadata as the Java Reflection API provides for Java fields or methods.

In EclipseLink, a SDOProperty wraps an object-XML mapping in the following manner:

For more information, see the default Property API.

Defining Metadata

You can use the following helper classes to define and access SDO metadata:


How to Define Metadata with XSDHelper

You use the XSDHelper to do the following:

  • Define SDO metadata, where SDO metadata is derived from XML schemas.
  • Generate XML schemas from SDO types.

You can obtain the default XSDHelper from the INSTANCE field or from the getDataHelper method of the default HelperContext.

You can also define and retrieve the HelperContext from your EclipseLink SDOXSDHelper.

For more information on how to use the XSDHelper in your application, see XSDHelper examples.

You can customize metadata by using the following annotations that you apply to the XML schema:

  • Standard annotations:
    • Information pending
  • EclipseLink annotations:
    • Information pending

You can also use various APIs to determine the XML representation about the SDO metadata.

How to Define Metadata with EclipseLink TypeHelper

You use the TypeHelper to do the following:

  • Look up SDO metadata.
  • Programmatically define SDO metadata (note that this is not the typical usage for the TypeHelper).

For more information on how to use the TypeHelper in your application, see TypeHelper examples.

For more information, see EclipseLink SDOTypeHelper API.


Using Data

Use the following SDO classes to work with data:


Using DataObject

A DataObject in SDO corresponds to a Java Object (POJO). To define object-XML mappings, you map the DataObject to XML. You can create your data object as either dynamic (see Dynamic DataObject Examples), or static by applying a type-safe interface to it (see Static DataObject Examples).

The DataObject provides an XPath-like (see Mappings and XPath) means of data access. For example, the following code is valid in SDO:

customerDO.getDataObject("contact-info/phone-number[2]"); 

The standard JAXB, however, would require the following:

customer.getContactInfo().getPhoneNumbers().get(1); 

Note that you can use the EclipseLink XPathHelper to query data objects using an XPath expression.

For more information, see EclipseLink SDODataObject API.


What You May Need to Know About Serialization in SDO

SDO has its own Java serialization format. You can serialize SDO to XML using the XMLHelper interface that provides methods for serializing DataObject or XMLDocument instances to XML.


Using XMLDocument

When you marshall (save) a DataObject to XML, or unmarshall an XML document into objects, the XMLDocument class contains information about the root of the XML document.

For more information, see EclipseLink SDOXMLDocument API.


What You May Need to Know About Sequence, ChangeSummary, and DataGraph

The following SDO classes allow you to obtain additional information about data objects:

  • Sequence -- provides a list of properties and their corresponding values.
  • ChangeSummary -- records changes to data objects, therefore reducing the amount of data that needs to be transmitted between collaborating SDO applications.

Note that the DataGraph class has been deprecated.

For more information, see the following EclipseLink APIs:



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