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EclipseLink/UserGuide/JPA/Advanced JPA Development/Schema Generation/Index
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Key API
@Index Annotation and <index> XML
>>>>>>THIS PAGE IS IN PROGRESS. PLEASE SEE DISCUSSION PAGE.<<<<<<
An index is a database structure defined for a table, to improve query and look-up performance for a set of columns. Use the @Index annotation in code or the <index> element in the orm.xml descriptor to create an index on a table.
An index can be defined on an Entity or on an attribute. For the Entity it must define a set of columns to index.
Index creation is database specific, some databases may not support indexes. Most databases auto index primary key and foriegn key columns. Some databases support advanced index DDL options. To create more advanced index DDL, a DDL script or native query can be used.
Attribute | Description | Default | Required? |
---|---|---|---|
catalog | The catalog of the INDEX. | Default catalog | No |
columnNames | Specify the set of columns to define the index on. | For an Entity , the table. For an attribute, the table and column. | Not required when annotated on a field or method. |
name | The name of the INDEX. | <table>_<column>_INDEX (but a name should be provided) | No |
schema | The schema of the INDEX. | Default schema | No |
table | The table to define the index on, defaults to entities primary table. | The entity's primary table. | No |
unique | Specify whether the index is unique or non-unique. | false | No |
Configuration File
Create an index in orm.xml using <index>, as follows:
<index name="EMP_NAME_INDEX" table="EMPLOYEE" unique="true"> <column>F_NAME</column> <column>L_NAME</column> </index>
Usage of @Index Annotation
@Entity @Index(name="EMP_NAME_INDEX", columns={"F_NAME","L_NAME"}) public class Employee{ @Id private long id; @Index @Column(name="F_NAME") private String firstName; @Index @Column(name="L_NAME") private String lastName; ... }