@Entity
public class Person {
@ElementCollection
private List<Location> locations;
[...]
}
@Embeddable
public class Location {
private Integer dummy;
private Date creationDate;
[...]
}
Given the following structure, I'd like to perform the HQL or CriteriaQuery equivalent of the following SQL:
SELECT
l.*
FROM
Location l
INNER JOIN
Person p ON (p.id = l.person_id)
WHERE
p.id = ? AND l.creationDate > ?
I want to get back a list of Locations that are associated with the given person and whose creationDate is after the given one.
Thanks in advance!
Mark
Edit***: I have edited the SQL, as it was kinda misleading. I don't want to query for the locations independently.
This is not possible, you cannot query an Embeddable
. From the JPA Wikibook:
Embedded Collections
An
ElementCollection
mapping can be used to define a collection ofEmbeddable
objects. This is not a typical usage ofEmbeddable
objects as the objects are not embedded in the source object's table, but stored in a separate collection table. This is similar to aOneToMany
, except the target object is anEmbeddable
instead of anEntity
. This allows collections of simple objects to be easily defined, without requiring the simple objects to define anId
orManyToOne
inverse mapping.ElementCollection
can also override the mappings, or table for their collection, so you can have multiple entities reference the same Embeddable class, but have each store their dependent objects in a separate table.The limitations of using an
ElementCollection
instead of aOneToMany
is that the target objects cannot be queried, persisted, merged independently of their parent object. They are strictly privately-owned (dependent) objects, the same as anEmbedded
mapping. There is no cascade option on anElementCollection
, the target objects are always persisted, merged, removed with their parent.ElementCollection
still can use a fetch type and defaults to LAZY the same as other collection mappings.
To achieve what you want, use a OneToMany
and an Entity
instead of an ElementCollection
and an Embeddable
. Or change your approach and query the Person
.