28.What is component mapping in Hibernate?
- A component is an object saved as a value, not as a reference
- A component can be saved directly without needing to declare interfaces or identifier properties
- Required to define an empty constructor
- Shared references not supported
Example:
29.What is the difference between sorted and ordered collection in hibernate?
sorted collection vs. order collection :-
sorted collection | order collection |
A sorted collection is sorting a collection by utilizing the sorting features provided by the Java collections framework. The sorting occurs in the memory of JVM which running Hibernate, after the data being read from database using java comparator. | Order collection is sorting a collection by specifying the order-by clause for sorting this collection when retrieval. |
If your collection is not large, it will be more efficient way to sort it. | If your collection is very large, it will be more efficient way to sort it . |
31.What is the advantage of Hibernate over jdbc?
Hibernate Vs. JDBC :-
JDBC | Hibernate |
With JDBC, developer has to write code to map an object model's data representation to a relational data model and its corresponding database schema. | Hibernate is flexible and powerful ORM solution to map Java classes to database tables. Hibernate itself takes care of this mapping using XML files so developer does not need to write code for this. |
With JDBC, the automatic mapping of Java objects with database tables and vice versa conversion is to be taken care of by the developer manually with lines of code. | Hibernate provides transparent persistence and developer does not need to write code explicitly to map database tables tuples to application objects during interaction with RDBMS. |
JDBC supports only native Structured Query Language (SQL). Developer has to find out the efficient way to access database, i.e. to select effective query from a number of queries to perform same task. | Hibernate provides a powerful query language Hibernate Query Language (independent from type of database) that is expressed in a familiar SQL like syntax and includes full support for polymorphic queries. Hibernate also supports native SQL statements. It also selects an effective way to perform a database manipulation task for an application. |
Application using JDBC to handle persistent data (database tables) having database specific code in large amount. The code written to map table data to application objects and vice versa is actually to map table fields to object properties. As table changed or database changed then it’s essential to change object structure as well as to change code written to map table-to-object/object-to-table. | Hibernate provides this mapping itself. The actual mapping between tables and application objects is done in XML files. If there is change in Database or in any table then the only need to change XML file properties. |
With JDBC, it is developer’s responsibility to handle JDBC result set and convert it to Java objects through code to use this persistent data in application. So with JDBC, mapping between Java objects and database tables is done manually. | Hibernate reduces lines of code by maintaining object-table mapping itself and returns result to application in form of Java objects. It relieves programmer from manual handling of persistent data, hence reducing the development time and maintenance cost. |
With JDBC, caching is maintained by hand-coding. | Hibernate, with Transparent Persistence, cache is set to application work space. Relational tuples are moved to this cache as a result of query. It improves performance if client application reads same data many times for same write. Automatic Transparent Persistence allows the developer to concentrate more on business logic rather than this application code. |
In JDBC there is no check that always every user has updated data. This check has to be added by the developer. | Hibernate enables developer to define version type field to application, due to this defined field Hibernate updates version field of database table every time relational tuple is updated in form of Java class object to that table. So if two users retrieve same tuple and then modify it and one user save this modified tuple to database, version is automatically updated for this tuple by Hibernate. When other user tries to save updated tuple to database then it does not allow saving it because this user does not have updated data. |
32.What are the Collection types in Hibernate ?
- Bag
- Set
- List
- Array
- Map
33.What are the ways to express joins in HQL?
HQL provides four ways of expressing (inner and outer) joins:-
- An implicit association join
- An ordinary join in the FROM clause
- A fetch join in the FROM clause.
- A theta-style join in the WHERE clause.
34.Define cascade and inverse option in one-many mapping?
cascade - enable operations to cascade to child entities.
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
cascade="all|none|save-update|delete|all-delete-orphan"
inverse - mark this collection as the "inverse" end of a bidirectional association.
inverse="true|false"
Essentially "inverse" indicates which end of a relationship should be ignored, so when persisting a parent who has a collection of children, should you ask the parent for its list of children, or ask the children who the parents are?
35.What is Hibernate proxy?
The proxy attribute enables lazy initialization of persistent instances of the class. Hibernate will initially return CGLIB proxies which implement the named interface. The actual persistent object will be loaded when a method of the proxy is invoked.
36.How can Hibernate be configured to access an instance variable directly and not through a setter method ?
By mapping the property with access="field" in Hibernate metadata. This forces hibernate to bypass the setter method and access the instance variable directly while initializing a newly loaded object.
37.How can a whole class be mapped as immutable?
Mark the class as mutable="false" (Default is true),. This specifies that instances of the class are (not) mutable. Immutable classes, may not be updated or deleted by the application.
38.What is the use of dynamic-insert and dynamic-update attributes in a class mapping?
Criteria is a simplified API for retrieving entities by composing Criterion objects. This is a very convenient approach for functionality like "search" screens where there is a variable number of conditions to be placed upon the result set.
- dynamic-update (defaults to false): Specifies that UPDATE SQL should be generated at runtime and contain only those columns whose values have changed
- dynamic-insert (defaults to false): Specifies that INSERT SQL should be generated at runtime and contain only the columns whose values are not null.
39.What do you mean by fetching strategy ?
A fetching strategy is the strategy Hibernate will use for retrieving associated objects if the application needs to navigate the association. Fetch strategies may be declared in the O/R mapping metadata, or over-ridden by a particular HQL or Criteria query.
40.What is automatic dirty checking?
Automatic dirty checking is a feature that saves us the effort of explicitly asking Hibernate to update the database when we modify the state of an object inside a transaction.
41.What is transactional write-behind?
Hibernate uses a sophisticated algorithm to determine an efficient ordering that avoids database foreign key constraint violations but is still sufficiently predictable to the user. This feature is called transactional write-behind.
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42.What are Callback interfaces?
Callback interfaces allow the application to receive a notification when something interesting happens to an object—for example, when an object is loaded, saved, or deleted. Hibernate applications don't need to implement these callbacks, but they're useful for implementing certain kinds of generic functionality.
43.What are the types of Hibernate instance states ?
Three types of instance states:
- Transient -The instance is not associated with any persistence context
- Persistent -The instance is associated with a persistence context
- Detached -The instance was associated with a persistence context which has been closed – currently not associated
44.What are the differences between EJB 3.0 & Hibernate
Hibernate Vs EJB 3.0 :-
Hibernate | EJB 3.0 |
Session–Cache or collection of loaded objects relating to a single unit of work | Persistence Context-Set of entities that can be managed by a given EntityManager is defined by a persistence unit |
XDoclet Annotations used to support Attribute Oriented Programming | Java 5.0 Annotations used to support Attribute Oriented Programming |
Defines HQL for expressing queries to the database | Defines EJB QL for expressing queries |
Supports Entity Relationships through mapping files and annotations in JavaDoc | Support Entity Relationships through Java 5.0 annotations |
Provides a Persistence Manager API exposed via the Session, Query, Criteria, and Transaction API | Provides and Entity Manager Interface for managing CRUD operations for an Entity |
Provides callback support through lifecycle, interceptor, and validatable interfaces | Provides callback support through Entity Listener and Callback methods |
Entity Relationships are unidirectional. Bidirectional relationships are implemented by two unidirectional relationships | Entity Relationships are bidirectional or unidirectional |
45.What are the types of inheritance models in Hibernate?
There are three types of inheritance models in Hibernate:
- Table per class hierarchy
- Table per subclass
- Table per concrete class
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