JPA : 1-N Relationships with Lists

You have a 1-N (one to many) when you have one object of a class that has a List of objects of another class. There are two ways in which you can represent this in a datastore. Join Table (where a join table is used to provide the relationship mapping between the objects), and Foreign-Key (where a foreign key is placed in the table of the object contained in the List.

The various possible relationships are described below.

This page is aimed at List fields and so applies to fields of Java type java.util.ArrayList, java.util.LinkedList, java.util.List, java.util.Stack, java.util.Vector

Please note that RDBMS supports the full range of options on this page, whereas other datastores (ODF, Excel, HBase, MongoDB, etc) persist the List in a column in the owner object rather than using join-tables or foreign-keys since those concepts are RDBMS-only

In JPA1 all List relationships are "ordered Lists". If a List is an "ordered List" then the positions of the elements in the List at persistence are not preserved (are not persisted) and instead an ordering is defined for their retrieval. In JPA2 Lists can optionally use a surrogate column to handle the ordering. This means that the positions of the elements in List at persistence are preserved. This is the same situation as JDO provides.

equals() and hashCode()

Important : The element of a Collection ought to define the methods equals and hashCode so that updates are detected correctly. This is because any Java Collection will use these to determine equality and whether an element is contained in the Collection. Note also that the hashCode() should be consistent throughout the lifetime of a persistable object. By that we mean that it should not use some basis before persistence and then use some other basis (such as the object identity) after persistence, for this reason we do not recommend usage of JDOHelper.getObjectId(obj) in the equals/hashCode methods.

1-N List Unidirectional

We have 2 sample classes Account and Address. These are related in such a way as Account contains a List of objects of type Address, yet each Address knows nothing about the Account objects that it relates to. Like this

There are 2 ways that we can persist this relationship. These are shown below

Using Join Table

If you define the XML metadata for these classes as follows

<entity-mappings>
    <entity class="Account">
        <table name="ACCOUNT"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <one-to-many name="addresses" target-entity="com.mydomain.Address">
                <order-by>id</order-by>
                <join-table name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES">
                    <join-column name="ACCOUNT_ID_OID"/>
                    <inverse-join-column name="ADDRESS_ID_EID"/>
                </join-table>
            </one-to-many>
        </attributes>
    </entity>

    <entity class="Address">
        <table name="ADDRESS"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ADDRESS_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
        </attributes>
    </entity>
</entity-mappings>

or alternatively using annotations

public class Account
{
    ...

    @OneToMany
    @OrderBy("id")
    @JoinTable(name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES", 
        joinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="ACCOUNT_ID_OID")},
        inverseJoinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="ADDRESS_ID_EID")})
    List<Address> addresses
}

public class Address
{
    ...
}
The crucial part is the join-table element on the field element - this signals to JPA to use a join table.

There will be 3 tables, one for Address, one for Account, and the join table. This is identical to the handling for Sets/Collections. Note that we specified <order-by> which defines the order the elements are retrieved in (the "id" is the field in the List element).



The join table is used to link the 2 classes via foreign keys to their primary key. This is useful where you want to retain the independence of one class from the other class.

If you wish to fully define the schema table and column names etc, follow these tips

  • To specify the name of the table where a class is stored, specify the table element below the class element
  • To specify the names of the columns where the fields of a class are stored, specify the column attribute on the basic element.
  • To specify the name of the join table, specify the join-table element below the one-to-many element with the collection.
  • To specify the names of the join table columns, use the join-column and inverse-join-column elements below the join-table element.
  • The join table will NOT be given a primary key (so that duplicates can be stored).
  • If you want to have a surrogate column added to contain the ordering you should specify order-column (@OrderColumn) instead of order-by. This is available from JPA2

Using Foreign-Key

In this relationship, the Account class has a List of Address objects, yet the Address knows nothing about the Account. In this case we don't have a field in the Address to link back to the Account and so DataNucleus has to use columns in the datastore representation of the Address class. So we define the XML metadata like this

<entity-mappings>
    <entity class="Account">
        <table name="ACCOUNT"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <one-to-many name="addresses" target-entity="com.mydomain.Address">
                <order-by>city</order-by>
                <join-column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </one-to-many>
        </attributes>
    </entity>

    <entity class="Address">
        <table name="ADDRESS"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ADDRESS_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
        </attributes>
    </entity>
</entity-mappings>

or alternatively using annotations

public class Account
{
    ...

    @OneToMany
    @OrderBy("city")
    @JoinColumn(name="ACCOUNT_ID")
    List<Address> addresses
}

public class Address
{
    ...
}

Note that you MUST specify the join-column here otherwise it defaults to a join table with JPA!

Again there will be 2 tables, one for Address, and one for Account. Note that we have no "mapped-by" attribute specified, and also no "join" element. If you wish to specify the names of the columns used in the schema for the foreign key in the Address table you should use the element element within the field of the collection.



In terms of operation within your classes of assigning the objects in the relationship. With DataNucleus and List-based containers you have to take your Account object and add the Address to the Account collection field since the Address knows nothing about the Account.

If you wish to fully define the schema table and column names etc, follow these tips

  • To specify the name of the table where a class is stored, specify the table element below the class element
  • To specify the names of the columns where the fields of a class are stored, specify the column attribute on the basic element.

Limitations

  • If we are using an "ordered List" and the primary key of the join table contains owner and element then duplicate elements can't be stored in a List. If you want to allow duplicate List entries, then use the "Join Table" variant above.

1-N List Bidirectional

We have 2 sample classes Account and Address. These are related in such a way as Account contains a List of objects of type Address, and each Address has a reference to the Account object that it relates to. Like this

There are 2 ways that we can persist this relationship. These are shown below

Using Join Table

If you define the XML metadata for these classes as follows

<entity-mappings>
    <entity class="Account">
        <table name="ACCOUNT"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <one-to-many name="addresses" target-entity="com.mydomain.Address" mapped-by="account">
                <order-by>id</order-by>
                <join-table name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES">
                    <join-column name="ACCOUNT_ID_OID"/>
                    <inverse-join-column name="ADDRESS_ID_EID"/>
                </join-table>
            </one-to-many>
        </attributes>
    </entity>

    <entity class="Address">
        <table name="ADDRESS"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ADDRESS_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <many-to-one name="account">
            </many-to-one>
        </attributes>
    </entity>
</entity-mappings>

or alternatively using annotations

public class Account
{
    ...

    @OneToMany(mappedBy="account")
    @OrderBy("id")
    @JoinTable(name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES", 
        joinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="ACCOUNT_ID_OID")},
        inverseJoinColumns={@JoinColumn(name="ADDRESS_ID_EID")})
    List<Address> addresses
}

public class Address
{
    ...

    @ManyToOne
    Account account;

    ...
}
The crucial part is the join element on the field element - this signals to JPA to use a join table.

This will create 3 tables in the database, one for Address, one for Account, and a join table, as shown below.



The join table is used to link the 2 classes via foreign keys to their primary key. This is useful where you want to retain the independence of one class from the other class.

If you wish to fully define the schema table and column names etc, follow these tips

  • To specify the name of the table where a class is stored, specify the table element below the class element
  • To specify the names of the columns where the fields of a class are stored, specify the column attribute on the basic element.
  • To specify the name of the join table, specify the join-table element below the one-to-many element with the collection.
  • To specify the names of the join table columns, use the join-column and inverse-join-column elements below the join-table element.
  • The join table will NOT be given a primary key (so that duplicates can be stored).
  • When forming the relation please make sure that you set the relation at BOTH sides since DataNucleus would have no way of knowing which end is correct if you only set one end.
  • If you want to have a surrogate column added to contain the ordering you should specify order-column (@OrderColumn) instead of order-by. This is available from JPA2

Using Foreign-Key

Here we have the 2 classes with both knowing about the relationship with the other.

Please note that an Foreign-Key List will NOT, by default, allow duplicates. This is because it stores the element position in the element table. If you need a List with duplicates we recommend that you use the Join Table List implementation above. If you have an application identity element class then you could in principle add the element position to the primary key to allow duplicates, but this would imply changing your element class identity.

If you define the XML metadata for these classes as follows

<entity-mappings>
    <entity class="Account">
        <table name="ACCOUNT"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <one-to-many name="addresses" target-entity="com.mydomain.Address" mapped-by="account">
                <order-by>city ASC</order-by>
                <join-column name="ACCOUNT_ID"/>
            </one-to-many>
        </attributes>
    </entity>

    <entity class="Address">
        <table name="ADDRESS"/>
        <attributes>
            <id name="id">
                <column name="ADDRESS_ID"/>
            </id>
            ...
            <many-to-one name="account">
            </many-to-one>
        </attributes>
    </entity>
</entity-mappings>

or alternatively using annotations

public class Account
{
    ...

    @OneToMany(mappedBy="account")
    @OrderBy("city")
    @JoinColumn(name="ACCOUNT_ID")
    List<Address> addresses
}

public class Address
{
    ...

    @ManyToOne
    Account account;

    ...
}
The crucial part is the mapped-by attribute of the field on the "1" side of the relationship. This tells the JPA implementation to look for a field called account on the Address class.

This will create 2 tables in the database, one for Address (including an ACCOUNT_ID to link to the ACCOUNT table), and one for Account. Notice the subtle difference to this set-up to that of the Join Table relationship earlier.



If you wish to fully define the schema table and column names etc, follow these tips

  • To specify the name of the table where a class is stored, specify the table element below the classelement
  • To specify the names of the columns where the fields of a class are stored, specify the column attribute on the basic element.
  • When forming the relation please make sure that you set the relation at BOTH sides since DataNucleus would have no way of knowing which end is correct if you only set one end.

Limitation : Since each Address object can have at most one owner (due to the "Foreign Key") this mode of persistence will not allow duplicate values in the Collection. If you want to allow duplicate Collection entries, then use the "Join Table" variant above.


1-N Collection of non-Entity objects

In JPA1 you cannot have a 1-N List of non-Entity objects. This is available in JPA2. All of the examples above show a 1-N relationship between 2 persistable classes. If you want the element to be primitive or Object types then follow this section. For example, when you have a List of Strings. This will be persisted in the same way as the "Join Table" examples above. A join table is created to hold the collection elements. Let's take our example. We have an Account that stores a Collection of addresses. These addresses are simply Strings. We define the annotations like this

@Entity
public class Account
{
    ...

    @ElementCollection
    @CollectionTable(name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES")
    Collection<String> addresses;
}

or using XML metadata

    <entity class="mydomain.Account">
        <attributes>
            ...
            <element-collection name="addresses">
                <collection-table name="ACCOUNT_ADDRESSES"/>
            </element-collection>
        </attributes>
    </entity>

In the datastore the following is created

The ACCOUNT table is as before, but this time we only have the "join table". Use @Column on the field/method to define the column details of the element in the join table.