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Java Hibernate Cookbook

You're reading from  Java Hibernate Cookbook

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2015
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784391904
Pages 250 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Java Hibernate Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Setting Up Hibernate 2. Understanding the Fundamentals 3. Basic Annotations 4. Working with Collections 5. Working with Associations 6. Querying 7. Advanced Concepts 8. Integration with Other Frameworks Index

Configuring hibernate programmatically


In the preceding section, we understood XML and the properties-based configuration. Hibernate also supports the programmatic configuration. To configure hibernate using this method, we have to work on a Java code and create an instance of the org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration class. There are multiple ways to configure hibernate.

How to do it…

First, write the following code:

Configuration configuration = new Configuration();

This will create an instance of the Configuration class using hibernate.cfg.xml or hibernate.properties, whichever is found in the classpath.

Provide the following mapping files to the configuration:

configuration = configuration.addResource("Employee.hbm.xml");
configuration = configuration.addResource("Department.hbm.xml");

You can use an alternate way, as shown in the following code:

Configuration configuration = new Configuration().addResource("Employee.hbm.xml").addResource("Department.hbm.xml");

We can also provide a direct mapping using the class, as shown in the following code:

configuration = configuration.addClass("Department.class");

This will also look for Department.hbm.xml.

We can also set a custom property. To set up the custom property, use the following method:

configuration.setProperty(propertyName, value);

For example, consider the following code:

configuration.setProperty("show_sql", true);

To set up multiple properties using the properties object, execute the following code:

configuration.setProperties(java.util.Properties properties);

Here is an example:

Properties properties = new Properties();
properties.put("hibernate.dialect", "org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect");
properties.put("hibernate.connection.driver_class", "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
properties.put("hibernate.connection.url", "jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/kode12");
properties.put("hibernate.connection.username", "root");
properties.put("hibernate.connection.password", "root");
properties.put("show_sql", "true");
properties.put("hbm2ddl.auto", "update");
configuration.setProperties(properties);

To read the mapping from the URL, you can use the following code:

configuration = configuration.addURL(java.net.URL url);

To read the mapping from the XML file, you can use the following code:

configuration = configuration.addXML(String xml);

How it works…

When we select the programmatic configuration option, the Configuration class is very important. Using the instance of the Configuration class, we will build a SessionFactory object, as shown in the following code:

SessionFactory sessionFactory = new Configuration().buildSessionFactory();

When the preceding code is executed, it creates a SessionFactory object using a .properties or .cfg file or whichever source is provided to create the configuration.

You have been reading a chapter from
Java Hibernate Cookbook
Published in: Sep 2015 Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781784391904
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