![]() | ![]() |
![]() |
| Project | Ver 1.1 | Ver 1.2 | JDO | JPA | Guides | Tools |
| 1.2 | Persistence | JDO ORM | JPA ORM | Runtime | JDO Runtime | JPA Runtime | Extensions | Developer |
JPOX requires that all classes that are persisted implement PersistenceCapable, an interface defined by JDO. Why should we do this, Hibernate/TopLink dont need it ?. Well thats a simple question really
In a JDO-enabled application there are 3 categories of classes. These are PersistenceCapable, PersistenceAware and normal classes. The Meta-Data defines which classes fit into these categories. To give an example for JDO, we have 3 classes. The class A is to be persisted in the datastore. The class B directly updates the fields of class A but doesn't need persisting. The class C is not involved in the persistence process. We would define JDO MetaData for these classes like this
<class name="A" persistence-modifier="persistence-capable">
<field name="myField">
...
</field>
...
</class>
<class name="B" persistence-modifier="persistence-aware">
</class>So our MetaData is mainly for those classes that are PersistenceCapable and are to be persisted to the datastore (we don't really need the persistence-modifier for thse classes since this is the default). For PersistenceAware classes we simply notate that the class knows about persistence. We don't define MetaData for any class that has no knowledge of persistence.
JDO requires that all classes to be persisted must implement the PersistenceCapable interface
![]() The example above doesn't show all PersistenceCapable methods, but demonstrates that all added methods and fields are prefixed with "jdo" to distinguish them from the users own methods and fields. Also each persistent field of the class will be given a jdoGetXXX, jdoSetXXX method so that accesses of these fields are intercepted so that JDO can manage their "dirty" state.
The MetaData defines which classes are required to be persisted, and also defines which aspects of persistence
each class requires. For example if a class has the detachable attribute set to true, then
that class will be enhanced to also implement Detachable
![]() Again, the example above doesn't show all methods added for the Detachable interface but the main thing to know is that the detached state (object id of the datastore object, the version of the datastore object when it was detached, and which fields were detached is stored in "jdoDetachedState"). Please see the JDO spec for more details. If the MetaData is changed in any way during development, the classes should always be recompiled and re-enhanced afterwards.
Some groups (e.g Hibernate) perpetuated arguments against "byte-code enhancement" saying that it was somehow 'evil'. The most common were :-
So as you can see, there are no valid reasons against byte-code enhancement, and the pluses are that runtime detection of dirty events on objects is much quicker, hence your persistence layer operates faster without any need for iterative reflection-based checks. The fact is that Hibernate itself also now has a mode whereby you can do bytecode enhancement although not the default mode of Hibernate. So maybe it wasn't so evil after all ? |