I have JPA entities where some properties are annotated wi开发者_如何学Goth @Transient
.
Should I use these properties in equals/hashCode/toString
methods?
My first thought is NO but I don't know why.
- Tips?
- Ideas?
- Explanations?
The case of toString()
is different, you can do whatever you want with toString()
so I will only cover equals()
(and hashCode()
).
First, the rule: if you want to store an object in a List
, Map
or a Set
then it is a requirement that equals
and hashCode
are implemented so they obey the standard contract as specified in the documentation.
Now, how to implement equals()
and hashCode()
? A "natural" idea would be to use the properties mapped as Id
as part of the equals()
:
public class User {
...
public boolean equals(Object other) {
if (this==other) return true;
if (id==null) return false;
if ( !(other instanceof User) ) return false;
final User that = (User) other;
return this.id.equals( that.getId() );
}
public int hashCode() {
return id==null ? System.identityHashCode(this) : id.hashCode();
}
}
Unfortunately, this solution has a major problem: when using generated identifiers, the values are not assigned until an entity becomes persistent so if a transient entity is added to a Set
before being saved, its hash code will change while it's in the Set
and this breaks the contract of the Set
.
The recommended approach is thus to use the attributes that are part of the business key i.e. a combination of attributes that is unique for each instance with the same database identity. For example, for the User class, this could be the username:
public class User {
...
public boolean equals(Object other) {
if (this==other) return true;
if ( !(other instanceof User) ) return false;
final User that = (User) other;
return this.username.equals( that.getUsername() );
}
public int hashCode() {
return username.hashCode();
}
}
The Hibernate Reference Documentation summarizes this as follow:
"Never use the database identifier to implement equality; use a business key, a combination of unique, usually immutable, attributes. The database identifier will change if a transient object is made persistent. If the transient instance (usually together with detached instances) is held in a
Set
, changing thehashcode
breaks the contract of theSet
. Attributes for business keys don't have to be as stable as database primary keys, you only have to guarantee stability as long as the objects are in the same Set." - 12.1.3. Considering object identity"It is recommended that you implement
equals()
andhashCode()
using Business key equality. Business key equality means that theequals()
method compares only the properties that form the business key. It is a key that would identify our instance in the real world (a natural candidate key)" - 4.3. Implementing equals() and hashCode()
So, back to the initial question:
- Use a business key if possible.
@Transient
attributes are very likely not part of such a key. - If not possible, use identifier properties but make sure to get the values assigned before to add an entity to a
List
,Map
,Set
.
See also
- Equals and HashCode
- Don't Let Hibernate Steal Your Identity
- equals and hashcode in Hibernate
- Understanding equals() and hashCode() (p. 396) in Java Persistence with Hibernate
The two typical usages of @Transient
and transient
that I'm aware of, are to use them either for stuff that can't be serialized/persisted (e.g. a remote resource handle) or computed properties which can be reconstructed from others.
For computed data, it makes no sense to use them in the equality relationship (equals/hashCode
), because it would be redundant. The value is computed out of other value which are already used in the equality. It can however still makes sense to print them in toString
(e.g. a base price and a ratio are used to compute the actual price).
For not serializable/persitable data, it depends. I can imagine a handle to a resource that is not serializable, but you can still compare the resource name that the handle represent. Same for toString
, maybe printing the handle resource name is useful.
This was my 2 cent, but if you explain your particular usage of @Transient
, someone can maybe give a better advice.
Exception maybe comes from letting it be transient
and at the same time you provide writeObject()
and readObject()
where you process it.
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