Nearly every table in our database has a FK to the Auditing table which logs created, updated and deleted status (date and username).
We mapped the auditing table to the Auditing class and use it like this:
@MappedSuperclass
public class BusinessObje开发者_开发百科ct extends DataObject {
private static final long serialVersionUID = -1147811010395941150L;
@OneToOne(fetch = FetchType.EAGER, cascade = { CascadeType.ALL })
@JoinColumn(name = "AUD_ID")
private AuditingObject auditing;
...
As you'd expect, nearly every entity extends from BusinessObject.
Is there an easy way of saying, for every businessObject, only receive "auditing.deleted is null".
I've tried adding a @Where and @WhereJoinTable in the businessObject but this doesn't seem to work as I expect.
Currently, i've done this to one of my queries and this works, but I'd hate to do this for all queries since we have about 150.
@NamedQuery(
name="allCountries",
query="SELECT c FROM Country c"
+ " LEFT JOIN FETCH c.labelDefinition "
+ " LEFT JOIN FETCH c.labelDefinition.translations "
+ " WHERE c.auditing.deleted is null"
+ " ORDER BY c.code"
)
IMO, the easiest way to implement a soft-delete would be to add a flag in your entities and to use:
- the
@SQLDelete
annotation to override the default Hibernatedelete
(and perform an update of the flag) - the
@Where
(or@Filters
?) annotation on your entities and associations to filter the deleted entities
Not sure how this can fit with your Auditing
table though. Some further exploration and testing are required.
Resources
- Soft deletes using Hibernate annotations
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