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The following sections describe the EJB 2.1 elements in the weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
file, the WebLogic-specific XML Schema-based (XSD) deployment descriptor file. Use these definitions to create the WebLogic-specific weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
file that is part of your EJB deployment. Use this deployment descriptor file to specify container-managed-persistence (CMP) behavior.
In this release of WebLogic Server, weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
is XML Schema-based (XSD). In prior releases, weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
was Document Type Definition-based (DTD). For backward compatibility, this release of WebLogic Server supports XSD- or DTD-based EJB descriptors. In this release of WebLogic Server, the EJB container still supports all older DTD-based descriptors; you can deploy applications that use DTD-based descriptors in this release of WebLogic Server without modifying the descriptors.
For information on the EJB 1.1 deployment descriptor elements see Important Information for EJB 1.1 Users.
weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
, as well as Document Type Definitions and DOCTYPE headers, see Deployment Descriptor Schema and Document Type Definitions Reference.weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
file, see weblogic-ejb-jar.xml Deployment Descriptor Reference.EJB 1.1 deployment descriptor elements, see Important Information for EJB 1.1 Users.
The weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
file defines deployment descriptors for entity EJBs that use WebLogic Server RDBMS-based persistence services. The EJB container uses a version of weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
that is different from the XML shipped with pre-9.0 releases of WebLogic Server.
You can continue to use the earlier weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
DTD beans that you deploy to this release of WebLogic Server; likewise, you can continue to use the weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
DTD that was supported in WebLogic Server 8.1. Though deployment descriptors are XSD-based beginning with WebLogic Server 9.0, for backward compatibility, WebLogic Server continues to support DTD-based descriptors. However, if you want to use any of the CMP 2.1 features, you must use the XSD described below.
BEA recommends that you run DDConverter to convert EJB deployment descriptors from pre-9.0 releases of WebLogic Server to conform to the current release of WebLogic Server. DDConverter converts your DTD-based EJB deployment descriptors from pre-9.0 releases of WebLogic Server to XSD-based descriptors supported in this release.
Note: | BEA recommends that you always convert descriptors when migrating applications to a new WebLogic Server release. |
The top-level element of the WebLogic Server 9.x weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
consists of a weblogic-rdbms-jar
element:
weblogic-rdbms-jar
weblogic-rdbms-bean
ejb-name
data-source-jndi-name
table-map
field-group
relationship-caching
sql-shape
weblogic-query
delay-database-insert-until
use-select-for-update
lock-order
instance-lock-order
automatic-key-generation
check-exists-on-method
cluster-invalidation-disabled
weblogic-rdbms-relation
relation-name
table-name
weblogic-relationship-role
order-database-operations
enable-batch-operations
create-default-dbms-tables
validate-db-schema-with
database-type
default-dbms-tables-ddl
compatibility
serialize-byte-array-to-oracle-blob
serialize-char-array-to-bytes
allow-readonly-create-and-remove
disable-string-trimming
This list of the elements in weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
includes all elements that are supported in WebLogic Server 9.1.
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 8.1 SP02, is a backward compatibility flag. It is used to enable create and remove operations for an EJB that uses ReadOnly
concurrency.
Prior to WebLogic Server 8.1 SP2, these operations were allowed, although they had no transactional meaning. They have been disallowed so that more efficient code can be generated for ReadOnly
beans, and because using them is a bad practice.
<compatibility>
<allow-readonly-create-and-remove>
true
</allow-readonly-create-and-remove>
</compatibility>
The automatic-key-generation
element specifies how primary keys will be automatically generated. For more information about this feature, see Automatically Generating Primary Keys.
The following code samples show the automatic-key-generation
element for different primary key generation methods. For supported generation methods, see generator-type
<automatic-key-generation>
<generator-type>Oracle</generator-type>
<generator-name>test_sequence</generator-name>
<key-cache-size>10</key-cache-size>
</automatic-key-generation>
<automatic-key-generation>
<generator-type>SQL-SERVER</generator-type>
</automatic-key-generation>
<automatic-key-generation>
<generator-type>NamedSequenceTable</generator-type>
<generator-name>MY_SEQUENCE_TABLE_NAME</generator-name>
<key-cache-size>100</key-cache-size>
</automatic-key-generation>
Specifies the cmr-field
and the group-name
in the related bean. If group-name
is not specified, the default group-name
(load all fields) is used. For more information, see group-name.
caching-element
can contain nested caching elements, as in the example shown in relationship-caching.
For information about relationship caching, see Relationship Caching.
See relationship-caching:
The caching-name
element specifies the name of a relationship cache. For more information about relationship caching, see Relationship Caching.
See relationship-caching.
By default, the EJB container checks that a container-managed persistence (CMP) entity bean exists before any business method invoked on the bean completes. This means the container notifies an application as soon as any business method is invoked on a container-managed entity bean that has been removed.
To specify that the EJB container wait for transaction completion to perform the existence check, set check-exists-on-method
to False
. This results in high performance and still provides a sufficient level of checking for most applications.
The following example specifies that WebLogic Server notify the application that a business method has been invoked on a CMP entity bean that has been removed.
<check-exists-on-method>True</check-exists-on-method>
This flag, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, is used to disable or enable invalidation of an EJB that uses Optimistic
or ReadOnly
concurrency when the EJB is updated by a member of a cluster to which it is deployed. For more information, see Invalidation Options for Optimistic Concurrency in Clusters.
<cluster-invalidation-disabled>true</cluster-invalidation-disabled>
This name specifies the mapped field in the bean instance which should be populated with information from the database.
See field-map.
Specifies the name of a container-managed relationship field.
<cmr-field>stock options</cmr-field>
This element represents the mapping of a foreign key column in one table in the database to a corresponding primary key. The two columns may or may not be in the same table. The tables to which the columns belong are implicit from the context in which the column-map
element appears in the deployment descriptor.
The following is an example of the column-map
element:
Note: | You do not need to specify the key-column element if the foreign-key-column refers to a remote bean. |
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>account-id</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>id</key-column>
</column-map>
The <compatibility>
element, introduced in WebLogic Server 8.1 SP02, contains elements that specify compatibility flags for all of the cmp beans described in the descriptor file.
<compatibility>
<serialize-byte-array-to-oracle-blob>
<serialize-char-array-to-bytes>
<allow-readonly-create-and-remove>
<disable-string-trimming>
</compatibility>
The create-default-dbms-table
element performs two functions:
Use this element only for convenience during development phases. This is because the table schema in the DBMS CREATE
statement used are the EJB container’s best approximation of the definition. A production environment typically requires more precise schema definition.
The following table describes how WebLogic Server handles automatic table creation, based on the value of create-default-dbms-tables
.
If TABLE CREATION
fails, the server throws a Table Not Found
error and the table must be created manually.
See Automatic Table Creation (Development Only).
Note: | Automatic Oracle SEQUENCE generation works only with servers running in development mode. |
The following table describes how WebLogic Server handles automatic SEQUENCE generation, based on the value of create-default-dbms-tables
.
The EJB container creates a SEQUENCE, and constructs its name by appending “_WL” to the value of the
generator-name element.
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The EJB container creates a SEQUENCE, and constructs its name by appending “_WL” to the value of the
generator-name element.
If the SEQUENCE’s increment value does not match the value of the key-cache-size element, the container alters the increment value to match the value of key-cache-size.
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The EJB container creates a SEQUENCE, and constructs its name by appending “_WL” to the value of the
generator-name element.
If the SEQUENCE’s increment value does not match the value of the key-cache-size element, the container alters the increment value to match the value of key-cache-size.
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The EJB container creates a SEQUENCE, and constructs its name by appending “_WL” to the value of the
generator-name element.
If the SEQUENCE’s increment value does not match the value of the key-cache-size element, the container alters the increment value to match the value of key-cache-size.
|
For more information on automatic generation of an Oracle SEQUENCE, see Support for Oracle SEQUENCE.
The following example specifies the create-default-dbms-tables element.
<create-default-dbms-tables>CreateOnly</create-default-dbms-tables>
database-type must be specified.
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The database-specific-sql
element specifies a database-specific SQL statement.
<database-specific-sql>
<database-type>SQLServer</database-type>
<sql>SELECT name, phone, location, testid FROM medrecappPharmacyBeanTable WHERE testid = ?1 AND SUBSTRING(testid, 1,5) = 'local' ORDER BY name</sql>
</database-specific-sql>
The database-type
element specifies the database used as the underlying WebLogic Server dbms or the dbms against which to execute a vendor-specific SQL statement. If you specify database-type
in the weblogic-rdbms-jar
element, the database you specify applies to the entire weblogic-rdbms-jar
deployment descriptor file unless it is overridden in a database-specific-sql
element by another database-type
element.
<database-type>POINTBASE</database-type>
Specifies the JDBC data source name to be used for database connectivity for this bean. For more information on data sources, see “Programming WebLogic JDBC.”
Note: | Prior to WebLogic Server 9.0, this element was data-source-name. |
See table-name.
By default, database cascade delete is not used. The EJB container performs cascade deletes by issuing an individual SQL |
|
Allows an application to take advantage of a database's built-in support for cascade delete, and possibly improve performance. This functionality is supported only for:
If db-cascade-delete
is enabled in weblogic-cmp-rdbms-jar.xml
, you must
Note: | If db-cascade-delete is not specified, do not enable the database's cascade delete functionality, as this will produce incorrect results. |
The following Oracle table definition will cause deletion all of the emp
rows if the owning dept
is deleted in the database.
CREATE TABLE dept
(deptno NUMBER(2) CONSTRAINT pk_dept PRIMARY KEY,
dname VARCHAR2(9) );
CREATE TABLE emp
(empno NUMBER(4) PRIMARY KEY,
ename VARCHAR2(10),
deptno NUMBER(2) CONSTRAINT fk_deptno
REFERENCES dept(deptno)
ON DELETE CASCADE );
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<db-cascade-delete/>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
The name of the database column to which the field should be mapped.
Note: | dbms-column is case maintaining, although not all database are case sensitive. |
See field-map.
Specifies the type of the cmp-field
. Maps the current field to a Blob
or Clob
in an Oracle or DB2 database or to a LongString
or SybaseBinary
in a Sybase database.
Blob
—maps the field to an Oracle or DB2 Blob.Clob
—maps the field to an Oracle or DB2 Clob.LongString
—tells the container to use setCharacterStream
to write String data into the database. Some JDBC drivers have problems writing more than 4K of data using setString
.SybaseBinary
—tells the container to use setBytes
to write bytes into the binary column, because setBinaryStream
does not work with SybaseXADriver
.<field-map>
<cmp-field>photo</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>PICTURE</dbms-column>
<dbms_column-type>OracleBlob</dbms-column-type>
</field-map>
Specifies the database used as the default underlying dbms. This value can be overridden by the database-type element.
<dbms-default-value>Oracle</dbms-default-value>
Specifies the DDL
file name to which the EJB container writes the table creation scripts.
Specifies when a new CMP bean is inserted into the database. The allowable values cause the following behavior:
This element has an effect only when order-database-operations is False
. By default, order-database-operations
is true
, which causes new beans to be inserted at the transaction commit time.
Delaying the database insert until after ejbPostCreate
is required when a cmr-field
is mapped to a foreign-key
column that does not allow null values. In this case, the cmr-field
must be set to a non-null value in ejbPostCreate
before the bean is inserted into the database.
For maximum flexibility, avoid creating related beans in your ejbPostCreate
method. If ejbPostCreate
creates related beans, and database constraints prevent related beans from referring to a bean that has not yet been created, it is not possible to perform a database insert until after the method completion.
Note: | cmr-field s may not be set during ejbCreate , before the primary key of the bean is known. |
<delay-database-insert-until>ejbPostCreate</delay-database-insert-until>
The description
element provides text that describes the parent element.
<description>Contains a description of parent element</description>
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, is a compatibility flag. It is used to specify whether a cmp-field of type string[] should be trimmed. Set this flag to True
to disable string trimming. For more information on string trimming, see String-Valued CMP Field Trimming and Disabling String Trimming.
<compatibility>
<disable-string-trimming>True</disable-string-trimming>
</compatibility>
The name that specifies an EJB as defined in the ejb-cmp-rdbms.xml
. This name must match the ejb-name
of a cmp entity bean contained in the ejb-jar.xml
.
See table-name.
The ejb-ql-query
element specifies an EJB-QL query. You should only specify EJB-QL queries that implement EJB finders or contain WebLogic-specific extensions in the weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
deployment descriptor; specify queries that use only standard EJB-QL features in the ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor.
See weblogic-query.
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 8.1, controls whether or not the EJB container allows batch database operations, including batch inserts, batch updates, and batch deletes.
If this element is set to True
, the EJB delays database operations in a transaction until commit time.
The following XML sample demonstrates use of the enable-batch-operations
element:
<enable-batch-operations>True</enable-batch-operations>
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, controls whether read-only entity EJBs can be cached at the query level. Caching read-only entity EJBs at the query level improves performance because it enables the EJBs to be accessed in cache by any finder, thereby avoiding the need to access the database. If you set this value to True
, you can specify the maximum number of queries to cache at the application or bean level. To specify the maximum number of queries to cache, set max-queries-in-cache
in the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor. For information, see max-queries-in-cache.
The following XML sample demonstrates use of the enable-query-caching
element:
<enable-query-caching>True</enable-query-caching>
The field-group
element represents a subset of the cmp-fields and cmr-fields of a bean. Related fields in a bean can be put into groups that are faulted into memory together as a unit. A group can be associated with a finder or relationship, so that when a bean is loaded as the result of executing a finder or following a relationship, only the fields specified in the group are loaded.
A field may belong to multiple groups. In this case, the getXXX
method for the field faults in the first group that contains the field.
The field-group
element can contain the elements shown here:
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<ejb-name>XXXBean</ejb-name>
<field-group>
<group-name>medical-data</group-name>
<cmp-field>insurance</cmp-field>
<cmr-field>doctors</cmr-fields>
</field-group>
</weblogic-rdbms-bean>
The field-map
element represents a mapping between a particular column in a database and a cmp-field
in the bean instance.
The optional group-name
element specifies a field group that is to be loaded when the getXXX
method for the cmp-field
is called and the EJB container needs to read the value from the DBMS because it is not in memory. If group-name
is omitted, the default group, which contains all cmp-field
s, is used when the cmp-field
is not explicitly listed in any field groups, otherwise a field group that contains the cmp-field
is chosen. Thus, developers should specify a group-name
if the cmp-field
is listed in multiple field groups or the container will pick one of the groups arbitrarily.
The dbms-column-type element is optional.
The field-map
element can contain the elements shown here:
<field-map>
<cmp-field>....</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>...</dbms-column>
<dbms-column-type>...</dbms-column-type>
<group-name>...</group name>
</field-map>
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, is a compatibility flag. It is used to specify whether finders can return null results.
<compatibility>
<finders-return-nulls>
True
</finders-return-value>
</compatibility>
The foreign-key-column
element represents a column of a foreign key in the database.
See column-map.
The foreign-key-table
element specifies the name of a DBMS table that contains a foreign key.
The generator-name
element is used to specify the name of the primary key generator.
Oracle
, and WebLogic Server is running in development mode, then the EJB container constructs the Oracle SEQUENCE name by appending “_WL” to the generator-name
as part of the container’s automatic SEQUENCE generation feature.For more information on automatic Oracle SEQUENCE generation, see Support for Oracle SEQUENCE.
generator-type
element is Oracle
, and WebLogic Server is running in production mode, then the EJB container sets the name of the Oracle SEQUENCE to the value of generator-name
.generator-type
element is NamedSequenceTable
, then the generator-name
element would be the name of the SEQUENCE_TABLE
to be used.
The generator-type
element specifies the primary key generation method to use.
Note: | You must set the database-type element when using automatic-key-generation. |
In addition, generator-type
is used in conjunction with automatic Oracle SEQUENCE generation. See Support for Oracle SEQUENCE.
Note: | The following databases are supported for each generator-type : |
Specifies the name of a field group.
See field-group.
Specifies whether updates made during the current transaction must be reflected in the result of a query. If this element is set to True
, the container will flush all changes made by the current transaction to disk before executing the query. A value of False
provides best performance.
<weblogic-query>
<query-method>
<method-name>findBigAccounts</method-name>
<method-params>
<method-param>double</method-param>
</method-params>
</query-method>
<ejb-ql-query>
<weblogic-ql>WHERE BALANCE>10000 ORDER BY NAME</weblogic-ql>
</ejb-ql-query>
<include-updates>True</include-updates>
</weblogic-query>
Specifies a locking or processing order for instances of a particular EJB. This element can be used to prevent deadlocks in an application that would otherwise experience deadlocks. instance-lock-order
is used whenever database operations (update, for example) that apply to multiple instances of the same EJB are performed by the container. It specifies an order for operations that can cause a database lock to be acquired for a bean instance.
For example, instance-lock-order
could be used to specify the order in which the EJB container calls ejbStore
for instances of a particular EJB that uses database concurrency; ejbStore
may acquire an exclusive lock when a database update is done. instance-lock-order
also controls the order in which beans using optimistic concurrency are locked when optimistic checking is performed.
AccessOrder
—The container will process beans so that locks are acquired (or upgraded) in the order in which the application originally accessed the beans during the transaction. This is the recommended value when all transactions in the system access instances of the bean, and ultimately rows in a database table, in the same order.ValueOrder
—Beans are processed in order based on the value of their primary key. ValueOrder
should be specified to avoid deadlocks when concurrent transactions access instances of the same EJB in different orders.Note: | The EJB's primary key class is not required to implement the java.lang.Comparable interface when ValueOrder is specified, although this will result in a total ordering. Beans are ordered partially using the hash code value of the primary key when the primary key does not implement java.lang.Comparabl e. |
<instance-lock-order>ValueOrder</instance-lock-order>
Specifies the optional size of the primary key cache available in the automatic primary key generation feature. In addition, the EJB container uses this value to calculate the increment value for an Oracle SEQUENCE when automatic SEQUENCE generation is enabled. See Support for Oracle SEQUENCE.
If generator-type is:
Oracle
—key-cache-size
must match the Oracle SEQUENCE INCREMENT value. If there is a mismatch between this value and the Oracle SEQUENCE INCREMENT value, then there will likely be duplicate key problems.NamedSequenceTable
—key-cache-size
specifies how many keys the container will fetch in a single DBMS call.key-cache-size
is ignored.
The key-column
element represents a column of a primary key in the database.
See column-map.
Use this flag to specify the database locking order of an entity bean when a transaction involves multiple beans and exclusive concurrency. The bean with the lowest number is locked first.
This flag should only be used to prevent a deadlock situation and, currently, only applies when a transaction performs cascade deletes.
An example of the lock-order
element is:
<lock-order>1</lock-order>
<!ELEMENT lock-order (PCDATA)>
max-elements
specifies the maximum number of elements that should be returned by a multi-valued query. This element is similar to the maxRows
feature in JDBC.
An example of the max-elements
element is shown here:
<max-elements>100</max-elements>
<!ELEMENT max-element (PCDATA)>
The method-name
element specifies the name of a finder or ejbSelect
method.
Note: | The ‘*’ character cannot be used as a wildcard. |
See weblogic-query.
The method-param
element contains the fully qualified Java type name of a method parameter.
<method-param>java.lang.String</method-param>
The method-params
element contains an ordered list of the fully-qualified Java type names of the method parameters.
See weblogic-query.
The optimistic-column
element denotes a database column that contains a version or timestamp value used to implement optimistic concurrency. For more information on optimistic concurrency, see Choosing a Concurrency Strategy.
Note: | Although not all databases are case sensitive, this element is case maintaining. |
The following sample XML shows the use of the optimistic-column
element.
<optimistic-column>ROW_VERSION</optimistic-column>
where ROW_VERSION
is the name of a database column that contains the value used for concurrency checking.
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 8.1, determines whether the EJB container delays all database operations in a transaction until commit time, automatically sorts the database dependency between the operations, and sends these operations to the database in such a way to avoid any database constraint errors.
If enable-batch-operations is set to True
, the container automatically sets order-database-operations
to True
. To turn off order-database-operations
, set both order-database-operations
and enable-batch-operations
to False
.
See also ejb-ql-query and delay-database-insert-until.
<order-database-operations>True</order-database-operations>
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, specifies the number of aggregate columns that should be passed through to a SQL query result set without being mapped to anything.
See sql-shape.
The primary-key-table
element specifies the name of a DBMS table that contains a primary key. For more information about primary keys, see Using Primary Keys.
Note: | Although not all databases are case sensitive, this element is case maintaining. |
For examples, see relationship-role-map and Mapping a Bean on Primary Key Side of a Relationship to Multiple Tables.
Specifies the method that is associated with a weblogic-query
. It also uses the same format as the ejb-jar.xml
descriptor.
See weblogic-query.
The relation-name
element specifies the name of a relation.
For more information about container-managed relationships, see Using Container-Managed Relationships (CMRs).
An example of the relationship-name
element is shown here:
<weblogic-rdbms-jar>
<weblogic-rdbms-relation>
<relation-name>stocks-holders</relation-name>
<table-name>stocks</table-name>
</weblogic-rdbms-relation>
</weblogic-rdbms-jar>
The relationship-caching
element specifies relationship caching. For more information about relationship caching, see Relationship Caching.
The relationship-caching
element can contain the elements shown here:
<relationship-caching>
<caching-name>cacheMoreBeans</caching-name>
<caching-element>
<cmr-field>accounts<</cmr-field>
<group-name>acct_group</group-name>
<caching-element>
<cmr-field>address</cmr-field>
<group-name>addr_group</group-name>
</caching-element>
</caching-element>
<caching-element>
<cmr-field>phone</cmr-field>
<group-name>phone_group</group-name>
</caching-element>
</relationship-caching>
The relationship-role-map
element specifies foreign key column to key column mapping for beans involved in a relationship.
A CMP bean that is involved in a relationship may be mapped to multiple DBMS tables (see the table-map element for more details). If the bean on the foreign key side of a one-to-one or one-to-many relationship is mapped to multiple tables, then the name of the table containing the foreign-key columns must be specified using the foreign-key-table
element.
Conversely, if the bean on the primary key side of a one-to-one or one-to-many relationship or a bean participating in a m-n relationship is mapped to multiple tables, then the name of the table containing the primary key must be specified using the primary-key-table
element.
If neither of the beans in a relationship is mapped to multiple tables, then the foreign-key-table
and primary-key-table
elements can be omitted because the tables being used are implicit.
For more information about container-managed relationships, see Using Container-Managed Relationships (CMRs).
The bean on the foreign-key side of a one-to-one relationship, Fk_Bean
, is mapped to multiple tables. The table that holds the foreign key columns must be specified in the foreign-key-table
element.
Fk_Bean
is mapped to two tables: Fk_BeanTable_1
and Fk_BeanTable_2
. The foreign key columns for the relationship are located in table Fk_BeanTable_2
. The foreign key columns are named Fk_column_1
and Fk_column_2
. The bean on the primary key side, Pk_Bean
, is mapped to a single table with primary key columns Pk_table_pkColumn_1
and Pk_table_pkColumn_2
:
<relationship-role-map
<foreign-key-table>Fk_BeanTable_2</foreign-key-table>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>Fk_column_1</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>Pk_table_pkColumn_1</key-column>
</column-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>Fk_column_2</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>Pk_table_pkColumn_2</key-column>
</column-map>
</relationship-role-map>
The foreign-key-table
element must be specified so that the container can know which table contains the foreign key columns.
The bean on the primary key side of a one-to-one relationship, Pk_bean
, is mapped to multiple tables, but the bean on the foreign key side of the relationship, Fk_Bean
, is mapped to one table, Fk_BeanTable
. The foreign key columns are named Fk_column_1
and Fk_column_2
.
<relationship-role-map>
<primary-key-table>Pk_BeanTable_1</primary-key-table>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>Fk_column_1</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>Pk_table1_pkColumn_1</key-column>
</column-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>Fk_column_2</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>Pk_table1_pkColumn_2</key-column>
</column-map>
</relationship-role-map>
The relationship-role-name
element specifies the name of a relationship role.
For more information about container-managed relationships, see Using Container-Managed Relationships (CMRs).
See the examples for weblogic-relationship-role.
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 8.1 SP02, is a compatibility flag. It is used to specify whether a cmp-field of type byte[] mapped to a Blob in an Oracle database should be serialized. By default, the value of the tag is false
, which means that the container will persist the byte[] directly and not serialize it.
In versions prior to WebLogic Server 8.1 SP02, the default behavior was to serialize a cmp-field of type byte[] mapped to a Blob in an Oracle database. To revert to the old behavior, set the value of serialize-byte-array-to-oracle-blob
to true.
<compatibility>
<serialize-byte-array-to-oracle-blob>
true
</serialize-byte-array-to-oracle-blob>
</compatibility>
This element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, is a compatibility flag. It is used to specify whether a cmp-field of type char[] mapped to a byte should be serialized. By default, the value of the tag is False
, which causes the EJB container to persist the char[] directly and not serialize it; If you want the EJB container to serialize the char[], set this value to True
.
<compatibility>
<serialize-char-array-to-bytes>
true
</serialize-char-array-to-bytes>
</compatibility>
To use database-specific SQL, you must specify the database against which to execute the SQL in the in database-type element.
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The sql
element contains a standard or database-specific SQL query. You should specify queries that use only standard EJB-QL language features in the ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor. Specify queries that contain standard SQL, database-specific SQL, or WebLogic extensions to EJB-QL in the weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
deployment descriptor.
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<weblogic-query>
<sql-query>
<sql>SELECT date_prescribed, dosage, drug, id, frequency, instructions, pat_id, issuing_phys_id, record_id, refills_remaining FROM medrecappPrescription WHERE testid = ?1</sql>
</sql-query>
</weblogic-query>
To use database-specific SQL, you must specify the database against which to execute the SQL in database-type.
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The sql-query
element allows you to specify standard and database-specific SQL queries. EJB-QL queries that do not take advantage of WebLogic extensions to EJB-QL should be specified in the ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor.
Prior to WebLogic Server 9.0, only EJB-QL queries (with or without WebLogic extensions) were supported; in this release of WebLogic Server, SQL queries, EJB-QL queries (with or without WebLogic extensions), or a combination of the two are supported.
<sql-query>
<sql-shape-name>...</sql-shape-name>
<sql>...</sql>
<database-specific-sql>...</database-specific-sql>
<database-type>...</database-type>
<sql>...</sql>
<unknown-primary-key-field>...</unknown-primary-key-field>
<cmp-field>...</cmp-field>
</sql-query>
Note: | This element is deprecated. To achieve the same functionality, use the SELECT DISTINCT clause directly in finder queries
. |
The sql-select-distinct
element controls whether the generated SQL SELECT statement will contain a a DISTINCT qualifier. Using the DISTINCT qualifier causes the database to return unique rows.
Oracle database does not allow use of a SELECT DISTINCT
with a FOR UPDATE
clause. Therefore, you cannot use the sql-select-distinct
element if any bean in the calling chain has a method with isolation-level
of TransactionReadCommittedForUpdate
. You specify the transaction-isolation
element in the weblogic-ejb-jar.xml
.
The XML
example contains the element shown here:
<sql-select-distinct>True</sql-select-dist
inct>
The sql-shape
element describes the data that is returned by a SQL query. Specifying sql-shape is necessary because databases do not always provide this information. Usually the sql-shape element should simply specify the database tables and columns that are being returned. For more complex queries, sql-shape should also specify the relationships that are present in the data that is returned by the database, and whether there are aggregate columns that should be passed through (should not be mapped to anything).
The sql-shape-name
element can be used to associate a sql-shape with multiple queries. If you have multiple queries that use the same sql-shape
, you can define the shape once and use it multiple times by referencing sql-shape-name
.
See sql-shape.
A CMP bean can be mapped to one or more DBMS tables. The table-map
element specifies a mapping between the cmp-fields of a bean and the columns of a table for all of the cmp-fields
mapped to that table. If you map a CMP bean to multiple DBMS tables, then you must specify a table-map
element for each of the tables.
When you map a CMP bean to multiple tables, each table contains a row that maps to a particular bean instance. Consequently, all tables will contain the same number of rows at any point in time. In addition, each table contains the same set of homogeneous primary key values. Therefore, each table must have the same number of primary key columns and corresponding primary key columns in different tables must have the same type, although they may have different names.
Each table-map
element must specify a mapping from the primary key column(s) for a particular table to the primary key field(s) of the bean. You can only map non-primary key fields to a single table.
For information about using the verify-rows, verify-columns, and optimistic-column elements, see Check Data for Validity with Optimistic Concurrency.
The table-map
element can contain the elements shown here:
<table-map>
<table-name>DeptTable</table-name>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>deptId1</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>t1_deptId1_column</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>deptId2</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>t1_deptId2_column</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>location</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>location_column</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<cmp-field>budget</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>budget</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<verify-rows>Read</verify-rows>
<verify-columns>Version</verify-columns>
<optimistic-column>ROW_VERSION
</optimistic-column>
<trigger-updates-optimistic-column>False
</trigger-updates-optimistic-column>
<version-column-initial-value>0
</version-column-initial-value>
</table-map>
The fully-qualified SQL name of the table. The user defined for the data-source
for this bean must have read and write privileges for this table, but does not necessarily need schema modification privileges.
<weblogic-rdbms-jar>
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<ejb-name>containerManaged</ejb-name>
<data-source-jndi-name>examples-dataSource-demoPool</data-source-jndi-name>
<table-name>ejbAccounts</table-name>
</weblogic-rdbms-bean>
</weblogic-rdbms-jar>
The trigger-updates-optimistic-column
element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, indicates whether you want the EJB container to automatically update the database column value specified in optimistic-column
that is used for concurrency checking. By default, the value of trigger-updates-optimistic-column
is False
, and the EJB container automatically updates the database column specified in optimistic-column
whenever it sends SQL UPDATE
statements to JDBC. If you have legacy applications that use database triggers to update the version values whenever the legacy application updates a database row and you do not want the EJB container to automatically update version values, set the value of this element to True
.
Note: | If you set trigger-updates-optimistic-column to True, you must also ensure that your database triggers initialize the version column in the database when the bean is created. |
See table-map.
The unknown-primary-key-field
element allows you to specify which of your cmp fields should be used as the primary key when the primary key is not specified in the ejb-jar.xml
descriptor. The specified primary key field must be mapped to a database column using the field-map element. If the specified primary key field was not declared as a cmp field in the ejb-jar.xml
descriptor, automatic key generation must be enabled and the primary key type will be java.lang.Long
.
See weblogic-rdbms-bean.
Enforces pessimistic concurrency on a per-bean basis. Specifying True
causes SELECT ... FOR UPDATE
to be used whenever the bean is loaded from the database. This is different from the transaction isolation level of TransactionReadCommittedForUpdate
in that this is set at the bean level rather than the transaction level.
<weblogic-rdbms.jar>
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<ejb-name>containerManaged</ejb-name>
<use-select-for-update>True</use-select-for-update>
</weblogic-rdbms-bean>
</weblogic-rdbms-jar>
The validate-db-schema-with
element specifies that container-managed persistence checks that beans have been mapped to a valid database schema during deployment.
If you specify MetaData
WebLogic Server uses the JDBC metadata to validate the schema.
If you specify TableQuery
, the default setting, WebLogic Server queries the tables directly to verify that they have the schema expected by CMP runtime.
An example of the validate-db-schema-with
element is shown here:
<validate-db-schema-with>TableQuery</validate-db-schema-with>
The verify-columns
element specifies the columns in a table that you want WebLogic Server to check for validity when you use the optimistic
concurrency strategy. WebLogic Server checks columns at the end of a transaction, before committing it to the database, to make sure that no other transaction has modified the data.
See Choosing a Concurrency Strategy for more information.
<verify-columns>Modified</verify-columns>
The verify-rows
element specifies the rows in a table that the EJB container should check when optimistic concurrency is used.
Modified
— only rows that are updated or deleted by a transaction are checked. This value ensures that two transactions do not update the same row concurrently, resulting in a lost update, but allows reads and updates of different transactions to be interleaved. This results in a level of consistency that falls between the ANSI READ_COMMITTED
and REPEATABLE_READ
levels of consistency.Read
—specifies that any row that is read by the transaction should be checked. This includes both rows that are simply read and rows that are read and then updated or deleted by the transaction. Specifying a value of Read
results in additional overhead since it generally increases the amount of optimistic checking the EJB container must perform. With the Read
option, committed transactions read a set of rows that are guaranteed not to be modified by another transaction until after the transaction commits.This results in a high level of consistency which is very close to the ANSI definition of SERIALIZABLE
consistency.Note: | If verify-rows is set to Read then the verify-columns element cannot have a value of Modified , as this combination would result in the EJB container checking only the modified rows. |
See Choosing a Concurrency Strategy for more information.
<verify-rows>Modified</verify-rows>
The version-column-initial-value
element, introduced in WebLogic Server 9.0, specifies the initial value of the version column used to implement optimistic concurrency. The version column is the database column you specify in the optimistic-column
element. For more information, see optimistic-column.
See table-map.
The weblogic-q
l element specifies a query that contains a WebLogic specific extension to the ejb-ql language. You should specify queries that only use standard EJB-QL language features in the ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor.
See weblogic-query.
The weblogic-query
element allows you to specify queries that use standard or database-specific SQL or WebLogic-specific extensions to EJB-QL. Queries that do not take advantage of SQL or WebLogic extensions to EJB-QL should be specified in the ejb-jar.xml
deployment descriptor.
The weblogic-query
element is also used to associate a field-group
with the query if the query retrieves an entity bean that should be pre-loaded into the cache by the query.
The weblogic-query
element can contain the elements shown here:
<weblogic-query>
<description>...</description>
<query-method>
<method-name>findBigAccounts</method-name>
<method-params>
<method-param>double</method-param>
</method-params>
</query-method>
<ejb-ql-query>
<weblogic-ql>WHERE BALANCE>10000 ORDER BY NAME
</weblogic-ql>
<group-name>...</group-name>
<caching-name>...</caching-name>
</ejb-ql-query>
<sql-query>
<sql-shape>...</sql-shape>
<sql>SELECT date_prescribed, dosage, drug, id, frequency, instructions, pat_id, issuing_phys_id, record_id, refills_remaining FROM medrecappPrescription WHERE testid = ?1
</sql>
<database-specific-sql>
<database-type>SQLServer</database-type>
<sql>SELECT name, phone, location, testid FROM medrecappPharmacyBeanTable WHERE testid = ?1 AND SUBSTRING(testid, 1,5) = 'local' ORDER BY name
</sql>
</database-specific-sql>
</sql-query>
<max-elements>...</max-elements>
<include-updates>...</include-updates>
<sql-select-distinct>...</sql-select-distinct>
</weblogic-query>
The weblogic-rdbms-bean
specifies an entity bean that is managed by the WebLogic RDBMS CMP persistence type.
weblogic-rdbms-bean
ejb-name
data-source-jndi-name
unkonown-primary-key-field
table-map
field-group
relationship-caching
weblogic-query
dalay-database-insert-until
automatic-key-generation
check-exists-on-method
The weblogic-rdbms-jar
element is the root level element of a WebLogic RDBMS CMP deployment descriptor. This element contains the deployment information for one or more entity beans and an optional set of relations.
The XML
structure of weblogic-rdbms-jar
is:
weblogic-rdbms-jar
weblogic-rdbms-bean
weblogic-rdbms-relation
create-default-dbms-tables
validate-db-schema-with
database-type
The weblogic-rdbms-relation
element represents a single relationship that is managed by the WebLogic CMP persistence type. deployment descriptor. WebLogic Server supports the following three relationship mappings:
For more information on container managed relationships, see Using Container-Managed Relationships (CMRs).
See the following sections for examples of how one-to-one, one-to-many, and many-to-many relationships are configured.
Listing 8-3 shows the weblogic-rdbms-bean
element that defines a one-to-one relationship between the entities defined in Listing 8-1 and Listing 8-2. The weblogic-rdbms-relation
element is in the weblogic-cmp-jar.xml
file, after the weblogic-rdbms-bean
elements.
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<ejb-name>CountryEJB</ejb-name>
<data-source-jndi-name>wlsd21-datasource</data-source-jndi-name>
<table-map>
<table-name>EXAMPLE07_COUNTRY</table-name>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>name</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>NAME</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>continent</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>CONTINENT</dbms-column>
</field-map>
</table-map>
</weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<ejb-name>CapitalEJB</ejb-name>
<data-source-jndi-name>wlsd21-datasource</data-source-jndi-name>
<table-map>
<table-name>EXAMPLE07_CAPITAL</table-name>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>CAPITAL_NAME</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>NAME</dbms-column>
</field-map>
<field-map>
<cmp-field>continent</cmp-field>
<dbms-column>CONTINENT</dbms-column>
</field-map>
</table-map>
</weblogic-rdbms-bean>
<weblogic-rdbms-relation>
<relation-name>CountryCapitalRel</relation-name>
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<relationship-role-name>CountryRole</relationship-role-name>
<relationship-role-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>CAPITAL_NAME</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>NAME</key-column>
</column-map>
</relationship-role-map>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
</weblogic-rdbms-relation>
Note: | CAPITAL_NAME is the column name for the foreign key in the Country table. |
Note: | NAME is the column name for the primary key located in the Capital table |
Note: | <relationship-role-name> contains the relation field specified in <cmr-field > in the <ejb-relationship-role > element in ejb-jar.xml. |
Listing 8-4 contains a sample <weblogic-rdbms-relation> element that defines a one-to-many relationship:
<weblogic-rdbms-relation>
<relation-name>OwnerDogRel</relation-name>
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<relationship-role-name>DogRole</relationship-role-name>
<relationship-role-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>OWNER_NAME</foreign-<key-column>
<key-column>NAME</key-column>
</column-map>
<relationship-role-map>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
</weblogic-rdbms-relation>
Note: | <relationship-role-name> contains the relation field specified in <cmr-field > in the <ejb-relationship-role > element in ejb-jar.xml. |
Note: | <foreign-key-column> must specify the column in the table on the “many” side of the relationship. |
A WebLogic Server many-to-many relationship involves the physical mapping of a join table. Each row in the join table contains two foreign keys that maps to the primary keys of the entities involved in the relationship.
The following example shows a many-to-many relationship between the FRIENDS
bean and the EMPLOYEES
bean.
<weblogic-rdbms-relation>
<relation-name>friends</relation-name>
<table-name>FRIENDS</table-name>
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<relationship-role-name>friend</relationship-role-name>
<relationship-role-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>first-friend-id</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>id</key-column>
</column-map
</relationship-role-map>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<relationship-role-name>second-friend</relationship-role-name>
<relationship-role-map>
<column-map>
<foreign-key-column>second-friend-id</foreign-key-column>
<key-column>id</key-column>
</column-map>
</relationship-role-map>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
</weblogic-rdbms-relation>
In Figure 8-4, the FRIENDS
join table has two columns, called first-friend-id
and second-friend-id.
Each column contains a foreign key that designates a particular employee who is a friend of another employee. The primary key column (key-column
) of the EMPLOYEES
table is id
. For this example, assume that the EMPLOYEES
bean is mapped to a single table. If the EMPLOYEES
bean is mapped to multiple tables, then the table containing the primary key column (key-column
) must be specified in the relationship-role-map
. For more information, see relationship-role-map.
The weblogic-relationship-role
element specifies the following DBMS schema information for an ejb-relationship-role
specified in ejb-jar.xml
:
relationship-role-map
sub-element specifies the mapping between a foreign key and a primary key, for one side of a relationship. For a 1-1 or 1-n relationship, only the role on the foreign-key side of the relationship specifies a mapping. Both roles specify a mapping for a m-m relationship. For details and examples, see relationship-role-map. group-name
can be used to indicate the field-group to be loaded when the bean corresponding to the role is loaded as a result of traversing the relationship, i.e. calling a cmr getXXX
method. db-cascade-delete
tag can to used to specify that cascade deletes use the built-in cascade delete facilities of the underlying DBMS. For more information, see db-cascade-delete.For more information about container-managed relationships, see Using Container-Managed Relationships (CMRs).
<weblogic-relationship-role>
<relationship-role-name>...</relationship-role-name>
<group-name> ....</group-name>
<relationship-role-map>...
....
</relationship-role-map>
<db-cascade-delete/>
</weblogic-relationship-role>
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