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          轉自:http://josephmarques.wordpress.com/2010/02/22/many-to-many-revisited/

          講了many-to-many在修改的時候怎么解決性能問題。大體看了一遍,有些地方還沒好好體會,絕對是個好文,先收藏了!

          The modeling problem is classic: you have two entities, say Users and Roles, which have a many-to-many relationship with one another. In other words, each user can be in multiple roles, and each role can have multiple users associated with it.

          The schema is pretty standard and would look like:

          CREATE TABLE app_user (
             id INTEGER,
             PRIMARY KEY ( id ) );
          
          CREATE TABLE app_role (
             id INTEGER,
             PRIMARY KEY ( id ) );
          
          CREATE TABLE app_user_role (
             user_id INTEGER,
             role_id INTEGER,
             PRIMARY KEY ( user_id, role_id ),
             FOREIGN KEY ( user_id ) REFERENCES app_user ( id ),
             FOREIGN KEY ( role_id ) REFERENCES app_role ( id ) );
          

          But there are really two choices for how you want to expose this at the Hibernate / EJB3 layer. The first strategy employs the use of the @ManyToMany annotation:

          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_USER")
          public class User {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @ManyToMany
              @JoinTable(name = "APP_USER_ROLE",
                 joinColumns = { @JoinColumn(name = "USER_ID") },
                 inverseJoinColumns = { @JoinColumn(name = "ROLE_ID") })
              private Set<Role> roles = new HashSet<Role>();
          }
          
          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_ROLE")
          public class Role {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @ManyToMany(mappedBy = "roles")
              private Set<User> users = new HashSet<User>();
          }
          

          The second strategy uses a set of @ManyToOne mappings and requires the creation of a third “mapping” entity:

          public class UserRolePK {
              @ManyToOne
              @JoinColumn(name = "USER_ID", referencedColumnName = "ID")
              private User user;
          
              @ManyToOne
              @JoinColumn(name = "ROLE_ID", referencedColumnName = "ID")
              private Role role;
          }
          
          @Entity @IdClass(UserRolePK.class)
          @Table(name = "APP_USER_ROLE")
          public class UserRole {
              @Id
              private User user;
          
              @Id
              private Role role;
          }
          
          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_USER")
          public class User {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @OneToMany(mappedBy = "user")
              private Set<UserRole> userRoles;
          }
          
          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_ROLE")
          public class Role {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @OneToMany(mappedBy = "role")
              private Set<UserRole> userRoles;
          }
          

          The most obvious pro for the @ManyToMany solution is simpler data retrieval queries. The annotation automagically generates the proper SQL under the covers, and allows access to data from the other side of the linking table with a simple join at the HQL/JPQL level. For example, to get the roles for some user:

          SELECT r
          FROM User u
          JOIN u.roles r
          WHERE u.id = :someUserId
          

          You can still retrieve the same data with the other solution, but it’s not as elegant. It requires traversing from a user to the userRoles relationship, and then accessing the roles associated with those mapping entities:

          SELECT ur.role
          FROM User u
          JOIN u.userRoles ur
          WHERE u.id = :someUserId
          

          The inelegance of the second strategy becomes clear if you had several many-to-many relationships that you needed to traverse in a single query. If you had to use explicit mapping entities for each join table, the query would look like:

          SELECT threeFour.four
          FROM One one
          JOIN one.oneTwos oneTwo
          JOIN oneTwo.two.twoThrees twoThree
          JOIN twoThree.three.threeFours threeFour
          where one.id = :someId
          

          Whereas using @ManyToMany annotations, exclusively, would result in a query with the following form:

          SELECT four
          FROM One one
          JOIN one.twos two
          JOIN two.threes three
          JOIN threes.four
          WHERE one.id = :someId
          

          Some readers might wonder why, if we have explicit mapping table entities, we don’t just use them directly to make the query a little more intelligible / human-readable:

          SELECT threeFour.four
          FROM OneTwo oneTwo, TwoThree twoThree, ThreeFour threeFour
          WHERE oneTwo.two = twoThree.two
          AND twoThree.three = threeFour.three
          AND oneTwo.one.id = :someId
          

          Although I agree this query may be slightly easier to understand at a glance (especially if you’re used to writing native SQL), it definitely doesn’t save on keystrokes. Aside from that, it starts to pull away from thinking about your data model purely in terms of its high-level object relations.

          In a read-mostly system, where access to data is the most frequent operation, it just makes sense to use the @ManyToMany mapping strategy. It achieves the goal while keeping the queries as simple and straight forward as possible.

          ?

          However, elegance of select-statements should not be the only point considered when choosing a strategy. The more elaborate solution using the explicit mapping entiies does have its merits. Consider the problem of having to delete users that have properties matching a specific condition, which due to the foreign keys also require deleting user-role relationships matching that same criteria:

          DELETE UserRole ur
          WHERE ur.user.id IN (
             SELECT u
             FROM User u
             WHERE u.someProperty = :someInterestingValue );
          DELETE User u WHERE u.someProperty = :someInterestingValue;
          

          If the mapping entity did not exist, the role objects would have to be loaded into the session, traversed one at a time, and have all of their users removed…after which, the role objects themselves could be deleted from the system. If your application only had a handful of users that matched this condition, either solution would probably perform just fine.

          But what if you had tens of millions of users in your system, and this query happened to match 10% of them? (OK, perhaps this particular scenario is a bit contrived, but there *are* plenty of applications out there where the number of many-to-many relationships order in the tens of millions or more.) The logic would have to load more than a million users across the wire from the database which, as a result, might require you to implement a manual batching mechanism. You would load, say, 1000 users into memory at once, operate on them, flush/clear the session, then load the next batch, and so on. Memory requirements aside, you might find the transaction takes too long or might even time-out. In this case, you would need to execute each of the batches inside its own transaction, driving the process from outside of a transactional context.

          Unfortunately, the data-load isn’t the only issue. The actual deletion work has problems too. You’re going to have to, for each user in turn, remove all of its roles (e.g., “user.getRoles().clear()”) and then delete the user itself (e.g., “entityManager.remove(user)”). These operations translate into two native SQL delete statements for each matched user – one to remove the related entries from the app_user_role table, and the other to remove the user itself from the app_user table).

          All of these performance issues stem from the fact that a large amount of data has to be loaded across the wire and then manipulated, which results in a number of roundtrips proportional to the number of rows that match the criteria. However, by creating the mapping entity, it becomes possible to execute everything in two statements, neither of which even load data across the wire.

          So what’s the right solution? Well, the interesting thing about this problem space is that the two solutions described above are not mutually exclusive. There’s nothing that prevents you from using both of them simultaneously:

          public class UserRolePK {
              @ManyToOne
              @JoinColumn(name = "USER_ID", referencedColumnName = "ID")
              private User user;
          
              @ManyToOne
              @JoinColumn(name = "ROLE_ID", referencedColumnName = "ID")
              private Role role;
          }
          
          @Entity @IdClass(UserRolePK.class)
          @Table(name = "APP_USER_ROLE")
          public class UserRole {
              @Id
              private User user;
          
              @Id
              private Role role;
          }
          
          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_USER")
          public class User {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @OneToMany(mappedBy = "user")
              private Set<UserRole> userRoles;
          
              @ManyToMany
              @JoinTable(name = "APP_USER_ROLE",
                 joinColumns = { @JoinColumn(name = "USER_ID") },
                 inverseJoinColumns = { @JoinColumn(name = "ROLE_ID") })
              private Set<Role> roles = new HashSet<Role>();
          }
          
          @Entity
          @Table(name = "APP_ROLE")
          public class Role {
              @Id
              private Integer id;
          
              @OneToMany(mappedBy = "role")
              private Set<UserRole> userRoles;
          
              @ManyToMany(mappedBy = "roles")
              private Set<User> users = new HashSet<User>();
          }
          

          This hybrid solution actually gives you the best of both worlds: elegant queries and efficient updates to the linking table. Granted, the boilerplate to set up all the mappings might seem tedious, but that extra effort is well worth the pay-off.

          posted on 2011-02-17 01:05 人在江湖 閱讀(545) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: hibernate
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