Domain classes are core to any business application. They hold state about business processes and hopefully also implement behavior. They are linked together through relationships, either one-to-one or one-to-many.
GORM is Grails' object relational mapping (ORM) implementation. Under the hood it uses Hibernate 3 (an extremely popular and flexible open source ORM solution) but because of the dynamic nature of Groovy, the fact that it supports both static and dynamic typing, and the convention of Grails there is less configuration involved in creating Grails domain classes.
You can also write Grails domain classes in Java. See the section on Hibernate Integration for how to write Grails domain classes in Java but still use dynamic persistent methods. Below is a preview of GORM in action:
def book = Book.findByTitle("Groovy in Action")book
.addToAuthors(name:"Dierk Koenig")
.addToAuthors(name:"Guillaume LaForge")
.save()
A domain class can be created with the
create-domain-class command:
grails create-domain-class Person
This will create a class at the location
grails-app/domain/Person.groovy
such as the one below:
If you have the dbCreate
property set to "update", "create" or "create-drop" on your DataSource, Grails will automatically generated/modify the database tables for you.
You can customize the class by adding properties:
class Person {
String name
Integer age
Date lastVisit
}
Once you have a domain class try and manipulate it via the
shell or
console by typing:
This loads an interactive GUI where you can type Groovy commands.
Try performing some basic CRUD (Create/Read/Update/Delete) operations.
Create
To create a domain class use the Groovy new operator, set its properties and call
save:
def p = new Person(name:"Fred", age:40, lastVisit:new Date())
p.save()
The
save method will persist your class to the database using the underlying Hibernate ORM layer.
Read
Grails transparently adds an implicit
id
property to your domain class which you can use for retrieval:
def p = Person.get(1)
assert 1 == p.id
This uses the
get method that expects a database identifier to read the
Person
object back from the db.
You can also load an object in a read-only state by using the
read method:
In this case the underlying Hibernate engine will not do any dirty checking and the object will not be persisted. Note that
if you explicitly call the
save method then the object is placed back into a read-write state.
Update
To update an instance, set some properties and then simply call
save again:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.name = "Bob"
p.save()
Delete
To delete an instance use the
delete method:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.delete()
When building Grails applications you have to consider the problem domain you are trying to solve. For example if you were building an
Amazon bookstore you would be thinking about books, authors, customers and publishers to name a few.
These are modeled in GORM as Groovy classes so a
Book
class may have a title, a release date, an ISBN number and so on. The next few sections show how to model the domain in GORM.
To create a domain class you can run the
create-domain-class target as follows:
grails create-domain-class Book
The result will be a class at
grails-app/domain/Book.groovy
:
If you wish to use packages you can move the Book.groovy class into a sub directory under the domain directory and add the appropriate package
declaration as per Groovy (and Java's) packaging rules.
The above class will map automatically to a table in the database called
book
(the same name as the class). This behaviour is customizable through the
ORM Domain Specific LanguageNow that you have a domain class you can define its properties as Java types. For example:
class Book {
String title
Date releaseDate
String ISBN
}
Each property is mapped to a column in the database, where the convention for column names is all lower case separated by underscores. For example
releaseDate
maps onto a column
release_date
. The SQL types are auto-detected from the Java types, but can be customized via
Constraints or the
ORM DSL.
Relationships define how domain classes interact with each other. Unless specified explicitly at both ends, a relationship exists only in the direction it is defined.
A one-to-one relationship is the simplest kind, and is defined trivially using a property of the type of another domain class. Consider this example:
Example A
class Face {
Nose nose
}
class Nose {
}
In this case we have unidirectional many-to-one relationship from
Face
to
Nose
. To make it a true one-to-one you should make
nose
unique:
class Face {
Nose nose
static constraints = {
nose unique:true
}
}
class Nose {
}
To make this relationship bidirectional define the other side as follows:
Example B
class Face {
Nose nose
}
class Nose {
static belongsTo = [face:Face]
}
In this case we use the
belongsTo
setting to say that
Nose
"belongs to" Face. The result of this is that we can create a Face and save it and the database updates/inserts will be
cascaded down to
Nose
:
new Face(nose:new Nose()).save()
The example above will save both face and nose. Note that the inverse
is not true and will result in an error due to a transient
Face
:
new Nose(face:new Face()).save() // will cause an error
Another important implication of
belongsTo
is that if you delete a
Face
instance the
Nose
will be deleted too:
def f = Face.get(1)
f.delete() // both Face and Nose deleted
In the previous example the foreign key associated the
Face
with the
Nose
is stored in the parent as column called
nose_id
. If you want the foreign key to be stored in the child you need a
hasOne
association:
Example C
class Face {
static hasOne = [nose:Nose]
}
class Nose {
Face face
}
In this example you get a bidirectional one-to-one where the foreign key column is stored in the
nose
table inside a column called
face_id
.
A one-to-many relationship is when one class, example
Author
, has many instances of a another class, example
Book
. With Grails you define such a relationship with the
hasMany
setting:
class Author {
static hasMany = [ books : Book ] String name
}
class Book {
String title
}
In this case we have a unidirectional one-to-many. Grails will, by default, map this kind of relationship with a join table.
The ORM DSL allows mapping unidirectional relationships using a foreign key association instead
Grails will automatically inject a property of type
java.util.Set
into the domain class based on the
hasMany
setting. This can be used to iterate over the collection:
def a = Author.get(1)a.books.each {
println it.title
}
The default fetch strategy used by Grails is "lazy", which means that the collection will be lazily initialized. This can lead to the n+1 problem if you are not careful.If you need "eager" fetching you can use the ORM DSL or specify eager fetching as part of a query
The default cascading behaviour is to cascade saves and updates, but not deletes unless a
belongsTo
is also specified:
class Author {
static hasMany = [ books : Book ] String name
}
class Book {
static belongsTo = [author:Author]
String title
}
If you have two properties of the same type on the many side of a one-to-many you have to use
mappedBy
to specify which the collection is mapped:
class Airport {
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
static mappedBy = [flights:"departureAirport"]
}
class Flight {
Airport departureAirport
Airport destinationAirport
}
This is also true if you have multiple collections that map to different properties on the many side:
class Airport {
static hasMany = [outboundFlights:Flight, inboundFlights:Flight]
static mappedBy = [outboundFlights:"departureAirport", inboundFlights:"destinationAirport"]
}
class Flight {
Airport departureAirport
Airport destinationAirport
}
Grails supports many-to-many relationships by defining a
hasMany
on both sides of the relationship and having a
belongsTo
on the owned side of the relationship:
class Book {
static belongsTo = Author
static hasMany = [authors:Author]
String title
}
class Author {
static hasMany = [books:Book]
String name
}
Grails maps a many-to-many using a join table at the database level. The owning side of the relationship, in this case
Author
, takes responsibility for persisting the relationship and is the only side that can cascade saves across.
For example this will work and cascade saves:
new Author(name:"Stephen King")
.addToBooks(new Book(title:"The Stand"))
.addToBooks(new Book(title:"The Shining"))
.save()
However the below will only save the
Book
and not the authors!
new Book(name:"Groovy in Action")
.addToAuthors(new Author(name:"Dierk Koenig"))
.addToAuthors(new Author(name:"Guillaume Laforge"))
.save()
This is the expected behaviour as, just like Hibernate, only one side of a many-to-many can take responsibility for managing the relationship.
Grails' Scaffolding feature does not currently support many-to-many relationship and hence you must write the code to manage the relationship yourself
As well as associations between different domain classes, GORM also supports mapping of basic collection types.
For example, the following class creates a
nicknames
association that is a
Set
of
String
instances:
class Person {
static hasMany = [nicknames:String]
}
GORM will map an association like the above using a join table. You can alter various aspects of how the join table is mapped using the
joinTable
argument:
class Person {
static hasMany = [nicknames:String] static mapping = {
hasMany joinTable:[name:'bunch_o_nicknames', key:'person_id', column:'nickname', type:"text"]
}
}
The example above will map to a table that looks like the following:
bunch_o_nicknames Table
---------------------------------------------
| person_id | nickname |
---------------------------------------------
| 1 | Fred |
---------------------------------------------
As well as
association, Grails supports the notion of composition. In this case instead of mapping classes onto separate tables a class can be "embedded" within the current table. For example:
class Person {
Address homeAddress
Address workAddress
static embedded = ['homeAddress', 'workAddress']
}
class Address {
String number
String code
}
The resulting mapping would looking like this:
If you define the Address
class in a separate Groovy file in the grails-app/domain
directory you will also get an address
table. If you don't want this to happen use Groovy's ability to define multiple classes per file and include the Address
class below the Person
class in the grails-app/domain/Person.groovy
file
GORM supports inheritance both from abstract base classes and concrete persistent GORM entities. For example:
class Content {
String author
}
class BlogEntry extends Content {
URL url
}
class Book extends Content {
String ISBN
}
class PodCast extends Content {
byte[] audioStream
}
In the above example we have a parent
Content
class and then various child classes with more specific behaviour.
Considerations
At the database level Grails by default uses table-per-hierarchy mapping with a discriminator column called
class
so the parent class (
Content
) and its sub classes (
BlogEntry
,
Book
etc.), share the
same table.
Table-per-hierarchy mapping has a down side in that you
cannot have non-nullable properties with inheritance mapping. An alternative is to use table-per-subclass which can be enabled via the
ORM DSLHowever, excessive use of inheritance and table-per-subclass can result in poor query performance due to the excessive use of join queries. In general our advice is if you're going to use inheritance, don't abuse it and don't make your inheritance hierarchy too deep.
Polymorphic Queries
The upshot of inheritance is that you get the ability to polymorphically query. For example using the
list method on the
Content
super class will return all sub classes of
Content
:
def content = Content.list() // list all blog entries, books and pod casts
content = Content.findAllByAuthor('Joe Bloggs') // find all by authordef podCasts = PodCast.list() // list only pod casts
Sets of objects
By default when you define a relationship with GORM it is a
java.util.Set
which is an unordered collection that cannot contain duplicates. In other words when you have:
class Author {
static hasMany = [books:Book]
}
The books property that GORM injects is a
java.util.Set
. The problem with this is there is no ordering when accessing the collection, which may not be what you want. To get custom ordering you can say that the set is a
SortedSet
:
class Author {
SortedSet books
static hasMany = [books:Book]
}
In this case a
java.util.SortedSet
implementation is used which means you have to implement
java.lang.Comparable
in your Book class:
class Book implements Comparable {
String title
Date releaseDate = new Date() int compareTo(obj) {
releaseDate.compareTo(obj.releaseDate)
}
}
The result of the above class is that the Book instances in the books collections of the Author class will be ordered by their release date.
Lists of objects
If you simply want to be able to keep objects in the order which they were added and to be able to reference them by index like an array you can define your collection type as a
List
:
class Author {
List books
static hasMany = [books:Book]
}
In this case when you add new elements to the books collection the order is retained in a sequential list indexed from 0 so you can do:
author.books[0] // get the first book
The way this works at the database level is Hibernate creates a
books_idx
column where it saves the index of the elements in the collection in order to retain this order at the db level.
When using a
List
, elements must be added to the collection before being saved, otherwise Hibernate will throw an exception (
org.hibernate.HibernateException
: null index column for collection):
// This won't work!
def book = new Book(title: 'The Shining')
book.save()
author.addToBooks(book)// Do it this way instead.
def book = new Book(title: 'Misery')
author.addToBooks(book)
author.save()
Maps of Objects
If you want a simple map of string/value pairs GORM can map this with the following:
class Author {
Map books // map of ISBN:book names
}def a = new Author()
a.books = ["1590597583":"Grails Book"]
a.save()
In this case the key and value of the map MUST be strings.
If you want a Map of objects then you can do this:
class Book {
Map authors
static hasMany = [authors:Author]
}def a = new Author(name:"Stephen King")def book = new Book()
book.authors = [stephen:a]
book.save()
The static
hasMany
property defines the type of the elements within the Map. The keys for the map
must be strings.
A Note on Collection Types and Performance
The Java
Set
type is a collection that doesn't allow duplicates. In order to ensure uniqueness when adding an entry to a
Set
association Hibernate has to load the entire associations from the database. If you have a large numbers of entries in the association this can be costly in terms of performance.
The same behavior is required for
List
types, since Hibernate needs to load the entire association in-order to maintain order. Therefore it is recommended that if you anticipate a large numbers of records in the association that you make the association bidirectional so that the link can be created on the inverse side. For example consider the following code:
def book = new Book(title:"New Grails Book")
def author = Author.get(1)
book.author = author
book.save()
In this example the association link is being created by the child (Book) and hence it is not necessary to manipulate the collection directly resulting in fewer queries and more efficient code. Given an
Author
with a large number of associated
Book
instances if you were to write code like the following you would see an impact on performance:
def book = new Book(title:"New Grails Book")
def author = Author.get(1)
author.addToBooks(book)
author.save()
A key thing to remember about Grails is that under the surface Grails is using
Hibernate for persistence. If you are coming from a background of using
ActiveRecord or
iBatis Hibernate's "session" model may feel a little strange.
Essentially, Grails automatically binds a Hibernate session to the currently executing request. This allows you to use the
save and
delete methods as well as other GORM methods transparently.
An example of using the
save method can be seen below:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.save()
A major difference with Hibernate is when you call
save it does not necessarily perform any SQL operations
at that point. Hibernate typically batches up SQL statements and executes them at the end. This is typically done for you automatically by Grails, which manages your Hibernate session.
There are occasions, however, when you may want to control when those statements are executed or, in Hibernate terminology, when the session is "flushed". To do so you can use the flush argument to the save method:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.save(flush:true)
Note that in this case all pending SQL statements including previous saves will be synchronized with the db. This also allows you to catch any exceptions thrown, which is typically useful in highly concurrent scenarios involving
optimistic locking:
def p = Person.get(1)
try {
p.save(flush:true)
}
catch(Exception e) {
// deal with exception
}
An example of the
delete method can be seen below:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.delete()
By default Grails will use transactional write behind to perform the delete, if you want to perform the delete in place then you can use the
flush
argument:
def p = Person.get(1)
p.delete(flush:true)
Using the
flush
argument will also allow you to catch any errors that may potentially occur during a delete. A common error that may occur is if you violate a database constraint, although this is normally down to a programming or schema error. The following example shows how to catch a
DataIntegrityViolationException
that is thrown when you violate the database constraints:
def p = Person.get(1)try {
p.delete(flush:true)
}
catch(org.springframework.dao.DataIntegrityViolationException e) {
flash.message = "Could not delete person ${p.name}"
redirect(action:"show", id:p.id)
}
Note that Grails does not supply a
deleteAll
method as deleting data is discouraged and can often be avoided through boolean flags/logic.
If you really need to batch delete data you can use the
executeUpdate method to do batch DML statements:
Customer.executeUpdate("delete Customer c where c.name = :oldName", [oldName:"Fred"])
It is critical that you understand how cascading updates and deletes work when using GORM. The key part to remember is the
belongsTo
setting which controls which class "owns" a relationship.
Whether it is a one-to-one, one-to-many or many-to-many if you define
belongsTo
updates and deletes will cascade from the owning class to its possessions (the other side of the relationship).
If you
do not define
belongsTo
then no cascades will happen and you will have to manually save each object.
Here is an example:
class Airport {
String name
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
}
class Flight {
String number
static belongsTo = [airport:Airport]
}
If I now create an
Airport
and add some
Flight
s to it I can save the
Airport
and have the updates cascaded down to each flight, hence saving the whole object graph:
new Airport(name:"Gatwick")
.addToFlights(new Flight(number:"BA3430"))
.addToFlights(new Flight(number:"EZ0938"))
.save()
Conversely if I later delete the
Airport
all
Flight
s associated with it will also be deleted:
def airport = Airport.findByName("Gatwick")
airport.delete()
However, if I were to remove
belongsTo
then the above cascading deletion code
would not work. To understand this better take a look at the summaries below that describe the default behaviour of GORM with regards to specific associations.
Bidirectional one-to-many with belongsTo
class A { static hasMany = [bees:B] }
class B { static belongsTo = [a:A] }
In the case of a bidirectional one-to-many where the many side defines a
belongsTo
then the cascade strategy is set to "ALL" for the one side and "NONE" for the many side.
Unidirectional one-to-many
class A { static hasMany = [bees:B] }
class B { }
In the case of a unidirectional one-to-many where the many side defines no belongsTo then the cascade strategy is set to "SAVE-UPDATE".
Bidirectional one-to-many no belongsTo
class A { static hasMany = [bees:B] }
class B { A a }
In the case of a bidirectional one-to-many where the many side does not define a
belongsTo
then the cascade strategy is set to "SAVE-UPDATE" for the one side and "NONE" for the many side.
Unidirectional One-to-one with belongsTo
class A { }
class B { static belongsTo = [a:A] }
In the case of a unidirectional one-to-one association that defines a
belongsTo
then the cascade strategy is set to "ALL" for the owning side of the relationship (A->B) and "NONE" from the side that defines the
belongsTo
(B->A)
Note that if you need further control over cascading behaviour, you can use the
ORM DSL.
Associations in GORM are by default lazy. This is best explained by example:
class Airport {
String name
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
}
class Flight {
String number
static belongsTo = [airport:Airport]
}
Given the above domain classes and the following code:
def airport = Airport.findByName("Gatwick")
airport.flights.each {
println it.name
}
GORM will execute a single SQL query to fetch the
Airport
instance and then 1 extra query
for each iteration over the
flights
association. In other words you get N+1 queries.
This can sometimes be optimal depending on the frequency of use of the association as you may have logic that dictates the associations is only accessed on certain occasions.
Configuring Eager Fetching
An alternative is to use eager fetching which can specified as follows:
class Airport {
String name
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
static mapping = {
flight fetch:"join"
}
}
In this case the association will be
Airport
instance and the
flights
association will be loaded all at once (depending on the mapping). This has the benefit of requiring fewer queries, however should be used carefully as you could load your entire database into memory with too many eager associations.
Associations can also be declared non-lazy using the ORM DSL
Using Batch Fetching
Although eager fetching is appropriate for some cases, it is not always desirable. If you made everything eager you could quite possibly load your entire database into memory resulting in performance and memory problems. An alternative to eager fetching is to use batch fetching. Essentially, you can configure Hibernate to lazily fetch results in "batches". For example:
class Airport {
String name
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
static mapping = {
flight batchSize:10
}
}
In this case, due to the
batchSize
argument, when you iterate over the
flights
association, Hibernate will fetch results in batches of 10. For example if you had an
Airport
that had 30 flights, if you didn't configure batch fetching you would get 1 query to fetch the
Airport
and then
30
queries to fetch each flight. With batch fetching you get 1 query to fetch the
Airport
and 3 queries to fetch each
Flight
in batches of 10. In other words, batch fetching is an optimization of the lazy fetching strategy. Batch fetching can also be configured at the class level as follows:
class Flight {
…
static mapping = {
batchSize 10
}
}
Optimistic Locking
By default GORM classes are configured for optimistic locking. Optimistic locking essentially is a feature of Hibernate which involves storing a version number in a special
version
column in the database.
The
version
column gets read into a
version
property that contains the current versioned state of persistent instance which you can access:
def airport = Airport.get(10)println airport.version
When you perform updates Hibernate will automatically check the version property against the version column in the database and if they differ will throw a
StaleObjectException and the transaction will be rolled back.
This is useful as it allows a certain level of atomicity without resorting to pessimistic locking that has an inherit performance penalty. The downside is that you have to deal with this exception if you have highly concurrent writes. This requires flushing the session:
def airport = Airport.get(10)try {
airport.name = "Heathrow"
airport.save(flush:true)
}
catch(org.springframework.dao.OptimisticLockingFailureException e) {
// deal with exception
}
The way you deal with the exception depends on the application. You could attempt a programmatic merge of the data or go back to the user and ask them to resolve the conflict.
Alternatively, if it becomes a problem you can resort to pessimistic locking.
Pessimistic Locking
Pessimistic locking is equivalent to doing a SQL "SELECT * FOR UPDATE" statement and locking a row in the database. This has the implication that other read operations will be blocking until the lock is released.
In Grails pessimistic locking is performed on an existing instance via the
lock method:
def airport = Airport.get(10)
airport.lock() // lock for update
airport.name = "Heathrow"
airport.save()
Grails will automatically deal with releasing the lock for you once the transaction has been committed. However, in the above case what we are doing is "upgrading" from a regular SELECT to a SELECT..FOR UPDATE and another thread could still have updated the record in between the call to get() and the call to lock().
To get around this problem you can use the static
lock method that takes an id just like
get:
def airport = Airport.lock(10) // lock for update
airport.name = "Heathrow"
airport.save()
In this case only SELECT..FOR UPDATE is issued.
Though Grails, through Hibernate, supports pessimistic locking, the embedded HSQLDB shipped with Grails which is used as the default in-memory database does not. If you need to test pessimistic locking you will need to do so against a database that does have support such as MySQL.
As well as the
lock method you can also obtain a pessimistic locking using queries. For example using a dynamic finder:
def airport = Airport.findByName("Heathrow", [lock:true])
Or using criteria:
def airport = Airport.createCriteria().get {
eq('name', 'Heathrow')
lock true
}
GORM supports a number of powerful ways to query from dynamic finders, to criteria to Hibernate's object oriented query language HQL.
Groovy's ability to manipulate collections via
GPath and methods like sort, findAll and so on combined with GORM results in a powerful combination.
However, let's start with the basics.
Listing instances
If you simply need to obtain all the instances of a given class you can use the
list method:
The
list method supports arguments to perform pagination:
def books = Book.list(offset:10, max:20)
as well as sorting:
def books = Book.list(sort:"title", order:"asc")
Here, the
sort
argument is the name of the domain class property that you wish to sort on, and the
order
argument is either
asc
for
ascending or
desc
for
descending.
Retrieval by Database Identifier
The second basic form of retrieval is by database identifier using the
get method:
You can also obtain a list of instances for a set of identifiers using
getAll:
def books = Book.getAll(23, 93, 81)
GORM supports the concept of
dynamic finders. A dynamic finder looks like a static method invocation, but the methods themselves don't actually exist in any form at the code level.
Instead, a method is auto-magically generated using code synthesis at runtime, based on the properties of a given class. Take for example the
Book
class:
class Book {
String title
Date releaseDate
Author author
}
class Author {
String name
}
The
Book
class has properties such as
title
,
releaseDate
and
author
. These can be used by the
findBy and
findAllBy methods in the form of "method expressions":
def book = Book.findByTitle("The Stand")book = Book.findByTitleLike("Harry Pot%")book = Book.findByReleaseDateBetween( firstDate, secondDate )book = Book.findByReleaseDateGreaterThan( someDate )book = Book.findByTitleLikeOrReleaseDateLessThan( "%Something%", someDate )
Method Expressions
A method expression in GORM is made up of the prefix such as
findBy followed by an expression that combines one or more properties. The basic form is:
Book.findBy([Property][Comparator][Boolean Operator])?[Property][Comparator]
The tokens marked with a '?' are optional. Each comparator changes the nature of the query. For example:
def book = Book.findByTitle("The Stand")book = Book.findByTitleLike("Harry Pot%")
In the above example the first query is equivalent to equality whilst the latter, due to the
Like
comparator, is equivalent to a SQL
like
expression.
The possible comparators include:
InList
- In the list of given values
LessThan
- less than the given value
LessThanEquals
- less than or equal a give value
GreaterThan
- greater than a given value
GreaterThanEquals
- greater than or equal a given value
Like
- Equivalent to a SQL like expression
Ilike
- Similar to a Like
, except case insensitive
NotEqual
- Negates equality
Between
- Between two values (requires two arguments)
IsNotNull
- Not a null value (doesn't require an argument)
IsNull
- Is a null value (doesn't require an argument)
Notice that the last 3 require different numbers of method arguments compared to the rest, as demonstrated in the following example:
def now = new Date()
def lastWeek = now - 7
def book = Book.findByReleaseDateBetween( lastWeek, now )books = Book.findAllByReleaseDateIsNull()
books = Book.findAllByReleaseDateIsNotNull()
Boolean logic (AND/OR)
Method expressions can also use a boolean operator to combine two criteria:
def books =
Book.findAllByTitleLikeAndReleaseDateGreaterThan("%Java%", new Date()-30)
In this case we're using
And
in the middle of the query to make sure both conditions are satisfied, but you could equally use
Or
:
def books =
Book.findAllByTitleLikeOrReleaseDateGreaterThan("%Java%", new Date()-30)
At the moment, you can only use dynamic finders with a maximum of two criteria, i.e. the method name can only have one boolean operator. If you need to use more, you should consider using either
Criteria or the
HQL.
Querying Associations
Associations can also be used within queries:
def author = Author.findByName("Stephen King")def books = author ? Book.findAllByAuthor(author) : []
In this case if the
Author
instance is not null we use it in a query to obtain all the
Book
instances for the given
Author
.
Pagination & Sorting
The same pagination and sorting parameters available on the
list method can also be used with dynamic finders by supplying a map as the final parameter:
def books =
Book.findAllByTitleLike("Harry Pot%", [max:3,
offset:2,
sort:"title",
order:"desc"])
Criteria is a type safe, advanced way to query that uses a Groovy builder to construct potentially complex queries. It is a much better alternative to using StringBuffer.
Criteria can be used either via the
createCriteria or
withCriteria methods. The builder uses Hibernate's Criteria API, the nodes on this builder map the static methods found in the
Restrictions class of the Hibernate Criteria API. Example Usage:
def c = Account.createCriteria()
def results = c {
between("balance", 500, 1000)
eq("branch", "London")
or {
like("holderFirstName", "Fred%")
like("holderFirstName", "Barney%")
}
maxResults(10)
order("holderLastName", "desc")
}
This criteria will select up to 10
Account
objects matching the following criteria:
balance
is between 500 and 1000
branch
is 'London'
holderFirstName
starts with 'Fred' or 'Barney'
The results will be sorted in descending ordery by
holderLastName
.
Conjunctions and Disjunctions
As demonstrated in the previous example you can group criteria in a logical OR using a
or { }
block:
or {
between("balance", 500, 1000)
eq("branch", "London")
}
This also works with logical AND:
and {
between("balance", 500, 1000)
eq("branch", "London")
}
And you can also negate using logical NOT:
not {
between("balance", 500, 1000)
eq("branch", "London")
}
All top level conditions are implied to be AND'd together.
Querying Associations
Associations can be queried by having a node that matches the property name. For example say the
Account
class had many
Transaction
objects:
class Account {
…
def hasMany = [transactions:Transaction]
Set transactions
…
}
We can query this association by using the property name
transaction
as a builder node:
def c = Account.createCriteria()
def now = new Date()
def results = c.list {
transactions {
between('date',now-10, now)
}
}
The above code will find all the
Account
instances that have performed
transactions
within the last 10 days.
You can also nest such association queries within logical blocks:
def c = Account.createCriteria()
def now = new Date()
def results = c.list {
or {
between('created',now-10,now)
transactions {
between('date',now-10, now)
}
}
}
Here we find all accounts that have either performed transactions in the last 10 days OR have been recently created in the last 10 days.
Querying with Projections
Projections may be used to customise the results. To use projections you need to define a "projections" node within the criteria builder tree. There are equivalent methods within the projections node to the methods found in the Hibernate
Projections class:
def c = Account.createCriteria()def numberOfBranches = c.get {
projections {
countDistinct('branch')
}
}
Using SQL Restrictions
You can access Hibernate's SQL Restrictions capabilities.
def c = Person.createCriteria()def peopleWithShortFirstNames = c.list {
sqlRestriction "char_length( first_name ) <= 4"
}
Note that the parameter there is SQL. The first_name
attribute referenced in the example relates to the persistence model,
not the object model. The Person
class may have a property named firstName
which is mapped to a column in the database
named first_name
.Also note that the SQL used here is not necessarily portable across databases.
Using Scrollable Results
You can use Hibernate's
ScrollableResults feature by calling the scroll method:
def results = crit.scroll {
maxResults(10)
}
def f = results.first()
def l = results.last()
def n = results.next()
def p = results.previous()def future = results.scroll(10)
def accountNumber = results.getLong('number')
To quote the documentation of Hibernate ScrollableResults:
A result iterator that allows moving around within the results by arbitrary increments. The Query / ScrollableResults pattern is very similar to the JDBC PreparedStatement/ ResultSet pattern and the semantics of methods of this interface are similar to the similarly named methods on ResultSet.
Contrary to JDBC, columns of results are numbered from zero.
Setting properties in the Criteria instance
If a node within the builder tree doesn't match a particular criterion it will attempt to set a property on the Criteria object itself. Thus allowing full access to all the properties in this class. The below example calls
setMaxResults
and
setFirstResult
on the
Criteria instance:
import org.hibernate.FetchMode as FM
…
def results = c.list {
maxResults(10)
firstResult(50)
fetchMode("aRelationship", FM.EAGER)
}
Querying with Eager Fetching
In the section on
Eager and Lazy Fetching we discussed how to declaratively specify fetching to avoid the N+1 SELECT problem. However, this can also be achieved using a criteria query:
def criteria = Task.createCriteria()
def tasks = criteria.list{
eq "assignee.id", task.assignee.id
join 'assignee'
join 'project'
order 'priority', 'asc'
}
Notice the usage of the
join
method. This method indicates the criteria API that a
JOIN
query should be used to obtain the results.
Method Reference
If you invoke the builder with no method name such as:
The build defaults to listing all the results and hence the above is equivalent to:
Method | Description |
---|
|
list | This is the default method. It returns all matching rows. |
get | Returns a unique result set, i.e. just one row. The criteria has to be formed that way, that it only queries one row. This method is not to be confused with a limit to just the first row. |
scroll | Returns a scrollable result set. |
listDistinct | If subqueries or associations are used, one may end up with the same row multiple times in the result set, this allows listing only distinct entities and is equivalent to DISTINCT_ROOT_ENTITY of the CriteriaSpecification class. |
count | Returns the number of matching rows. |
GORM classes also support Hibernate's query language HQL, a very complete reference for which can be found
Chapter 14. HQL: The Hibernate Query Language of the Hibernate documentation.
GORM provides a number of methods that work with HQL including
find,
findAll and
executeQuery. An example of a query can be seen below:
def results =
Book.findAll("from Book as b where b.title like 'Lord of the%'")
Positional and Named Parameters
In this case the value passed to the query is hard coded, however you can equally use positional parameters:
def results =
Book.findAll("from Book as b where b.title like ?", ["The Shi%"])
def author = Author.findByName("Stephen King")
def books = Book.findAll("from Book as book where book.author = ?", [author])
Or even named parameters:
def results =
Book.findAll("from Book as b where b.title like :search or b.author like :search",
[search:"The Shi%"])
def author = Author.findByName("Stephen King")
def books = Book.findAll("from Book as book where book.author = :author",
[author: author])
Multiline Queries
If you need to separate the query across multiple lines you can use a line continuation character:
def results = Book.findAll("\
from Book as b, \
Author as a \
where b.author = a and a.surname = ?", ['Smith'])
Groovy multiline strings will NOT work with HQL queries
Pagination and Sorting
You can also perform pagination and sorting whilst using HQL queries. To do so simply specify the pagination options as a map at the end of the method call and include an "ORDER BY" clause in the HQL:
def results =
Book.findAll("from Book as b where b.title like 'Lord of the%' order by b.title asc",
[max:10, offset:20])
The following sections cover more advanced usages of GORM including caching, custom mapping and events.
GORM supports the registration of events as methods that get fired when certain events occurs such as deletes, inserts and updates. The following is a list of supported events:
beforeInsert
- Executed before an object is initially persisted to the databse
beforeUpdate
- Executed before an object is updated
beforeDelete
- Executed before an object is deleted
afterInsert
- Executed after an object is persisted to the database
afterUpdate
- Executed after an object has been updated
afterDelete
- Executed after an object has been updated
onLoad
- Executed when an object is loaded from the database
To add an event simply register the relevant closure with your domain class.
Do not attempt to flush the session within an event (such as with obj.save(flush:true)). Since events are fired during flushing this will cause a StackOverflowError.
Event types
The beforeInsert event
Fired before an object is saved to the db
class Person {
Date dateCreated def beforeInsert() {
dateCreated = new Date()
}
}
The beforeUpdate event
Fired before an existing object is updated
class Person {
Date dateCreated
Date lastUpdated def beforeInsert() {
dateCreated = new Date()
}
def beforeUpdate() {
lastUpdated = new Date()
}
}
The beforeDelete event
Fired before an object is deleted.
class Person {
String name
Date dateCreated
Date lastUpdated def beforeDelete() {
ActivityTrace.withNewSession {
new ActivityTrace(eventName:"Person Deleted",data:name).save()
}
}
}
Notice the usage of
withNewSession
method above. Since events are triggered whilst Hibernate is flushing using persistence methods like
save()
and
delete()
won't result in objects being saved unless you run your operations with a new
Session
.
Fortunately the
withNewSession
method allows you to share the same transactional JDBC connection even though you're using a different underlying
Session
.
The onLoad event
Fired when an object is loaded from the db:
class Person {
String name
Date dateCreated
Date lastUpdated def onLoad() {
name = "I'm loaded"
}
}
Automatic timestamping
The examples above demonstrated using events to update a
lastUpdated
and
dateCreated
property to keep track of updates to objects. However, this is actually not necessary. By merely defining a
lastUpdated
and
dateCreated
property these will be automatically updated for you by GORM.
If this is not the behaviour you want you can disable this feature with:
class Person {
Date dateCreated
Date lastUpdated
static mapping = {
autoTimestamp false
}
}
Grails domain classes can be mapped onto many legacy schemas via an Object Relational Mapping Domain Specify Language. The following sections takes you through what is possible with the ORM DSL.
None if this is necessary if you are happy to stick to the conventions defined by GORM for table, column names and so on. You only needs this functionality if you need to in anyway tailor the way GORM maps onto legacy schemas or performs caching
Custom mappings are defined using a a static
mapping
block defined within your domain class:
class Person {
..
static mapping = { }
}
Table names
The database table name which the class maps to can be customized using a call to
table
:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
}
}
In this case the class would be mapped to a table called
people
instead of the default name of
person
.
Column names
It is also possible to customize the mapping for individual columns onto the database. For example if its the name you want to change you can do:
class Person {
String firstName
static mapping = {
table 'people'
firstName column:'First_Name'
}
}
In this case we define method calls that match each property name (in this case
firstName
). We then use the named parameter
column
, to specify the column name to map onto.
Column type
GORM supports configuration of Hibernate types via the DSL using the type attribute. This includes specifing user types that subclass the Hibernate
org.hibernate.usertype.UserType class, which allows complete customization of how a type is persisted. As an example
if you had a
PostCodeType
you could use it as follows:
class Address {
String number
String postCode
static mapping = {
postCode type:PostCodeType
}
}
Alternatively if you just wanted to map it to one of Hibernate's basic types other than the default chosen by Grails you could use:
class Address {
String number
String postCode
static mapping = {
postCode type:'text'
}
}
This would make the
postCode
column map to the SQL TEXT or CLOB type depending on which database is being used.
See the Hibernate documentation regarding
Basic Types for further information.
One-to-One Mapping
In the case of associations it is also possible to change the foreign keys used to map associations. In the case of a one-to-one association this is exactly the same as any regular column. For example consider the below:
class Person {
String firstName
Address address
static mapping = {
table 'people'
firstName column:'First_Name'
address column:'Person_Adress_Id'
}
}
By default the
address
association would map to a foreign key column called
address_id
. By using the above mapping we have changed the name of the foreign key column to
Person_Adress_Id
.
One-to-Many Mapping
With a bidirectional one-to-many you can change the foreign key column used simple by changing the column name on the many side of the association as per the example in the previous section on one-to-one associations. However, with unidirectional association the foreign key needs to be specified on the association itself. For example given a unidirectional one-to-many relationship between
Person
and
Address
the following code will change the foreign key in the
address
table:
class Person {
String firstName
static hasMany = [addresses:Address]
static mapping = {
table 'people'
firstName column:'First_Name'
addresses column:'Person_Address_Id'
}
}
If you don't want the column to be in the
address
table, but instead some intermediate join table you can use the
joinTable
parameter:
class Person {
String firstName
static hasMany = [addresses:Address]
static mapping = {
table 'people'
firstName column:'First_Name'
addresses joinTable:[name:'Person_Addresses', key:'Person_Id', column:'Address_Id']
}
}
Many-to-Many Mapping
Grails, by default maps a many-to-many association using a join table. For example consider the below many-to-many association:
class Group {
…
static hasMany = [people:Person]
}
class Person {
…
static belongsTo = Group
static hasMany = [groups:Group]
}
In this case Grails will create a join table called
group_person
containing foreign keys called
person_id
and
group_id
referencing the
person
and
group
tables. If you need to change the column names you can specify a column within the mappings for each class.
class Group {
…
static mapping = {
people column:'Group_Person_Id'
}
}
class Person {
…
static mapping = {
groups column:'Group_Group_Id'
}
}
You can also specify the name of the join table to use:
class Group {
…
static mapping = {
people column:'Group_Person_Id',joinTable:'PERSON_GROUP_ASSOCIATIONS'
}
}
class Person {
…
static mapping = {
groups column:'Group_Group_Id',joinTable:'PERSON_GROUP_ASSOCIATIONS'
}
}
Setting up caching
Hibernate features a second-level cache with a customizable cache provider. This needs to be configured in the
grails-app/conf/DataSource.groovy
file as follows:
hibernate {
cache.use_second_level_cache=true
cache.use_query_cache=true
cache.provider_class='org.hibernate.cache.EhCacheProvider'
}
You can of course customize these settings how you desire, for example if you want to use a distributed caching mechanism.
For further reading on caching and in particular Hibernate's second-level cache, refer to the Hibernate documentation on the subject.
Caching instances
In your mapping block to enable caching with the default settings use a call to the
cache
method:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
cache true
}
}
This will configure a 'read-write' cache that includes both lazy and non-lazy properties. If you need to customize this further you can do:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
cache usage:'read-only', include:'non-lazy'
}
}
Caching associations
As well as the ability to use Hibernate's second level cache to cache instances you can also cache collections (associations) of objects. For example:
class Person {
String firstName
static hasMany = [addresses:Address]
static mapping = {
table 'people'
version false
addresses column:'Address', cache:true
}
}
class Address {
String number
String postCode
}
This will enable a 'read-write' caching mechanism on the addresses collection. You can also use:
cache:'read-write' // or 'read-only' or 'transactional'
To further configure the cache usage.
Caching Queries
You can cache queries such as dynamic finders and criteria. To do so using a dynamic finder you can pass the
cache
argument:
def person = Person.findByFirstName("Fred", [cache:true])
Note that in order for the results of the query to be cached, you still need to enable caching in your mapping as discussed in the previous section.
You can also cache criteria queries:
def people = Person.withCriteria {
like('firstName', 'Fr%')
cache true
}
Cache usages
Below is a description of the different cache settings and their usages:
read-only
- If your application needs to read but never modify instances of a persistent class, a read-only cache may be used.
read-write
- If the application needs to update data, a read-write cache might be appropriate.
nonstrict-read-write
- If the application only occasionally needs to update data (ie. if it is extremely unlikely that two transactions would try to update the same item simultaneously) and strict transaction isolation is not required, a nonstrict-read-write
cache might be appropriate.
transactional
- The transactional
cache strategy provides support for fully transactional cache providers such as JBoss TreeCache. Such a cache may only be used in a JTA environment and you must specify hibernate.transaction.manager_lookup_class
in the grails-app/conf/DataSource.groovy
file's hibernate
config.
By default GORM classes uses
table-per-hierarchy
inheritance mapping. This has the disadvantage that columns cannot have a
NOT-NULL
constraint applied to them at the db level. If you would prefer to use a
table-per-subclass
inheritance strategy you can do so as follows:
class Payment {
Long id
Long version
Integer amount static mapping = {
tablePerHierarchy false
}
}
class CreditCardPayment extends Payment {
String cardNumber
}
The mapping of the root
Payment
class specifies that it will not be using
table-per-hierarchy
mapping for all child classes.
You can customize how GORM generates identifiers for the database using the DSL. By default GORM relies on the native database mechanism for generating ids. This is by far the best approach, but there are still many schemas that have different approaches to identity.
To deal with this Hibernate defines the concept of an id generator. You can customize the id generator and the column it maps to as follows:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
version false
id generator:'hilo', params:[table:'hi_value',column:'next_value',max_lo:100]
}
}
In this case we're using one of Hibernate's built in 'hilo' generators that uses a separate table to generate ids.
For more information on the different Hibernate generators refer to the Hibernate reference documentation
Note that if you want to merely customise the column that the id lives on you can do:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
version false
id column:'person_id'
}
}
GORM supports the concept of composite identifiers (identifiers composed from 2 or more properties). It is not an approach we recommend, but is available to you if you need it:
class Person {
String firstName
String lastName static mapping = {
id composite:['firstName', 'lastName']
}
}
The above will create a composite id of the
firstName
and
lastName
properties of the Person class. When you later need to retrieve an instance by id you have to use a prototype of the object itself:
def p = Person.get(new Person(firstName:"Fred", lastName:"Flintstone"))
println p.firstName
To get the best performance out of your queries it is often necessary to tailor the table index definitions. How you tailor them is domain specific and a matter of monitoring usage patterns of your queries. With GORM's DSL you can specify which columns need to live in which indexes:
class Person {
String firstName
String address
static mapping = {
table 'people'
version false
id column:'person_id'
firstName column:'First_Name', index:'Name_Idx'
address column:'Address', index:'Name_Idx, Address_Index'
}
}
As discussed in the section on
Optimistic and Pessimistic Locking, by default GORM uses optimistic locking and automatically injects a
version
property into every class which is in turn mapped to a
version
column at the database level.
If you're mapping to a legacy schema this can be problematic, so you can disable this feature by doing the following:
class Person {
..
static mapping = {
table 'people'
version false
}
}
If you disable optimistic locking you are essentially on your own with regards to concurrent updates and are open to the risk of users losing (due to data overriding) data unless you use pessimistic locking
Lazy Collections
As discussed in the section on
Eager and Lazy fetching, by default GORM collections use lazy fetching and is is configurable through the
fetchMode
setting. However, if you prefer to group all your mappings together inside the
mappings
block you can also use the ORM DSL to configure fetching:
class Person {
String firstName
static hasMany = [addresses:Address]
static mapping = {
addresses lazy:false
}
}
class Address {
String street
String postCode
}
Lazy Single-Ended Associations
In GORM, one-to-one and many-to-one associations are by default lazy. Non-lazy single ended associations can be problematic in cases when you are loading many entities which have an association to another entity as a new SELECT statement is executed for each loaded entity.
You can make one-to-one and many-to-one associations non-lazy using the same technique as for lazy collections:
class Person {
String firstName
static belongsTo = [address:Address]
static mapping = {
address lazy:false
}
}
class Address {
String street
String postCode
}
Here we set the
address
property of the
Person
class will be eagerly fetched.
Lazy Single-Ended Associations and Proxies
In order to facilitate single-ended lazy associations Hibernate uses runtime generated proxies. The way this works is that Hibernate dynamically subclasses the proxied entity to create the proxy.
In the previous example Hibernate would create a subclass of
Address
and return that as a proxy to the real entity. When you call any of the getters or setters Hibernate will initialize the the entity from the database.
Unfortunately this technique can produce surprising results. Consider the following example classes:
class Animal {}
class Mammal extends Animal {}
class Dog extends Mammal {
String name
}
class Owner {
Animal pet
}
Given you have an
Owner
with a
pet
association that is a
Dog
consider the following code:
def owner = Owner.get(1)
def pet = Animal.get(owner.petId)
if(pet instanceof Dog) {
// doesn't work!
}
Now you may think this code will work, but in fact it will not. The reason is Hibernate creates a dynamic proxy by subclassing
Animal
for the
owner.pet
association and caches it in the first level cache. So even if the actual proxied class is a
Dog
it won't be an instance of the
Dog
class due to the way proxies work.
The get around this problem GORM provides an
instanceOf
method that should always be used:
def owner = Owner.get(1)
def pet = Animal.get(owner.petId)
if(pet?.instanceof( Dog )) {
// this works
}
However, there are cases where this particular Hibernate abstraction may still leak through. For example:
def owner = Owner.get(1)
Dog pet = Animal.get(owner.petId)
In this case you will get a
ClassCastException
because the proxied
Animal
is not a
Dog
even though the actual instance
is a
Dog
.
Our best advice is to be aware of Hibernate proxies and how to deal with them when you do run into issues.
As describes in the section on
cascading updates, the primary mechanism to control the way updates and deletes are cascading from one association to another is the
belongsTo static property.
However, the ORM DSL gives you complete access to Hibernate's
transitive persistence capabilities via the
cascade
attribute.
Valid settings for the cascade attribute include:
- create - cascades creation of new records from one association to another
- merge - merges the state of a detached association
- save-update - cascades only saves and updates to an association
- delete - cascades only deletes to an association
- lock - useful if a pessimistic lock should be cascaded to its associations
- refresh - cascades refreshes to an association
- evict - cascades evictions (equivalent to discard() in GORM) to associations if set
- all - cascade ALL operations to associations
- all-delete-orphan - Applies only to one-to-many associations and indicates that when a child is removed from an association then it should be automatically deleted. Children are also deleted when the parent is.
It is advisable to read the section in the Hibernate documentation on transitive persistence to obtain a better understanding of the different cascade styles and recommendation for their usage
To specific the cascade attribute simply define one or many (comma-separated) of the aforementioned settings as its value:
class Person {
String firstName
static hasMany = [addresses:Address]
static mapping = {
addresses cascade:"all-delete-orphan"
}
}
class Address {
String street
String postCode
}
You saw in an earlier section that you can use composition (via the
embedded
property) to break a table into multiple objects. You can achieve a similar effect via Hibernate's custom user types. These are not domain classes themselves, but plain Java or Groovy classes with associated. Each of these types also has a corresponding "meta-type" class that implements
org.hibernate.usertype.UserType.
The
Hibernate reference manual has some information on custom types, but here we will focus on how to map them in Grails. Let's start by taking a look at a simple domain class that uses an old-fashioned (pre-Java 1.5) type-safe enum class:
class Book {
String title
String author
Rating rating static mapping = {
rating type: RatingUserType
}
}
All we have done is declare the
rating
field the enum type and set the property's type in the custom mapping to the corresponding
UserType
implementation. That's all you have to do to start using your custom type. If you want, you can also use the other column settings such as "column" to change the column name and "index" to add it to an index.
Custom types aren't limited to just a single column - they can be mapped to as many columns as you want. In such cases you need to explicitly define in the mapping what columns to use, since Hibernate can only use the property name for a single column. Fortunately, Grails allows you to map multiple columns to a property using this syntax:
class Book {
String title
Name author
Rating rating static mapping = {
name type: NameUserType, {
column name: "first_name"
column name: "last_name"
}
rating type: RatingUserType
}
}
The above example will create "first_name" and "last_name" columns for the
author
property. You'll be pleased to know that you can also use some of the normal column/property mapping attributes in the column definitions. For example:
column name: "first_name", index: "my_idx", unique: true
The column definitions do
not support the following attributes:
type
,
cascade
,
lazy
,
cache
, and
joinTable
.
One thing to bear in mind with custom types is that they define the
SQL types for the corresponding database columns. That helps take the burden of configuring them yourself, but what happens if you have a legacy database that uses a different SQL type for one of the columns? In that case, you need to override column's SQL type using the
sqlType
attribute:
class Book {
String title
Name author
Rating rating static mapping = {
name type: NameUserType, {
column name: "first_name", sqlType: "text"
column name: "last_name", sqlType: "text"
}
rating type: RatingUserType, sqlType: "text"
}
}
Mind you, the SQL type you specify needs to still work with the custom type. So overriding a default of "varchar" with "text" is fine, but overriding "text" with "yes_no" isn't going to work.
You can sort objects using queries arguments such as those found in the
list method:
def airports = Airport.list(sort:'name')
However, you can also declare the sort order declaratively:
class Airport {
…
static mapping = {
sort "name"
}
}
You can also configure the sort order if necessary:
class Airport {
…
static mapping = {
sort name:"desc"
}
}
Alternatively, you can configure sort order at the association level:
class Airport {
…
static hasMany = [flights:Flight]
static mapping = {
flights sort:'number'
}
}
Grails is built on Spring and hence uses Spring's Transaction abstraction for dealing with programmatic transactions. However, GORM classes have been enhanced to make this more trivial through the
withTransaction method which accepts a block the first argument to which is the Spring
TransactionStatus object.
A typical usage scenario is as follows:
def transferFunds = {
Account.withTransaction { status ->
def source = Account.get(params.from)
def dest = Account.get(params.to) def amount = params.amount.toInteger()
if(source.active) {
source.balance -= amount
if(dest.active) {
dest.amount += amount
}
else {
status.setRollbackOnly()
}
}
}}
In this example we rollback the transactions if the destination account is not active and if any exception are thrown during the process the transaction will automatically be rolled back.
You can also use "save points" to rollback a transaction to a particular point in time if you don't want to rollback the entire transaction. This can be achieved through the use of Spring's
SavePointManager interface.
The
withTransaction method deals with the begin/commit/rollback logic for you within the scope of the block.
Although constraints are covered in the
Validation section, it is important to mention them here as some of the constraints can affect the way in which the database schema is generated.
Where feasible, Grails uses a domain class's constraints to influence the database columns generated for the corresponding domain class properties.
Consider the following example. Suppose we have a domain model with the following property.
String name
String description
By default, in MySQL, Grails would define these columns as...
column name | data type
description | varchar(255)
But perhaps the business rules for this domain class state that a description can be up to 1000 characters in length. If that were the case, we'd likely define the column as follows
if we were creating the table via an SQL script.
column name | data type
description | TEXT
Chances are we'd also want to have some application-based validation to make sure we don't exceed that 1000 character limit
before we persist any records. In Grails, we achieve this validation via
constraints. We'd add the following constraint declaration to the domain class.
static constraints = {
description(maxSize:1000)
}
This constraint would provide both the application-based validation we want and it would also cause the schema to be generated as shown above. Below is a description of the other constraints that influence schema generation.
Constraints Affecting String Properties
If either the
maxSize
or the
size
constraint is defined, Grails sets the maximum column length based on the constraint value.
In general, it's not advisable to use both constraints on the same domain class property. However, if both the
maxSize
constraint and the
size
constraint are defined, then Grails sets the column length to the minimum of the
maxSize
constraint and the upper bound of the size constraint. (Grails uses the minimum of the two, because any length that exceeds that minimum will result in a validation error.)
If the inList constraint is defined (and the
maxSize
and the
size
constraints are not defined), then Grails sets the maximum column length based on the length of the longest string in the list of valid values. For example, given a list including values "Java", "Groovy", and "C++", Grails would set the column length to 6 (i.e., the number of characters in the string "Groovy").
Constraints Affecting Numeric Properties
If the
max
constraint, the
min
constraint, or the
range
constraint is defined, Grails attempts to set the column
precision based on the constraint value. (The success of this attempted influence is largely dependent on how Hibernate interacts with the underlying DBMS.)
In general, it's not advisable to combine the pair min/max and range constraints together on the same domain class property. However, if both of these constraints is defined, then Grails uses the minimum precision value from the constraints. (Grails uses the minimum of the two, because any length that exceeds that minimum precision will result in a validation error.)
If the scale constraint is defined, then Grails attempts to set the column
scale based on the constraint value. This rule only applies to floating point numbers (i.e., java.lang.Float, java.Lang.Double, java.lang.BigDecimal, or subclasses of java.lang.BigDecimal). (The success of this attempted influence is largely dependent on how Hibernate interacts with the underlying DBMS.)
The constraints define the minimum/maximum numeric values, and Grails derives the maximum number of digits for use in the precision. Keep in mind that specifying only one of min/max constraints will not affect schema generation (since there could be large negative value of property with max:100, for example), unless specified constraint value requires more digits than default Hibernate column precision is (19 at the moment). For example...
someFloatValue(max:1000000, scale:3)
would yield:
someFloatValue DECIMAL(19, 3) // precision is default
but
someFloatValue(max:12345678901234567890, scale:5)
would yield:
someFloatValue DECIMAL(25, 5) // precision = digits in max + scale
and
someFloatValue(max:100, min:-100000)
would yield:
someFloatValue DECIMAL(8, 2) // precision = digits in min + default scale