Kodo includes a reverse mapping tool for generating persistent class definitions, complete with metadata, from an existing database schema. You do not have to use the reverse mapping tool to access an existing schema; you are free to write your classes and mappings yourself, as described in Section 7.3, “Meet-in-the-Middle Mapping”. The reverse mapping tool, however, can give you an excellent starting point from which to grow your persistent classes.
Note | |
---|---|
The reverse mapping tool in this release does not yet output JPA annotations. It is limited to JDO metadata output. |
To use the reverse mapping tool, follow the steps below:
Use the schema tool to export your current schema to an XML schema file. You can skip this step and the next step if you want to run the reverse mapping tool directly against the database.
Examine the generated schema file. JDBC drivers often provide incomplete or faulty metadata, in which case the file will not exactly match the actual schema. Alter the XML file to match the true schema. The XML format for the schema file is described in Section 4.14, “XML Schema Format”.
After fixing any errors in the schema file, modify the XML to include foreign keys between all relations. The schema tool will have automatically detected existing foreign key constraints; many schemas, however, do not employ database foreign keys for every relation. By manually adding any missing foreign keys, you will give the reverse mapping tool the information it needs to generate the proper relations between the persistent classes it creates.
Run the reverse mapping tool on the finished schema file.
If you do not supply the schema file to reverse map, the tool
will run directly against the schema in the database. The
tool can be run via the included
reversemappingtool
script, or through
its Java class,
kodo.jdbc.meta.ReverseMappingTool
.
Example 7.14. Using the Reverse Mapping Tool
reversemappingtool -pkg com.xyz -d ~/src -cp customizer.properties schema.xml
In addition to Kodo's standard configuration flags, including code formatting options, the reverse mapping tool recognizes the following command line arguments:
-schemas/-s <schema and table names>
: A comma-separated list of schema and
table names to reverse map, if no XML schema file is
supplied. Each element of the list must follow the
naming conventions for the kodo.jdbc.Schemas
property described in
Section 4.12.1, “Schemas List”. In fact,
if this flag is omitted, it defaults to the value of the
Schemas
property. If the
Schemas
property is not defined,
all schemas will be reverse-mapped.
-package/-pkg <package name>
:
The package name of the generated classes. If no
package name is given, the generated code will not
contain package declarations.
-directory/-d <output directory>
: All generated code and metadata will be
written to the directory at this path. If the path does
not match the package of a class, the package
structure will be created beneath this directory.
Defaults to the current directory.
-useSchemaName/-sn <true/t | false/f>
: Set this flag to true
to include the schema as well as table name in the
name of each generated class. This can be useful when
dealing with multiple schemas with same-named tables.
-useForeignKeyName/-fkn
<true/t | false/f>
: Set this flag to
true
if you would like field names
for relations to be based on the database foreign key
name. By default, relation field names are derived
from the name of the related class.
-nullableAsObject/-no <true/t | false/f>
: By default, all non-foreign key columns
are mapped to primitives. Set this flag to
true
to generate primitive wrapper
fields instead for columns that allow null values.
-blobAsObject/-bo <true/t | false/f>
: By default, all binary columns are mapped
to byte[]
fields. Set this flag
to true
to map them to
Object
fields instead. Note that
when mapped this way, the column is presumed to contain
a serialized Java object.
-primaryKeyOnJoin/-pkj <true/t | false/f>
: The standard reverse mapping tool behavior
is to map all tables with primary keys to persistent
classes. If your schema has primary keys on
many-many join tables as well, set this flag to
true
to avoid creating classes for
those tables.
-inverseRelations/-ir <true/t
| false/f>
: Set to false
to prevent the creation of inverse 1-many/1-1
relations for every many-1/1-1 relation detected.
-useDatastoreIdentity/-ds
<true/t | false/f>
: Set to
true
to use datastore identity
for tables that have single numeric primary key
columns. The tool typically uses application identity
for all generated classes.
-useBuiltinIdentityClass/-bic <true/t
| false/f>
: Set to false
to prevent the tool from using built-in application
identity classes when possible. This will force the
tool to to create custom application identity classes
even when there is only one primary key column.
-innerIdentityClasses/-inn <true/t
| false/f>
: Set to true
to have any generated application identity classes be
created as static inner classes within the persistent
classes. Defaults to false
.
-identityClassSuffix/-is
<suffix>
: Suffix to append to class
names to form application identity class names, or for
inner identity classes, the inner class name.
Defaults to Id
.
-discriminatorStrategy/-ds
<strategy>
:
The default discriminator strategy to use for generated
base classes. Defaults to a strategy using outer joins
to all possible subclass tables to determine a record's
type. This strategy does not require a discriminator
column.
-versionStrategy/-vs
<strategy>
:
The default version strategy to use for generated
base classes. Defaults to using state comparisons
on commit to detect concurrency violations.
-detachable/-det <true/t |
false/f>
: Whether to declare the generated
classes detachable in metadata. Defaults to
false
for JDO classes.
-metadata/-md <package
| class>
: Whether to write a single
package-level metadata file, or to write a metadata
file per generated class. Defaults to
package
.
-typeMap/-typ <type mapping>
:
A string that specifies the default Java classes to
generate for each SQL type that is seen in the schema.
The format is
SQLTYPE1=JavaClass1,SQLTYPE2=JavaClass2
.
The SQL type name first looks for a customization
based on SQLTYPE(SIZE,PRECISION)
,
then SQLTYPE(SIZE)
, then
SQLTYPE(SIZE,PRECISION)
. So
if a column whose type name is
CHAR
is found, it will first look
for the CHAR(50,0)
type name
specification, then it will look for
CHAR(50)
, and finally it will
just look for CHAR
.
For example, to generate a char array for
every CHAR
column whose size
is exactly 50, and to generate a
short
for every type name of
INTEGER
, you might specify:
CHAR(50)=char[],INTEGER=short
.
Note that since various databases report different
type names differently, one database's type name
specification might not work for another database.
Enable TRACE
level logging on the
MetaData
channel to track which
type names Kodo is examining.
-customizerClass/-cc
<class name>
: The full class name of a
kodo.jdbc.meta.ReverseCustomizer
customization plugin. If you do
not specify a reverse customizer of your own, the
system defaults to a
PropertiesReverseCustomizer
. This customizer allows you to specify
simple customization options in the properties file
given with the -customizerProperties
flag below. We present the available property keys
below.
-customizerProperties/-cp <properties
file or resource>
: The path or resource
name of a properties file to pass to the reverse
customizer on initialization.
-customizer./-c.<property name>
<property value>
: The given property
name will be matched with the corresponding Java bean
property in the specified reverse customizer, and set
to the given value.
Running the tool will generate .java
files
for each generated class (and its application identity class,
if applicable), along with all necessary persistence metadata
and mappings.
Examine the generated class, metadata, and mapping information, and modify it as necessary. Remember that the reverse mapping tool only provides a starting point, and you are free to make whatever modifications you like to the code it generates.
After you are satisfied with the generated classes and their
mappings, you should first compile them with
javac
, jikes
, or your
favorite Java compiler. Make sure the classes and their
metadata are located in the directory corresponding to
the -package
flag you gave the reverse
mapping tool. Finally, enhance the classes if necessary (see
Section 5.2, “Enhancement”).
Your persistent classes are now ready to access your existing schema.
The kodo.jdbc.meta.ReverseCustomizer
plugin
interface allows you to customze the reverse mapping process. See
the class
Javadoc for details on the hooks that this interface
provides. Specify the concrete plugin implementation to use with
the -customizerClass/-cc
command-line flag,
described in the preceding section.
By default, the reverse mapping tool uses a
kodo.jdbc.meta.PropertiesReverseCustomizer
. This customizer allows you to perform
relatively simple customizations through the properties file named
with the -customizerProperties
tool flag.
The customizer recognizes the following properties:
<table name>.table-type <type>
: Override the default type of the table with
name <table name>
. Legal values
are:
base
: Primary table for a base
class.
secondary
: Secondary table for
a class. The table must have a foreign key joining
to a class table.
secondary-outer
: Outer-joined
secondary table for a class. The table must have
a foreign key joining to a class table.
association
: Association table.
The table must have two foreign keys to class
tables.
collection
: Collection table.
The table must have one foreign key to a class
table and one data column.
subclass
: A joined subclass
table. The table must have a foreign key to the
superclass' table.
none
: The table should not be
reverse-mapped.
<class name>.rename <new class name>
: Override the given tool-generated name
<class name>
with a new value. Use full class names, including package.
You are free to rename a class to a new package. Specify
a value of none
to reject the class and
leave the corresponding table unmapped.
<table name>.class-name
<new class name>
: Assign the given
fully-qualified class name to the type created from the
table with name <table name>
.
Use a value of none
to prevent reverse
mapping this table. This property can be used in place
of the rename
property.
<class name>.identity <datastore |
builtin | identity class name>
: Set this
property to datastore
to use datastore
identity for the class <class
name>
, builtin
to use
a built-in identity class, or the desired
application identity class name. Give full class names,
including package. You are free to change the package of
the identity class this way. If the persistent class has
been renamed, use the new class name for this property key.
Remember that datastore identity requires a table with a
single numeric primary key column, and built-in identity
requires a single primary key column of any type.
<class name>.<field name>.rename
<new field name>
: Override the
tool-generated <field name>
in
class <class name>
with the given
name. Use the field owner's full class name in the
property key. If the
field owner's class was renamed, use the new class name.
The property value should be the new field name, without
the preceding class name. Use a value of none
to reject the generated mapping and remove the
field from the class.
<table name>.<column name>.field-name
<new field name>
: Set the generated field
name for the <table name>
table's
<column name>
column. If this is
a multi-column mapping, any of the columns can be used.
Use a value of none
to prevent the column
and its associated columns from being reverse-mapped.
<class name>.<field name>.type
<field type>
: The type to give the named
field. Use full class names. If the field or the field's
owner class has been renamed, use the new name.
<class name>.<field name>.value
: The initial value for the named field. The
given string will be placed as-is in the generated Java
code, so be sure it is valid Java. If the
field or the field's owner class has been renamed, use the
new name.
All property keys are optional; if not specified, the customizer keeps the default value generated by the reverse mapping tool.
Example 7.15. Customizing Reverse Mapping with Properties
reversemappingtool -pkg com.xyz -cp custom.properties schema.xml
Example custom.properties
:
com.xyz.TblMagazine.rename: com.xyz.Magazine com.xyz.TblArticle.rename: com.xyz.Article com.xyz.TblPubCompany.rename: com.xyz.pub.Company com.xyz.TblSysInfo.rename: none com.xyz.Magazine.allArticles.rename: articles com.xyz.Magazine.articles.type: java.util.Collection com.xyz.Magazine.articles.value: new TreeSet() com.xyz.Magazine.identity: datastore com.xyz.pub.Company.identity: com.xyz.pub.CompanyId
Your Kodo download includes the
PropertiesReverseCustomizer
source code. You can use
this code as an example when writing your own customization class.