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How to fetch FetchType.LAZY associations with JPA and Hibernate in a Spring Controller

I have a Person class:

@Entity
public class Person {

    @Id
    @GeneratedValue
    private Long id;

    @ManyToMany(fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
    private List<Role> roles;
    // etc
}

With a many-to-many relation that is lazy.

In my controller I have

@Controller
@RequestMapping("/person")
public class PersonController {
    @Autowired
    PersonRepository personRepository;

    @RequestMapping("/get")
    public @ResponseBody Person getPerson() {
        Person person = personRepository.findOne(1L);
        return person;
    }
}

And the PersonRepository is just this code, written according to this guide

public interface PersonRepository extends JpaRepository<Person, Long> {
}

However, in this controller I actually need the lazy-data. How can I trigger its loading?

Trying to access it will fail with

failed to lazily initialize a collection of role: no.dusken.momus.model.Person.roles, could not initialize proxy - no Session

or other exceptions depending on what I try.

My xml-description, in case needed.

Thanks.

Can you write a method, which will create a query to fetch a Person object given some parameter? In that Query, include the fetch clause and load the Roles too for the person.

C
Community

You will have to make an explicit call on the lazy collection in order to initialize it (common practice is to call .size() for this purpose). In Hibernate there is a dedicated method for this (Hibernate.initialize()), but JPA has no equivalent of that. Of course you will have to make sure that the invocation is done, when the session is still available, so annotate your controller method with @Transactional. An alternative is to create an intermediate Service layer between the Controller and the Repository that could expose methods which initialize lazy collections.

Update:

Please note that the above solution is easy, but results in two distinct queries to the database (one for the user, another one for its roles). If you want to achieve better performace add the following method to your Spring Data JPA repository interface:

public interface PersonRepository extends JpaRepository<Person, Long> {

    @Query("SELECT p FROM Person p JOIN FETCH p.roles WHERE p.id = (:id)")
    public Person findByIdAndFetchRolesEagerly(@Param("id") Long id);

}

This method will use JPQL's fetch join clause to eagerly load the roles association in a single round-trip to the database, and will therefore mitigate the performance penalty incurred by the two distinct queries in the above solution.


Please note that this is an easy solution, but results in two distinct queries to the database (one for the user, another one for its roles). If you want to achieve better performace, try writing a dedicated method that eagerly fetches the user and its associated roles in a single step using JPQL or the Criteria API as others suggested.
I now asked for an example to Jose's answer, have to admit I don't understand entirely.
Please check a possible solution for the desired query method in my updated answer.
Interesting thing to note, if you simply join without the fetch, the set will be returned with initialized = false; therefore still issuing a second query once the set is accessed. fetch is key to making sure the relationship is completely loaded and avoiding the second query.
Seems that the problem with doing both and fetch and a join is that join predicate criteria is ignored and you end up getting everything in the list or map. If you want everything, then use a fetch, if you want something specific, then a join, but the, as was said, the join will be empty. This defeats the purpose of using .LAZY loading.
r
rakpan

Though this is an old post, please consider using @NamedEntityGraph (Javax Persistence) and @EntityGraph (Spring Data JPA). The combination works.

Example

@Entity
@Table(name = "Employee", schema = "dbo", catalog = "ARCHO")
@NamedEntityGraph(name = "employeeAuthorities",
            attributeNodes = @NamedAttributeNode("employeeGroups"))
public class EmployeeEntity implements Serializable, UserDetails {
// your props
}

and then the spring repo as below

@RepositoryRestResource(collectionResourceRel = "Employee", path = "Employee")
public interface IEmployeeRepository extends PagingAndSortingRepository<EmployeeEntity, String>           {

    @EntityGraph(value = "employeeAuthorities", type = EntityGraphType.LOAD)
    EmployeeEntity getByUsername(String userName);

}

Note that @NamedEntityGraph is a part of JPA 2.1 API, which is not implemented in Hibernate before 4.3.0 version.
@EntityGraph(attributePaths = "employeeGroups") can be used directly in a Spring Data Repository to annotate a method without the need of a @NamedEntityGraph on your @Entity - less code, easy to understand when you open the repo.
J
Jose Luis Martin

You have some options

Write a method on repository that return a initialized entity as R.J suggested.

More work, best performance.

Use OpenEntityManagerInViewFilter to keep session open for the entire request.

Less work, usually acceptable in web enviroments.

Use a helper class to initialize entities when required.

Less work, useful when OEMIV is not at option, for example in a Swing application, but may be useful too on repository implementations to initialize any entity in one shot.

For the last option, I wrote a utility class, JpaUtils to initilize entities at some deph.

For example:

@Transactional
public class RepositoryHelper {

    @PersistenceContext
    private EntityManager em;

    public void intialize(Object entity, int depth) {
        JpaUtils.initialize(em, entity, depth);
    }
}

Since all my requests are simple REST calls with no rendering etc., the transaction is basically my whole request. Thanks for your input.
How do I do the first one? I know how to write a query, but not how to do what you say. Could you please show an example? Would be very helpful.
zagyi provided an example in his answer, thanks for pointing me in the right direction anyway, though.
I don't know how your class would be called! not completed solution waste others time
Use OpenEntityManagerInViewFilter to keep session open for the entire request.- Bad idea. I would make an additional request to fetch all collections for my entities.
V
Vlad Mihalcea

Spring Data JpaRepository

The Spring Data JpaRepository defines the following two methods:

getOne, which returns an entity proxy that is suitable for setting a @ManyToOne or @OneToOne parent association when persisting a child entity.

findById, which returns the entity POJO after running the SELECT statement that loads the entity from the associated table

However, in your case, you didn't call either getOne or findById:

Person person = personRepository.findOne(1L);

So, I assume the findOne method is a method you defined in the PersonRepository. However, the findOne method is not very useful in your case. Since you need to fetch the Person along with is roles collection, it's better to use a findOneWithRoles method instead.

Custom Spring Data methods

You can define a PersonRepositoryCustom interface, as follows:

public interface PersonRepository
    extends JpaRepository<Person, Long>, PersonRepositoryCustom { 

}

public interface PersonRepositoryCustom {
    Person findOneWithRoles(Long id);
}

And define its implementation like this:

public class PersonRepositoryImpl implements PersonRepositoryCustom {

    @PersistenceContext
    private EntityManager entityManager;

    @Override
    public Person findOneWithRoles(Long id)() {
        return entityManager.createQuery("""
            select p 
            from Person p
            left join fetch p.roles
            where p.id = :id 
            """, Person.class)
        .setParameter("id", id)
        .getSingleResult();
    }
}

That's it!


Is there a reason why you wrote the query yourself and didn’t use a solution like the EntityGraph in @rakpan answer? Wouldn’t this produce the same result?
Because EntityGraphs plans are not cached like JPQL are. That can be a significant performance hit.
Exactly. I'll have to write an article about it when I have some time.
JsonIgnore is needed for bidirectional associations in the web layer, so it won't affect the way you're querying data in the data access layer.
@Vlad Will you get caching of the querty like you describe in your comment above if you use a @Query annotation like in one of the amswers above (stackoverflow.com/a/15360333/924036)?
C
Community

it can only be lazily loaded whilst within a transaction. So you could access the collection in your repository, which has a transaction - or what I normally do is a get with association, or set fetchmode to eager.


M
Michail Nikolaev

I think you need OpenSessionInViewFilter to keep your session open during view rendering (but it is not too good practice).


As I'm not using JSP or anything, just making a REST-api, @Transactional will do for me. But will be useful at other times. Thanks.
@Matsemann I know it's late now...but you can make use of OpenSessionInViewFilter even in a controller as well as the session will exist till a response is compiled...
@Matsemann Thanks! Transactional-annotation did the trick for me! fyi: It even works if you just annotate the superclass of a rest-class.
n
neel4soft

You can do the same like this:

@Override
public FaqQuestions getFaqQuestionById(Long questionId) {
    session = sessionFactory.openSession();
    tx = session.beginTransaction();
    FaqQuestions faqQuestions = null;
    try {
        faqQuestions = (FaqQuestions) session.get(FaqQuestions.class,
                questionId);
        Hibernate.initialize(faqQuestions.getFaqAnswers());

        tx.commit();
        faqQuestions.getFaqAnswers().size();
    } finally {
        session.close();
    }
    return faqQuestions;
}

Just use faqQuestions.getFaqAnswers().size()nin your controller and you will get the size if lazily intialised list, without fetching the list itself.