An object (entity instance) is either transient or persistent with respect to a particular ISession. Newly instantiated objects are, of course, transient. The session offers services for saving (ie. persisting) transient instances:
DomesticCat fritz = new DomesticCat(); fritz.Color = Color.Ginger; fritz.Sex = 'M'; fritz.Name = "Fritz"; long generatedId = (long) sess.Save(fritz);
DomesticCat pk = new DomesticCat(); pk.Color = Color.Tabby; pk.Sex = 'F'; pk.Name = "PK"; pk.Kittens = new HashSet<Cat>(); pk.AddKitten(fritz); sess.Save( pk, 1234L );
The single-argument Save() generates and assigns a unique identifier to fritz. The two-argument form attempts to persist pk using the given identifier. We generally discourage the use of the two-argument form since it may be used to create primary keys with business meaning.
Associated objects may be made persistent in any order you like unless you have a NOT NULL constraint upon a foreign key column. There is never a risk of violating foreign key constraints. However, you might violate a NOT NULL constraint if you Save() the objects in the wrong order.
The Load() methods of ISession give you a way to retrieve a persistent instance if you already know its identifier. One version takes a class object and will load the state into a newly instantiated object. The second version allows you to supply an instance into which the state will be loaded. The form which takes an instance is only useful in special circumstances (DIY instance pooling etc.)
Cat fritz = sess.Load<Cat>(generatedId);
long pkId = 1234; DomesticCat pk = sess.Load<DomesticCat>(pkId);
Cat cat = new DomesticCat(); // load pk's state into cat sess.Load( cat, pkId ); var kittens = cat.Kittens;
Note that Load() will throw an unrecoverable exception if there is no matching database row. If the class is mapped with a proxy, Load() returns an object that is an uninitialized proxy and does not actually hit the database until you invoke a method of the object. This behaviour is very useful if you wish to create an association to an object without actually loading it from the database.
If you are not certain that a matching row exists, you should use the Get() method, which hits the database immediately and returns null if there is no matching row.
Cat cat = sess.Get<Cat>(id); if (cat==null) { cat = new Cat(); sess.Save(cat, id); } return cat;
You may also load an objects using an SQL SELECT ... FOR UPDATE. See the next section for a discussion of NHibernate LockModes.
Cat cat = sess.Get<Cat>(id, LockMode.Upgrade);
Note that any associated instances or contained collections are not selected FOR UPDATE.
It is possible to re-load an object and all its collections at any time, using the Refresh() method. This is useful when database triggers are used to initialize some of the properties of the object.
sess.Save(cat); sess.Flush(); //force the SQL INSERT sess.Refresh(cat); //re-read the state (after the trigger executes)
An important question usually appears at this point: How much does NHibernate load from the database and how many SQL SELECTs will it use? This depends on the fetching strategy and is explained in Section 21.1, “Fetching strategies”.
If you don't know the identifier(s) of the object(s) you are looking for, use the CreateQuery() method of ISession. NHibernate supports a simple but powerful object oriented query language.
IList<Cat> cats = sess .CreateQuery("from Cat as cat where cat.Birthdate = ?") .SetDateTime(0, date) .List<Cat>(); var mates = sess .CreateQuery("select mate from Cat as cat join cat.Mate as mate " + "where cat.name = ?") .SetString(0, name) .List<Cat>(); var cats = sess .CreateQuery("from Cat as cat where cat.Mate.Birthdate is null") .List<Cat>(); var moreCats = sess .CreateQuery("from Cat as cat where " + "cat.Name = 'Fritz' or cat.id = ? or cat.id = ?") .SetInt64(0, id1) .SetParameter(1, id2, NHibernateUtil.Int64) .List<Cat>(); var mates = sess .CreateQuery("from Cat as cat where cat.Mate = ?") .SetEntity(0, izi) .List<Cat>(); ); var problems = sess .CreateQuery("from GoldFish as fish " + "where fish.Birthday > fish.Deceased or fish.Birthday is null") .List<GoldFish>();
These given Set parameters are used to bind the given values to the ? query placeholders (which map to input parameters of an ADO.NET DbCommand). Just as in ADO.NET, you should use this binding mechanism in preference to string manipulation.
The NHibernateUtil class defines a number of static methods and constants, providing access to most of the built-in types, as instances of NHibernate.Type.IType.
If you expect your query to return a very large number of objects, but you don't expect to use them all, you might get better performance from the Enumerable() method, which return a IEnumerable. The iterator will load objects on demand, using the identifiers returned by an initial SQL query (n+1 selects total).
// fetch ids IEnumerable<Qux> en = sess .CreateQuery("from eg.Qux q order by q.Likeliness") .Enumerable<Qux>(); foreach (Qux qux in en) { // something we couldnt express in the query if ( qux.CalculateComplicatedAlgorithm() ) { // dont need to process the rest break; } }
The Enumerable() method also performs better if you expect that many of the objects are already loaded and cached by the session, or if the query results contain the same objects many times. (When no data is cached or repeated, CreateQuery() is almost always faster.) Here is an example of a query that should be called using Enumerable():
var en = sess .CreateQuery( "select customer, product " + "from Customer customer, " + "Product product " + "join customer.Purchases purchase " + "where product = purchase.Product") .Enumerable<object[]>();
Calling the previous query using CreateQuery() would return a very large ADO.NET result set containing the same data many times.
NHibernate queries sometimes return tuples of objects, in which case each tuple is returned as an array:
var foosAndBars = sess .CreateQuery( "select foo, bar from Foo foo, Bar bar " + "where bar.Date = foo.Date") .Enumerable<object[]>(); foreach (object[] tuple in foosAndBars) { Foo foo = tuple[0]; Bar bar = tuple[1]; .... }
Queries may specify a property of a class in the select clause. They may even call SQL aggregate functions. Properties or aggregates are considered "scalar" results.
var results = sess .CreateQuery( "select cat.Color, min(cat.Birthdate), count(cat) from Cat cat " + "group by cat.Color") .Enumerable<object[]>(); foreach (object[] row in results) { Color type = (Color) row[0]; DateTime oldest = (DateTime) row[1]; int count = (int) row[2]; ..... }
var en = sess .CreateQuery( "select cat.Type, cat.Birthdate, cat.Name from DomesticCat cat") .Enumerable<object[]>();
IList<object[]> list = sess .CreateQuery("select cat, cat.Mate.Name from DomesticCat cat") .List<object[]>();
If you need to specify bounds upon your result set (the maximum number of rows you want to retrieve and / or the first row you want to retrieve) you should obtain an instance of NHibernate.IQuery:
IQuery q = sess.CreateQuery("from DomesticCat cat"); q.SetFirstResult(20); q.SetMaxResults(10); var cats = q.List<Cat>();
You may even define a named query in the mapping document. (Remember to use a CDATA section if your query contains characters that could be interpreted as markup.)
<query name="Eg.DomesticCat.by.name.and.minimum.weight"><![CDATA[ from Eg.DomesticCat as cat where cat.Name = ? and cat.Weight > ? ] ]></query>
IQuery q = sess.GetNamedQuery("Eg.DomesticCat.by.name.and.minimum.weight"); q.SetString(0, name); q.SetInt32(1, minWeight); var cats = q.List<Cat>();
Named queries are by default validated at startup time, allowing to catch errors more easily than having to test all the application features using HQL queries. In case of validation errors, the details of failing queries are logged and a validation error is raised.
Named queries accepts a number of attributes matching settings available on the IQuery interface.
flush-mode - override the session flush mode just for this query.
cacheable - allow the query results to be cached by the second level cache. See Chapter 27, NHibernate.Caches.
cache-region - specify the cache region of the query.
cache-mode - specify the cache mode of the query.
fetch-size - set a fetch size for the underlying ADO query.
timeout - set the query timeout in seconds.
read-only - true switches yielded entities to read-only. See Chapter 11, Read-only entities.
comment - add a custom comment to the generated SQL.
The query interface supports the use of named parameters. Named parameters are identifiers of the form :name in the query string. There are methods on IQuery for binding values to named or positional parameters. NHibernate numbers parameters from zero. The advantages of named parameters are:
named parameters are insensitive to the order they occur in the query string
they may occur multiple times in the same query
they are self-documenting
//named parameter (preferred) IQuery q = sess.CreateQuery("from DomesticCat cat where cat.Name = :name"); q.SetString("name", "Fritz"); var cats = q.Enumerable<DomesticCat>();
//positional parameter IQuery q = sess.CreateQuery("from DomesticCat cat where cat.Name = ?"); q.SetString(0, "Izi"); var cats = q.Enumerable<DomesticCat>();
//named parameter list var names = new List<string>(); names.Add("Izi"); names.Add("Fritz"); IQuery q = sess.CreateQuery("from DomesticCat cat where cat.Name in (:namesList)"); q.SetParameterList("namesList", names); var cats = q.List<DomesticCat>();
A collection filter is a special type of query that may be applied to a persistent collection or array. The query string may refer to this, meaning the current collection element.
var blackKittens = session .CreateFilter(pk.Kittens, "where this.Color = ?") .SetEnum(0, Color.Black) .List<Cat>();
The returned collection is considered a bag.
Observe that filters do not require a from clause (though they may have one if required). Filters are not limited to returning the collection elements themselves.
var blackKittenMates = session .CreateFilter(pk.Kittens, "select this.Mate where this.Color = Eg.Color.Black") .List<Cat>();
HQL is extremely powerful but some people prefer to build queries dynamically, using an object oriented API, rather than embedding strings in their .NET code. For these people, NHibernate provides an intuitive ICriteria query API.
ICriteria crit = session.CreateCriteria<Cat>(); crit.Add(Expression.Eq("color", Eg.Color.Black)); crit.SetMaxResults(10); var cats = crit.List<Cat>();
If you are uncomfortable with SQL-like syntax, this is perhaps the easiest way to get started with NHibernate. This API is also more extensible than HQL. Applications might provide their own implementations of the ICriterion interface.
You may express a query in SQL, using CreateSQLQuery(). You must enclose SQL aliases in braces.
var cats = session .CreateSQLQuery("SELECT {cat.*} FROM CAT {cat} WHERE ROWNUM<10") .AddEntity("cat", typeof(Cat)) .List<Cat>();
var cats = session .CreateSQLQuery( "SELECT {cat}.ID AS {cat.Id}, {cat}.SEX AS {cat.Sex}, " + "{cat}.MATE AS {cat.Mate}, {cat}.SUBCLASS AS {cat.class}, ... " + "FROM CAT {cat} WHERE ROWNUM<10") .AddEntity("cat", typeof(Cat)) .List<Cat>()
SQL queries may contain named and positional parameters, just like NHibernate queries.
Transactional persistent instances (ie. objects loaded, saved, created or queried by the ISession) may be manipulated by the application and any changes to persistent state will be persisted when the ISession is flushed (discussed later in this chapter). So the most straightforward way to update the state of an object is to Load() it, and then manipulate it directly, while the ISession is open:
DomesticCat cat = sess.Load<DomesticCat>(69L); cat.Name = "PK"; sess.Flush(); // changes to cat are automatically detected and persisted
Sometimes this programming model is inefficient since it would require both an SQL SELECT (to load an object) and an SQL UPDATE (to persist its updated state) in the same session. Therefore NHibernate offers an alternate approach.
Many applications need to retrieve an object in one transaction, send it to the UI layer for manipulation, then save the changes in a new transaction. (Applications that use this kind of approach in a high-concurrency environment usually use versioned data to ensure transaction isolation.) This approach requires a slightly different programming model to the one described in the last section. NHibernate supports this model by providing the method ISession.Update().
// in the first session Cat cat = firstSession.Load<Cat>(catId); Cat potentialMate = new Cat(); firstSession.Save(potentialMate); // in a higher tier of the application cat.Mate = potentialMate; // later, in a new session secondSession.Update(cat); // update cat
If the Cat with identifier catId had already been loaded by secondSession when the application tried to update it, an exception would have been thrown.
The application should individually Update() transient instances reachable from the given transient instance if and only if it wants their state also updated. (Except for lifecycle objects, see Section 10.10, “Lifecycles and object graphs”.)
NHibernate users have requested a general purpose method that either saves a transient instance by generating a new identifier or update the persistent state associated with its current identifier. The SaveOrUpdate() method now implements this functionality.
NHibernate distinguishes "new" (unsaved) instances from "existing" (saved or loaded in a previous session) instances by the value of their identifier (or version, or timestamp) property. The unsaved-value attribute of the <id> (or <version>, or <timestamp>) mapping specifies which values should be interpreted as representing a "new" instance.
<id name="Id" type="Int64" column="uid" unsaved-value="0"> <generator class="hilo"/> </id>
The allowed values of unsaved-value are:
any - always save
none - always update
null - save when identifier is null
valid identifier value - save when identifier is null or the given value
undefined - do not infer the operation from the identifier (or version, or timestamp). Ultimately, NHibernate may query the database for determining the operation it has to perform.
If unsaved-value is not specified for a class, NHibernate will attempt to guess it by creating an instance of the class using the no-argument constructor and reading the property value from the instance.
// in the first session Cat cat = firstSession.Load<Cat>(catID); // in a higher tier of the application Cat mate = new Cat(); cat.Mate = mate; // later, in a new session secondSession.SaveOrUpdate(cat); // update existing state (cat has a non-null id) secondSession.SaveOrUpdate(mate); // save the new instance (mate has a null id)
The usage and semantics of SaveOrUpdate() seems to be confusing for new users. Firstly, so long as you are not trying to use instances from one session in another new session, you should not need to use Update() or SaveOrUpdate(). Some whole applications will never use either of these methods.
Usually Update() or SaveOrUpdate() are used in the following scenario:
the application loads an object in the first session
the object is passed up to the UI tier
some modifications are made to the object
the object is passed back down to the business logic tier
the application persists these modifications by calling Update() in a second session
SaveOrUpdate() does the following:
if the object is already persistent in this session, do nothing
if the object has no identifier property, Save() it
if the object's identifier matches the criteria specified by unsaved-value, Save() it
if the object is versioned (version or timestamp), and its version matches the criteria specified by unsaved-value, Save() it
if another object associated with the session has the same identifier, throw an exception
The last case can be avoided by using Merge(Object o). This method copies the state of the given object onto the persistent object with the same identifier. If there is no persistent instance currently associated with the session, it will be loaded. The method returns the persistent instance. If the given instance is unsaved or does not exist in the database, NHibernate will save it and return it as a newly persistent instance. Otherwise, the given instance does not become associated with the session. In most applications with detached objects, you need both methods, SaveOrUpdate() and Merge().
The Lock() method allows the application to re-associate an unmodified object with a new session.
//just reassociate: sess.Lock(fritz, LockMode.None); //do a version check, then reassociate: sess.Lock(izi, LockMode.Read); //do a version check, using SELECT ... FOR UPDATE, then reassociate: sess.Lock(pk, LockMode.Upgrade);
ISession.Delete() will remove an object's state from the database. Of course, your application might still hold a reference to it. So it's best to think of Delete() as making a persistent instance transient.
sess.Delete(cat);
You may also delete many objects at once by passing a NHibernate query string to Delete().
sess.Delete("from Cat");
You may now delete objects in any order you like, without risk of foreign key constraint violations. Of course, it is still possible to violate a NOT NULL constraint on a foreign key column by deleting objects in the wrong order.
From time to time the ISession will execute the SQL statements needed to synchronize the ADO.NET connection's state with the state of objects held in memory. This process, flush, occurs by default at the following points
from some invocations of IQuery methods such as List or Enumerable, and from similar methods of other querying API.
from NHibernate.ITransaction.Commit()
from ISession.Flush()
The SQL statements are issued in the following order
all entity insertions, in the same order the corresponding objects were saved using ISession.Save()
all entity updates
all collection deletions
all collection element deletions, updates and insertions
all collection insertions
all entity deletions, in the same order the corresponding objects were deleted using ISession.Delete()
(An exception is that objects using identity ID generation are inserted when they are saved.)
Except when you explicitly Flush(), there are absolutely no guarantees about when the Session executes the ADO.NET calls, only the order in which they are executed. However, NHibernate does guarantee that the queries methods will never return stale data; nor will they return the wrong data.
It is possible to change the default behavior so that flush occurs less frequently. The FlushMode class defines three different modes: only flush at commit time (and only when the NHibernate ITransaction API is used, or inside a transaction scope), flush automatically using the explained routine (will only work inside an explicit NHibernate ITransaction or inside a transaction scope), or never flush unless Flush() is called explicitly. The last mode is useful for long running units of work, where an ISession is kept open and disconnected for a long time (see Section 12.4, “Optimistic concurrency control”).
sess = sf.OpenSession(); using (ITransaction tx = sess.BeginTransaction()) { // allow queries to return stale state sess.FlushMode = FlushMode.Commit; Cat izi = sess.Load<Cat>(id); izi.Name = "iznizi"; // execute some queries.... sess.CreateQuery("from Cat as cat left outer join cat.Kittens kitten") .List<object[]>(); // change to izi is not flushed! ... tx.Commit(); // flush occurs }
ISession.IsDirty() will return whether the session hold any pending change to flush or not. Be cautious when using this method, its default implementation may have the following effects:
Dirty checks all the loaded entities. NHibernate does not instrument the entities for being notified of changes done on loaded ones. Instead, it stores their initial state and compare them to it. If session has loaded a lot of entities, the dirty checking will have a significant impact.
Triggers pending cascade operations. This includes any pending Save of, by example, children added to a collection having the Save cascade enabled. Depending on the entities ID generators (see Section 5.1.5.1, “generator”), this may trigger calls to the database, or even entity insertions if they are using the identity generator.
Ending a session involves four distinct phases:
flush the session
commit the transaction
close the session
handle exceptions
If you happen to be using the ITransaction API, you don't need to worry about this step. It will be performed implicitly when the transaction is committed. Otherwise you should call ISession.Flush() to ensure that all changes are synchronized with the database.
If you are using the NHibernate ITransaction API, this looks like:
tx.Commit(); // flush the session and commit the transaction
If you are managing ADO.NET transactions yourself you should manually Commit() the ADO.NET transaction.
sess.Flush(); currentTransaction.Commit();
If you decide not to commit your changes:
tx.Rollback(); // rollback the transaction
or:
currentTransaction.Rollback();
If you rollback the transaction you should immediately close and discard the current session to ensure that NHibernate's internal state is consistent.
A call to ISession.Close() marks the end of a session. The main implication of Close() is that the ADO.NET connection will be relinquished by the session.
tx.Commit(); sess.Close();
sess.Flush(); currentTransaction.Commit(); sess.Close();
If you provided your own connection, Close() returns a reference to it, so you can manually close it or return it to the pool. Otherwise Close() returns it to the pool.
NHibernate use might lead to exceptions, usually HibernateException. This exception can have a nested inner exception (the root cause), use the InnerException property to access it.
If the ISession throws an exception you should immediately rollback the transaction, call ISession.Close() and discard the ISession instance. Certain methods of ISession will not leave the session in a consistent state.
For exceptions thrown by the data provider while interacting with the database, NHibernate will wrap the error in an instance of ADOException. The underlying exception is accessible by calling ADOException.InnerException. NHibernate converts the DbException into an appropriate ADOException subclass using the ISQLExceptionConverter attached to the SessionFactory. By default, the ISQLExceptionConverter is defined by the configured dialect; however, it is also possible to plug in a custom implementation (see the api-docs for the ISQLExceptionConverter class for details).
The following exception handling idiom shows the typical case in NHibernate applications:
using (ISession sess = factory.OpenSession()) using (ITransaction tx = sess.BeginTransaction()) { // do some work ... tx.Commit(); }
Or, when manually managing ADO.NET transactions:
ISession sess = factory.openSession(); try { // do some work ... sess.Flush(); currentTransaction.Commit(); } catch (Exception e) { currentTransaction.Rollback(); throw; } finally { sess.Close(); }
To save or update all objects in a graph of associated objects, you must either
Save(), SaveOrUpdate() or Update() each individual object OR
map associated objects using cascade="all" or cascade="save-update".
Likewise, to delete all objects in a graph, either
Delete() each individual object OR
map associated objects using cascade="all", cascade="all-delete-orphan" or cascade="delete".
Recommendation:
If the child object's lifespan is bounded by the lifespan of the of the parent object make it a lifecycle object by specifying cascade="all".
Otherwise, Save() and Delete() it explicitly from application code. If you really want to save yourself some extra typing, use cascade="save-update" and explicit Delete().
Mapping an association (many-to-one, one-to-one or collection) with cascade="all" marks the association as a parent/child style relationship where save/update/deletion of the parent results in save/update/deletion of the child(ren). Furthermore, a mere reference to a child from a persistent parent will result in save / update of the child. The metaphor is incomplete, however. A child which becomes unreferenced by its parent is not automatically deleted, except in the cases of <one-to-many> and <one-to-one> associations that have been mapped with cascade="all-delete-orphan" or cascade="delete-orphan". The precise semantics of cascading operations are as follows:
If a parent is saved, all children are passed to SaveOrUpdate()
If a parent is passed to Update() or SaveOrUpdate(), all children are passed to SaveOrUpdate()
If a transient child becomes referenced by a persistent parent, it is passed to SaveOrUpdate()
If a parent is deleted, all children are passed to Delete()
If a transient child is dereferenced by a persistent parent, nothing special happens (the application should explicitly delete the child if necessary) unless cascade="all-delete-orphan" or cascade="delete-orphan", in which case the "orphaned" child is deleted.
NHibernate does not fully implement "persistence by reachability", which would imply (inefficient) persistent garbage collection. However, due to popular demand, NHibernate does support the notion of entities becoming persistent when referenced by another persistent object. Associations marked cascade="save-update" behave in this way. If you wish to use this approach throughout your application, it's easier to specify the default-cascade attribute of the <hibernate-mapping> element.
The IInterceptor interface provides callbacks from the session to the application allowing the application to inspect and / or manipulate properties of a persistent object before it is saved, updated, deleted or loaded. One possible use for this is to track auditing information. See Section 13.1, “Interceptors” for more information.
NHibernate requires a very rich meta-level model of all entity and value types. From time to time, this model is very useful to the application itself. For example, the application might use NHibernate's metadata to implement a "smart" deep-copy algorithm that understands which objects should be copied (eg. mutable value types) and which should not (eg. immutable value types and, possibly, associated entities).
NHibernate exposes metadata via the IClassMetadata and ICollectionMetadata interfaces and the IType hierarchy. Instances of the metadata interfaces may be obtained from the ISessionFactory.
Cat fritz = ......; IClassMetadata catMeta = sessionfactory.GetClassMetadata(typeof(Cat)); long id = (long) catMeta.GetIdentifier(fritz); object[] propertyValues = catMeta.GetPropertyValues(fritz); string[] propertyNames = catMeta.PropertyNames; IType[] propertyTypes = catMeta.PropertyTypes; // get an dictionary of all properties which are not collections or associations // TODO: what about components? var namedValues = new Dictionary<string, object>(); for (int i = 0; i < propertyNames.Length; i++) { if (!propertyTypes[i].IsEntityType && !propertyTypes[i].IsCollectionType) { namedValues[propertyNames[i]] = propertyValues[i]; } }