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This is version 8.
It is not the current version, and thus it cannot be edited. Parte I: Creación de nuevos DAOs y Objetos en AppFuse - Esto es un HowTo de como crear nuevos Objetos (que representan tablas en la BD's) y la creación de clases Java para hacer persistentes dichos objetos Java en la base de datos. Sobre este tutorialEste tutorial nos muestra como crear una nueva tabla en la base de datos, y como crear código Java para acceder a dicha tabla.Crearemos un objeto y algunas clases para hacer persistente (save/retrieve/delete) ese objeto en la base de datos. En el lenguaje Java, llamamos a esos objetos como "Antiguo Objeto Java Plano" (a.k.a. un POJO ). Jeje, si lo decimos en castellano andaluz será POLLO :o) Este objeto representa una tabla de la base de datos básicamente. Las otras clases serán :
AppFuse utiliza Hibernate para la capa de persistencia. Hibernate es un Objecto/Relacional (O/R) Framework que nos permite mapear nuestos objetos Java como tablas en la base de datos. Esto nos permite realizar más fácilmente métodos CRUD (Create, Retrieve, Update, Delete) a nuestros objetos (En castellano sería CRAB, Crear-Recibir-Actualizar-Borrar).
Let's get started on creating a new Object, DAO and Test in AppFuse's architecture. Table of Contents
Create a new Object and add XDoclet tags [#1]The first thing we need to do is create an object to persist. Let's create a simple "Person" object (in the src/dao/**/model directory) that has an id, a firstName and a lastName (as properties).
In the code snippet above, we're extending BaseObject because it has the following useful methods: toString(), equals(), hashCode() - the latter two are required by Hibernate. Now that we have this POJO created, we need to add XDoclet tags to generate the Hibernate mapping file. This mapping file is used by Hibernate to map objects → tables and properties (variables) → columns. First of all, we add a @hibernate.class tag that tells Hibernate what table this object relates to:
We also have to add a primary key mapping or XDoclet will puke when generating the mapping file. Note that all @hibernate.* tags should be placed in the getters' Javadocs of your POJOs.
Create a new database table from the object using Ant [#2]At this point, you can actually create the person table by running "ant setup-db". This task creates the Person.hbm.xml file and creates a database table called "person." From the ant console, you can see the table schema the Hibernate creates for your:[schemaexport] create table person ( [schemaexport] id BIGINT NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT, [schemaexport] primary key (id) [schemaexport] ) If you want to look at the Person.hbm.xml file that Hibernate generates for you, look in the build/dao/gen/**/hibernate directory. Here's the contents of Person.hbm.xml (so far):
Now we'll add additional @hibernate.property tags for our other columns (first_name, last_name):
In this example, the only reason for adding the column attribute is because the column name is different from our property name. If they're the same, you don't need to specify the column attribute. See the @hibernate.property reference for other attributes you can specify for this tag. Run "ant setup-db" again to get the additional columns added to your table. [schemaexport] create table person ( [schemaexport] id BIGINT NOT NULL, [schemaexport] first_name VARCHAR(255), [schemaexport] last_name VARCHAR(255), [schemaexport] primary key (id) [schemaexport] ) If you want to change the size of your columns, specify a length=size attribute in your @hibernate.property tag. If you want to make it a required field (NOT NULL), add not-null="true". Create a new DaoTest to run JUnit tests on your DAO [#3]Now we'll create a DaoTest to test our DAO works. "Wait a minute," you say, "we haven't created a DAO!" You are correct. However, I've found that Test-Driven Development breeds higher quality software. For years, I thought write your test before your class was hogwash. It just seemed stupid. Then I tried it and I found that it works great. The only reason I do all this test-driven stuff now is because I've found it rapidly speeds up the process of software development. To start, create a PersonDaoTest.java class in the test/dao/**/dao directory. This class should extend BaseDaoTestCase, which already exists in this package. This parent class is used to load Spring's ApplicationContext (since Spring binds the layers together), and for automatically loading a .properties file (ResourceBundle) that has the same name as your *Test.class. In this example, if you put a PersonDaoTest.properties file in the same directory as PersonDaoTest.java, this file's properties will be available via an "rb" variable.
The code you see above is what we need for a basic JUnit test that initializes and destroys our PersonDao. The "ctx" object is a reference to Spring's ApplicationContext, which is initialized in a static block of the BaseDaoTestCase's class. Now we need to actually test that the CRUD (create, retrieve, update, delete) methods work in our DAO. To do this we created methods that begin with "test" (all lower case). As long as these methods are public, have a void return type and take no arguments, they will be called by our <junit> task in our Ant build.xml file. Here's some simple tests for testing CRUD. An important thing to remember is that each method (also known as a test), should be autonomous. Add the following methods to your PersonDaoTest.java file:
<table name='person'> <column>id</column> <column>first_name</column> <column>last_name</column> <row> <value>1</value> <value>Matt</value> <value>Raible</value> </row> </table>
In the above example, you can see that we're calling person.set*(value) to populate our object before saving it. This is easy in this example, but it could get quite cumbersome if we're persisting an object with 10 required fields (not-null="true"). This is why I created the ResourceBundle in the BaseDaoTestCase. Simply create a PersonDaoTest.properties file in the same directory as the PersonDaoTest.java file and define your property values inside it:
firstName=Matt lastName=RaibleThen, rather than calling person.set* to populate your objects, you can use the BaseDaoTestCase.populate(java.lang.Object) method:
At this point, the PersonDaoTest class won't compile yet because there is no PersonDao.class in our classpath, we need to create it. PersonDAO.java is an interface, and PersonDAOHibernate.java is the Hibernate implementation of that interface. Let's go ahead and create those. Create a new DAO to perform CRUD on the object [#4]First off, create a PersonDao.java interface in the src/dao/**/dao directory and specify the basic CRUD methods for any implementation classes. I've eliminated the JavaDocs in the class below for display purposes.
Notice in the class above there are no exceptions on the method signatures. This is due to the power of Spring and how it wraps Exceptions with RuntimeExceptions. At this point, you should be able to compile all the source in src/dao and test/dao using "ant compile-dao". However, if you try to run "ant test-dao -Dtestcase=PersonDao", you will get an error: No bean named 'personDao' is defined. This is an error message from Spring - indicating that we need to specify a bean named personDAO in applicationContext-hibernate.xml. Before we do that, we need to create the PersonDao implementation class.
Let's start by creating a PersonDaoHibernate class that implements the methods in PersonDao and uses Hibernate to get/save/delete the Person object. To do this, create a new class in src/dao/**/dao/hibernate and name it PersonDAOHibernate.java. It should extend BaseDaoHibernate and implement PersonDAO. Javadocs eliminated for brevity.
You'll notice here that we're doing nothing with the person parameter. This is just a placeholder for now - in the future you may want to filter on it's properties using Hibernate's Query Language (HQL) or using Criteria Queries. An example using a Criteria Query:
Now, if you try to run "ant test-dao -Dtestcase=PersonDao", you will get the same error. We need to configure Spring so it knows that PersonDaoHibernate is the implementation of PersonDAO, and we also need to tell it about the Person object. Configure Spring for the Person object and PersonDao [#5]First, we need to tell Spring where the Hibernate mapping file is located. To do this, open src/dao/**/dao/hibernate/applicationContext-hibernate.xml and add Person.hbm.xml to the following code block.
Now we need to add some XML to this file to bind PersonDaoHibernate to PersonDao. To do this, add the following at the bottom of the file:
Run the DaoTest [#6]Save all your edited files and try running "ant test-dao -Dtestcase=PersonDao" one more time.Yeah Baby, Yeah:
BUILD SUCCESSFUL Next Up: Part II: Creating new Managers - A HowTo for creating Business Delegates that talk to the database tier (DAOs) and the web tier (Struts Actions).
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