In the 9 years of running Baeldung, we've never been through anything like this pandemic

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In the 9 years of running Baeldung, we've never been through anything like this pandemic

And, if making my courses more affordable for a while is going to help you stay in business, land a new job, make rent or be able to provide for your family - then it's well worth doing.

Effective immediately, all Baeldung courses are 33% off their normal prices!

You'll find all three courses in the menu, above.

1. Overview

This article will focus on simplifying the DAO layer by using a single, generified Data Access Object for all entities in the system, which will result in elegant data access, with no unnecessary clutter or verbosity.

We'll build on the Abstract DAO class we saw in our previous article on Spring and Hibernate, and add generics support.

2. The Hibernate and JPA DAOs

Most production codebases have some kind of DAO layer. Usually, the implementation ranges from multiple classes with no abstract base class to some kind of generified class. However, one thing is consistent – there is always more than one. Most likely, there is a one to one relation between the DAOs and the entities in the system.

Also, depending on the level of generics involved, the actual implementations can vary from heavily duplicated code to almost empty, with the bulk of the logic grouped in a base abstract class.

These multiple implementations can usually be replaced by a single parametrized DAO. We can implement this such that no functionality is lost by taking full advantage of the type safety provided by Java Generics.

We'll show two implementations of this concept next, one for a Hibernate centric persistence layer and the other focusing on JPA. These implementations are by no means complete, but we can easily add more additional data access methods are included.

2.1. The Abstract Hibernate DAO

Let's take a quick look at the AbstractHibernateDao class:

public abstract class AbstractHibernateDao<T extends Serializable> { private Class<T> clazz; @Autowired SessionFactory sessionFactory; public void setClazz(Class< T > clazzToSet){ this.clazz = clazzToSet; } public T findOne(long id){ return (T) getCurrentSession().get(clazz, id); } public List findAll() { return getCurrentSession().createQuery("from " + clazz.getName()).list(); } public T create(T entity) { getCurrentSession().saveOrUpdate(entity); return entity; } public T update(T entity) { return (T) getCurrentSession().merge(entity); } public void delete(T entity) { getCurrentSession().delete(entity); } public void deleteById(long entityId) { T entity = findOne(entityId); delete(entity); } protected Session getCurrentSession() { return sessionFactory.getCurrentSession(); } }

This is an abstract class with several data access methods, that uses the SessionFactory for manipulating entities.

2.2. The Generic Hibernate DAO

Now that we have the abstract DAO class, we can extend it just once. The generic DAO implementation will become the only implementation we need:

@Repository @Scope(BeanDefinition.SCOPE_PROTOTYPE) public class GenericHibernateDao<T extends Serializable> extends AbstractHibernateDao<T> implements IGenericDao<T>{ // }

First, note that the generic implementation is itself parameterized, allowing the client to choose the correct parameter on a case by case basis. This will mean that the clients get all the benefits of type safety without needing to create multiple artifacts for each entity.

Secondly, notice the prototype scope of this generic DAO implementation. Using this scope means that the Spring container will create a new instance of the DAO each time it's requested (including on autowiring). That will allow a service to use multiple DAOs with different parameters for different entities, as needed.

The reason this scope is so important is due to the way Spring initializes beans in the container. Leaving the generic DAO without a scope would mean using the default singleton scope, which would lead to a single instance of the DAO living in the container. That would obviously be majorly restrictive for any kind of more complex scenario.

The IGenericDao is simply an interface for all the DAO methods so that we can inject the implementation we need:

public interface IGenericDao<T extends Serializable> { T findOne(final long id); List<T> findAll(); void create(final T entity); T update(final T entity); void delete(final T entity); void deleteById(final long entityId); }

2.3. The Abstract JPA DAO

The AbstractJpaDao is very similar to the AbstractHibernateDao:

public abstract class AbstractJpaDao< T extends Serializable > { private Class< T > clazz; @PersistenceContext EntityManager entityManager; public void setClazz( Class< T > clazzToSet ) { this.clazz = clazzToSet; } public T findOne( Long id ){ return entityManager.find( clazz, id ); } public List< T > findAll(){ return entityManager.createQuery( "from " + clazz.getName() ) .getResultList(); } public void save( T entity ){ entityManager.persist( entity ); } public void update( T entity ){ entityManager.merge( entity ); } public void delete( T entity ){ entityManager.remove( entity ); } public void deleteById( Long entityId ){ T entity = getById( entityId ); delete( entity ); } }

Similar to the Hibernate DAO implementation, we're using the Java Persistence API directly, without relying on the now deprecated Spring JpaTemplate.

2.4. The Generic JPA DAO

Similar to the Hibernate implementation, the JPA Data Access Object is straightforward as well:

@Repository @Scope( BeanDefinition.SCOPE_PROTOTYPE ) public class GenericJpaDao< T extends Serializable > extends AbstractJpaDao< T > implements IGenericDao< T >{ // }

3. Injecting This DAO

We now have a single DAO interface we can inject. We also need to specify the Class:

@Service class FooService implements IFooService{ IGenericDao<Foo> dao; @Autowired public void setDao(IGenericDao<Foo> daoToSet) { dao = daoToSet; dao.setClazz(Foo.class); } // ... }

Spring autowires the new DAO instance using setter injection so that the implementation can be customized with the Class object. After this point, the DAO is fully parametrized and ready to be used by the service.

There are of course other ways that the class can be specified for the DAO – via reflection, or even in XML. My preference is towards this simpler solution because of the improved readability and transparency compared to using reflection.

4. Conclusion

This article discussed the simplification of the Data Access Layer by providing a single, reusable implementation of a generic DAO. We showed the implementation in both a Hibernate and a JPA based environment. The result is a streamlined persistence layer, with no unnecessary clutter.

For a step by step introduction about setting up the Spring context using Java based configuration and the basic Maven pom for the project, see this article.

Finally, the code for this article can be found in the GitHub project.