tree: ea0b5449370e8733df8c3d5b54c3930a0f5c957c [path history] [tgz]
  1. .github/
  2. assembly/
  3. build-tools/
  4. cayenne/
  5. cayenne-ant/
  6. cayenne-cache-invalidation/
  7. cayenne-cgen/
  8. cayenne-commitlog/
  9. cayenne-crypto/
  10. cayenne-dbsync/
  11. cayenne-di/
  12. cayenne-gradle-plugin/
  13. cayenne-jcache/
  14. cayenne-lifecycle/
  15. cayenne-osgi/
  16. cayenne-project/
  17. cayenne-project-compatibility/
  18. cayenne-velocity/
  19. docs/
  20. maven-plugins/
  21. modeler/
  22. tutorials/
  23. .gitignore
  24. KEYS
  25. pom.xml
  26. rat.sh
  27. README.md
  28. RELEASE-NOTES.txt
  29. UPGRADE.txt
README.md

Apache Cayenne

Maven Central Build Status

Apache Cayenne is an open source persistence framework licensed under the Apache License, providing object-relational mapping (ORM) and remoting services.

Table Of Contents

Quick Start

Create XML mapping

Modeler GUI application

You can use Cayenne Modeler to manually create Cayenne project without DB. Binary distributions can be downloaded from https://cayenne.apache.org/download/

Modeler

See tutorial https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/getting-started-guide/

Maven plugin

Additionally, you can use Cayenne Maven (or Gradle) plugin to create model based on existing DB structure. Here is example of Cayenne Maven plugin setup that will do it:

<plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.cayenne.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>cayenne-maven-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>4.2.1</version>

    <dependencies>
        <dependency>
            <groupId>com.mysql</groupId>
            <artifactId>mysql-connector-j</artifactId>
            <version>8.4.0</version>
        </dependency>
    </dependencies>

    <configuration>
        <map>${project.basedir}/src/main/resources/demo.map.xml</map>
        <cayenneProject>${project.basedir}/src/main/resources/cayenne-demo.xml</cayenneProject>
        <dataSource>
            <url>jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/cayenne_demo?nullNamePatternMatchesAll=true</url>
            <driver>com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver</driver>
            <username>user</username>
            <password>password</password>
        </dataSource>
        <dbImport>
            <defaultPackage>org.apache.cayenne.demo.model</defaultPackage>
        </dbImport>
    </configuration>
</plugin>

Run it:

mvn cayenne:cdbimport
mvn cayenne:cgen

See tutorial https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/getting-started-db-first/

Gradle plugin

And here is example of Cayenne Gradle plugin setup:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        mavenCentral()
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath 'org.apache.cayenne.plugins:cayenne-gradle-plugin:4.2.1'
        classpath 'com.mysql:mysql-connector-j:8.4.0'
    }
}

apply plugin: 'org.apache.cayenne'
cayenne.defaultDataMap 'demo.map.xml'

cdbimport {   
    cayenneProject 'cayenne-demo.xml'

    dataSource {
        driver 'com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver'
        url 'jdbc:mysql://127.0.0.1:3306/cayenne_demo?nullNamePatternMatchesAll=true'
        username 'user'
        password 'password'
    }

    dbImport {
        defaultPackage = 'org.apache.cayenne.demo.model'
    }
}

cgen.dependsOn cdbimport
compileJava.dependsOn cgen

Run it:

gradlew build

Include Cayenne into project

Maven
<dependencies>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.apache.cayenne</groupId>
        <artifactId>cayenne-server</artifactId>
        <version>4.2.1</version>
    </dependency>
</dependencies>
Gradle
compile group: 'org.apache.cayenne', name: 'cayenne-server', version: '4.2.1'
 
// or, if Gradle plugin is used
compile cayenne.dependency('server')

Create Cayenne Runtime

ServerRuntime cayenneRuntime = ServerRuntime.builder()
    .addConfig("cayenne-demo.xml")
    .dataSource(DataSourceBuilder
             .url("jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/cayenne_demo")
             .driver("com.mysql.cj.jdbc.Driver")
             .userName("username")
             .password("password")
             .build())
    .build();

Create New Objects

ObjectContext context = cayenneRuntime.newContext();

Artist picasso = context.newObject(Artist.class);
picasso.setName("Pablo Picasso");
picasso.setDateOfBirth(LocalDate.of(1881, 10, 25));

Gallery metropolitan = context.newObject(Gallery.class);
metropolitan.setName("Metropolitan Museum of Art");

Painting girl = context.newObject(Painting.class);
girl.setName("Girl Reading at a Table");

Painting stein = context.newObject(Painting.class);
stein.setName("Gertrude Stein");

picasso.addToPaintings(girl);
picasso.addToPaintings(stein);

girl.setGallery(metropolitan);
stein.setGallery(metropolitan);

context.commitChanges();

Queries

Select Objects
List<Painting> paintings = ObjectSelect.query(Painting.class)
        .where(Painting.ARTIST.dot(Artist.DATE_OF_BIRTH).year().lt(1900))
        .prefetch(Painting.ARTIST.joint())
        .select(context);
Aggregate functions
// this is artificial property signaling that we want to get full object
Property<Artist> artistProperty = Property.createSelf(Artist.class);

List<Object[]> artistAndPaintingCount = ObjectSelect.columnQuery(Artist.class, artistProperty, Artist.PAINTING_ARRAY.count())
    .where(Artist.ARTIST_NAME.like("a%"))
    .having(Artist.PAINTING_ARRAY.count().lt(5L))
    .orderBy(Artist.PAINTING_ARRAY.count().desc(), Artist.ARTIST_NAME.asc())
    .select(context);

for(Object[] next : artistAndPaintingCount) {
    Artist artist = (Artist)next[0];
    long paintingsCount = (Long)next[1];
    System.out.println(artist.getArtistName() + " has " + paintingsCount + " painting(s)");
}

Raw SQL queries
// Selecting objects
List<Painting> paintings = SQLSelect
    .query(Painting.class, "SELECT * FROM PAINTING WHERE PAINTING_TITLE LIKE #bind($title)")
    .params("title", "painting%")
    .upperColumnNames()
    .localCache()
    .limit(100)
    .select(context);

// Selecting scalar values
List<String> paintingNames = SQLSelect
    .scalarQuery(String.class, "SELECT PAINTING_TITLE FROM PAINTING WHERE ESTIMATED_PRICE > #bind($price)")
    .params("price", 100000)
    .select(context);

// Insert values
int inserted = SQLExec
    .query("INSERT INTO ARTIST (ARTIST_ID, ARTIST_NAME) VALUES (#bind($id), #bind($name))")
    .paramsArray(55, "Picasso")
    .update(context);

Documentation

Getting Started

https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/getting-started-guide/

Getting Started Db-First

https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/getting-started-db-first/

Full documentation

https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/cayenne-guide/

JavaDoc

https://cayenne.apache.org/docs/4.2/api/

About

With a wealth of unique and powerful features, Cayenne can address a wide range of persistence needs. Cayenne seamlessly binds one or more database schemas directly to Java objects, managing atomic commit and rollbacks, SQL generation, joins, sequences, and more.

Cayenne is designed to be easy to use, without sacrificing flexibility or design. To that end, Cayenne supports database reverse engineering and generation, as well as a Velocity-based class generation engine. All of these functions can be controlled directly through the CayenneModeler, a fully functional GUI tool. No cryptic XML or annotation based configuration is required! An entire database schema can be mapped directly to Java objects within minutes, all from the comfort of the GUI-based CayenneModeler.

Cayenne supports numerous other features, including caching, a complete object query syntax, relationship pre-fetching, on-demand object and relationship faulting, object inheritance, database auto-detection, and generic persisted objects. Most importantly, Cayenne can scale up or down to virtually any project size. With a mature, 100% open source framework, an energetic user community, and a track record of solid performance in high-volume environments, Cayenne is an exceptional choice for persistence services.

Collaboration

License

Cayenne is available as free and open source under the Apache License, Version 2.0.