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You can use Hibernate to map object-oriented domain models to a traditional relational database. The tutorial below shows how to use the CData JDBC Driver for JSON to generate an ORM of your JSON repository with Hibernate.
Though Eclipse is the IDE of choice for this article, the CData JDBC Driver for JSON works in any product that supports the Java Runtime Environment. In the Knowledge Base you will find tutorials to connect to JSON services from IntelliJ IDEA and NetBeans.
Follow the steps below to install the Hibernate plug-in in Eclipse.
Follow the steps below to add the driver JARs in a new project.
Follow the steps below to configure connection properties to JSON services.
Input the following values:
Connection URL: A JDBC URL, starting with jdbc:json: and followed by a semicolon-separated list of connection properties.
See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation to authenticate to your data source: The data provider models JSON APIs as bidirectional database tables and JSON files as read-only views (local files, files stored on popular cloud services, and FTP servers). The major authentication schemes are supported, including HTTP Basic, Digest, NTLM, OAuth, and FTP. See the Getting Started chapter in the data provider documentation for authentication guides.
After setting the and providing any authentication values, set to more closely match the data representation to the structure of your data.
The property is the controlling property over how your data is represented into tables and toggles the following basic configurations.
See the Modeling JSON Data chapter for more information on configuring the relational representation. You will also find the sample data used in the following examples. The data includes entries for people, the cars they own, and various maintenance services performed on those cars.
For assistance in constructing the JDBC URL, use the connection string designer built into the JSON JDBC Driver. Either double-click the JAR file or execute the jar file from the command-line.
java -jar cdata.jdbc.json.jar
Fill in the connection properties and copy the connection string to the clipboard.
๐ Using the built-in connection string designer to generate a JDBC URL (Salesforce is shown.)A typical JDBC URL is below:
jdbc:json:URI=C:/people.json;DataModel=Relational;
Follow the steps below to select the configuration you created in the previous step.
Follow the steps below to generate the reveng.xml configuration file. You will specify the tables you want to access as objects.
Follow the steps below to generate plain old Java objects (POJO) for the JSON tables.
One or more POJOs are created based on the reverse-engineering setting in the previous step.
For each mapping you have generated, you will need to create a mapping tag in hibernate.cfg.xml to point Hibernate to your mapping resource. Open hibernate.cfg.xml and insert the mapping tags as so:
cdata.json.JSONDriver jdbc:json:URI=C:/people.json;DataModel=Relational; org.hibernate.dialect.SQLServerDialect
Using the entity you created from the last step, you can now search and modify JSON services:
import java.util.*;
import org.hibernate.Session;
import org.hibernate.cfg.Configuration;
import org.hibernate.query.Query;
public class App {
public static void main(final String[] args) {
Session session = new
Configuration().configure().buildSessionFactory().openSession();
String SELECT = "FROM people p WHERE [ personal.name.last ] = :[ personal.name.last ]";
Query q = session.createQuery(SELECT, people.class);
q.setParameter("[ personal.name.last ]","Roberts");
List<people> resultList = (List<people>) q.list();
for(people s: resultList){
System.out.println(s.get[ personal.name.first ]());
System.out.println(s.get[ personal.name.last ]());
}
}
}
Download a free trial of the JSON Driver to get started:
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