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The Generic DAO Pattern in Java with Spring 3 and JPA 2.0

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7 Sep 2011CPOL3 min read 195.1K   15   7
How to implement a generic DAO pattern to avoid code duplication and preserve type safety at the same time.

One thing that annoys me the most is code duplication. The DAO layer is the perfect candidate for this kind of situation. Often, developers forget about OOP, polymorphism, and design patterns and just copy and paste code, change the name of the class, and voila, we have a brand “new” BankDao class. I’ll present you how to implement a generic DAO pattern to avoid code duplication and preserve type safety at the same time. Why would you care about type safety and just not use EntityManager’s generic methods. Well, for various reasons:

  1. You know for sure which entity objects can be persisted
  2. You avoid a lot of explicit casts which are error prone
  3. The code is cleaner and very easy to follow
  4. You actually apply OOP principles like inheritance and polymorphism ;)

The purpose of this article is not to get you familiar with the DAO pattern, but to show you a better way of using it. You can find a complete reference about DAO here: DataAccessobject.

The Generic DAO Interface

Let’s get started. First of all, this article assumes you are using Spring 3 (although this can be easily adapted to Spring 2.5) and JPA 2.0 in your project and the initial configuration is in place: you already have a data source declared, an entity manager factory, etc. The application is basically up and running.

The foundation of using a Generic DAO is the CRUD operations that you can perform on each entity. And this is the least you can have. Additional generic methods can be defined like: count all objects of a specific type, execute generic queries based on some parameters, etc. You’ll see a sample bellow for countAll().

The core of this pattern will be an interface called, surprisingly, GenericDao and its implementation GenericDaoImpl. This is the code:

Java
package insidecoding.javaee.dao

import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;

public interface GenericDao<T> {
    /**
     * Method that returns the number of entries from a table that meet some
     * criteria (where clause params)
     *
     * @param params
     *            sql parameters
     * @return the number of records meeting the criteria
     */
    long countAll(Map<String, Object> params);

    T create(T t);

    void delete(Object id);

    T find(Object id);

    T update(T t);   
}

The Generic DAO Implementation

Java
package insidecoding.javaee.dao.impl;

import java.lang.reflect.ParameterizedType;
import java.lang.reflect.Type;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Map.Entry;

import javax.persistence.EntityManager;
import javax.persistence.PersistenceContext;
import javax.persistence.Query;

import insidecoding.javaee.dao.GenericDao;

public abstract class GenericDaoImpl<T> implements GenericDao<T> {

    @PersistenceContext
    protected EntityManager em;

    private Class<T> type;

    public GenericDaoImpl() {
        Type t = getClass().getGenericSuperclass();
        ParameterizedType pt = (ParameterizedType) t;
        type = (Class) pt.getActualTypeArguments()[0];
    }

    @Override
    public long countAll(final Map<String, Object> params) {

        final StringBuffer queryString = new StringBuffer(
                "SELECT count(o) from ");

        queryString.append(type.getSimpleName()).append(" o ");
        queryString.append(this.getQueryClauses(params, null));

        final Query query = this.em.createQuery(queryString.toString());

        return (Long) query.getSingleResult();
    }

    @Override
    public T create(final T t) {
        this.em.persist(t);
        return t;
    }

    @Override
    public void delete(final Object id) {
        this.em.remove(this.em.getReference(type, id));
    }

    @Override
    public T find(final Object id) {
        return (T) this.em.find(type, id);
    }

    @Override
    public T update(final T t) {
        return this.em.merge(t);    
    }
}

This class offers CRUD operations for a generic type T. The class is marked as abstract so it can be used only through specific entity DAO implementations. Nothing spectacular about this class, except one thing: the constructor. This is where all the magic will happen. In order to keep things as clean as possible and to avoid AOP and other techniques, we use this hack: we get the actual parametrized type of a concrete class, store it in a Class variable, and use it in EntityManager’s methods. Reflection rulz!

Writing Concrete DAOs

Writing concrete DAOs is a piece of cake. A step-by-step overview will be as follows:

  1. Create a specific entity interface that extends GenericDao.
  2. Create a concrete implementation of the above interface that extends GenericDaoImpl and implements the above interface.

Suppose we have a User entity and we want to create a UserDao. We’ll have:

Java
package insidecoding.javaee.dao;

import insidecoding.javaee.model.User;

public interface UserDao extends GenericDao<User> {
    /**
     * Returns an User object that matches the username given
     *
     * @param username
     * @return
     */
    public User loadUserByUsername(String username);
}

---------------------------------------------------------------

package insidecoding.javaee.dao.impl;

import java.util.List;

import javax.persistence.Query;

import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;

import insidecoding.javaee.dao.UserDao;
import insidecoding.javaee.model.User;

@Component("userDao")
public class UserDaoImpl extends GenericDaoImpl<User> implements UserDao {

    public User loadUserByUsername(String username) {
        Query query = this.em
                .createQuery("select u FROM User u where u.username= :username");
        query.setParameter("username", username);
        List<User> users = query.getResultList();
        if (users != null && users.size() == 1) {
            return users.get(0);
        }
        return null;
    }
}

A concrete entity DAO class will extend GenericDaoImpl<Entity> and add additional methods if needed. If you don’t need additional methods, this will be just:

Java
package insidecoding.javaee.dao;

import insidecoding.javaee.model.User;

public interface UserDao extends GenericDao<User> {
}

---------------------------------------------------------------
package insidecoding.javaee.dao.impl;

import org.springframework.stereotype.Component;

import insidecoding.javaee.dao.UserDao;
import insidecoding.javaee.model.User;

@Component("userDao")
public class UserDaoImpl extends GenericDaoImpl<User> implements UserDao {

}

Dead simple. As we used the @Component annotation, you don’t even need to do additional Spring configuration. Just inject the UserDao and call the available methods. A typical usage will look like this:

Java
package insidecoding.javaee.service.impl;

import org.springframework.transaction.annotation.Transactional;

public interface UserService {

    @Transactional
    void createUser(String uname, String upwd);
}

---------------------------------------------------------------
package insidecoding.javaee.service.impl;

import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Service;

import insidecoding.javaee.dao.UserDao;
import insidecoding.javaee.model.User;
import insidecoding.javaee.service.UserService;

@Service("userService")
public class UserServiceImpl implements UserService {

    @Autowired
    private UserDao dao;

    @Override
    public void createUser(String uname, String upwd) {
        User u = new User();
        u.setUsername(uname);
        u.setPassword(upwd);
        dao.create(u);
    }
}

UserDao will expect a User object as parameter, just as we intended. Same thing for the rest of the methods. With just a few lines of code (just the class and interface declarations), we’ve achieved a type safety way to interact with our domain model.

If you have Spring configured to user annotations, the above code can just be dropped into your project and you can start using and extending it immediately.

Prior to Java 5, this was impossible. Now that we have Generics, it’s a shame not to use its power.

If you have any questions, please leave a comment below.

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)


Written By
Technical Lead Endava Ltd.
Romania Romania
My name is Madalin Ilie. Currently I'm a Development Lead at Endava Romania (www.endava.com).

Comments and Discussions

 
Questionquestion Pin
Gonzalo Jordan26-Jul-18 9:42
Gonzalo Jordan26-Jul-18 9:42 
QuestionUserDaoImpl extend GenericDaoImpl? Pin
Member 1336338415-Aug-17 23:45
Member 1336338415-Aug-17 23:45 
QuestionNeeds managed entities instead of detached ones Pin
Benne Otten20-Feb-14 1:42
Benne Otten20-Feb-14 1:42 
QuestionAbout @Autowiring GenericDao<T> itself form Service Pin
Member 1040813717-Nov-13 21:00
Member 1040813717-Nov-13 21:00 
GeneralMy vote of 5 Pin
Da Foot5-Jul-13 9:50
Da Foot5-Jul-13 9:50 
GeneralThank you for good information. Pin
Sejoon Lim2-May-12 23:36
Sejoon Lim2-May-12 23:36 
Question@Repository instead of @Component Pin
RalphEngelmann20-Feb-12 0:52
RalphEngelmann20-Feb-12 0:52 

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