Ebean

Ebean is an object-relational mapping product written in Java. It is designed to be simpler to use and understand than JPA (Java Persistence API) or JDO (Java Data Objects) products.

Ebean
Developer(s)Avaje
Stable release
10.3.2 / June 25, 2017 (2017-06-25)
Repository
Written inJava
Operating systemCross-platform
PlatformJava
Size1.9 MB (archived)
TypeObject-relational mapping
LicenseApache License
Websiteebean-orm.github.io

Simple API

Ebean has a simpler API than JPA. It achieves this through its 'Session Less' architecture. Ebean does not require a JPA EntityManager or JDO PersistenceManager and this removes the concepts of detached/attached beans and the issues associated with flushing/clearing and 'session management' of EntityManagers. This adds up to make Ebean's API much easier to learn, understand and use.

Relational features

Although Ebean has full ORM features (equivalent to JPA) it also has incorporated 'SQL/Relational' features. The idea being that many development efforts require control over the exact sql, calling stored procedures or are more simply solved with 'Relational' approaches. The ultimate goal for Ebean is to combine the best ORM features from JPA with the best 'Relational' features from products like MyBatis into a single persistence framework.

Object-relational mapping

Ebean uses the same mapping as JPA with its @Entity, @Table, @OneToMany etc. annotations and xml. The mapping of Entity beans should be compatible between Ebean and JPA.

Going beyond JPA Ebean supports Java Generics and fetching "Partial" objects with its Query object.

Examples

// find customer by id
Customer customer = Ebean.find(Customer.class, 1);

//Saving the changes of the customer object
customer.save();

// more complex query with joins
List<Order> order =
   Ebean.find(Order.class)
    .fetch("customer")
    .fetch("customer.billingAddress")
    .fetch("customer.shippingAddress")
    .fetch("details")
    .fetch("details.product", "name")
    .where().eq("shipDate", today)
    .findList();
gollark: > !quote An esolang where variables are filesYes, I SAW that, I was ADDING SOME EXTRA POSSIBILITIES.
gollark: They exist in a directory tree, you can symlink them, stat them, list directories of them, and whatever else.
gollark: How about: variables are files™ and you can do file-y operations on them?
gollark: No, Mediawiki's limits on HTML embedding are quite apiological.
gollark: I like it, but it might be impractical as we would need to cooperate somehow with the esowiki admins.

See also

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