Monday, March 14, 2016

SpringBoot : Working with MyBatis

MyBatis is a SQL Mapping framework with support for custom SQL, stored procedures and advanced mappings.

SpringBoot doesn’t provide official support for MyBatis integration, but MyBatis community built a SpringBoot starter for MyBatis. 
You can read about the SpringBoot MyBatis Starter release announcement at http://blog.mybatis.org/2015/11/mybatis-spring-boot-released.html and you can explore the source code on GitHub https://github.com/mybatis/mybatis-spring-boot.

Create a SpringBoot Maven project and add the following MyBatis Starter dependency.


<dependency>
    <groupId>org.mybatis.spring.boot</groupId>
    <artifactId>mybatis-spring-boot-starter</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>

We will be reusing User.java, schema.sql and data.sql files created in my previous article
SpringBoot : Working with JdbcTemplate
Create MyBatis SQL Mapper interface UserMapper.java with few database operations as follows:

package com.sivalabs.demo.domain;

public interface UserMapper
{
    void insertUser(User user);
    User findUserById(Integer id);
    List<User> findAllUsers();
}

We need to create Mapper XML files to define the queries for the mapped SQL statements for the corresponding Mapper interface methods.

Create UserMapper.xml file in src/main/resources/com/sivalabs/demo/mappers/ directory as follows:

<!DOCTYPE mapper
    PUBLIC "-//mybatis.org//DTD Mapper 3.0//EN"
    "http://mybatis.org/dtd/mybatis-3-mapper.dtd">

<mapper namespace="com.sivalabs.demo.mappers.UserMapper">

    <resultMap id="UserResultMap" type="User">
        <id column="id" property="id" />
        <result column="name" property="name" />
        <result column="email" property="email" />
    </resultMap>

    <select id="findAllUsers" resultMap="UserResultMap">
        select id, name, email from users
    </select>

    <select id="findUserById" resultMap="UserResultMap">
        select id, name, email from users WHERE id=#{id}
    </select>

    <insert id="insertUser" parameterType="User" useGeneratedKeys="true" keyProperty="id">
        insert into users(name,email) values(#{name},#{email})
    </insert>
</mapper>

Few things to observe here are:

  • Namespace in Mapper XML should be same as Fully Qualified Name (FQN) for Mapper Interface
  • Statement id values should be same as Mapper Interface method names.
  • If the query result column names are different from bean property names we can use <resultMap> configuration to provide mapping between column names and their corresponding bean property names. 

MyBatis also provides annotation based query configurations without requiring Mapper XMLs.
We can create UserMapper.java interface and configure the mapped SQLs using annotations as follows:

public interface UserMapper
{
    @Insert("insert into users(name,email) values(#{name},#{email})")
    @SelectKey(statement="call identity()", keyProperty="id",
    before=false, resultType=Integer.class)
    void insertUser(User user);

    @Select("select id, name, email from users WHERE id=#{id}")
    User findUserById(Integer id);

    @Select("select id, name, email from users")
    List<User> findAllUsers();

}

SpringBoot MyBatis starter provides the following MyBatis configuration parameters which we can use to customize MyBatis settings.

mybatis.config = mybatis config file name
mybatis.mapperLocations = mappers file locations
mybatis.typeAliasesPackage = domain object's package
mybatis.typeHandlersPackage = handler's package
mybatis.check-config-location = check the mybatis configuration exists
mybatis.executorType = mode of execution. Default is SIMPLE

Configure the typeAliasesPackage and mapperLocations in application.properties.

mybatis.typeAliasesPackage=com.sivalabs.demo.domain
mybatis.mapperLocations=classpath*:**/mappers/*.xml

Create the entry point class SpringbootMyBatisDemoApplication.java.

@SpringBootApplication
@MapperScan("com.sivalabs.demo.mappers")
public class SpringbootMyBatisDemoApplication
{
    public static void main(String[] args)
    {
        SpringApplication.run(SpringbootMyBatisDemoApplication.class, args);
    }
}

Observe that we have used @MapperScan("com.sivalabs.demo.mappers") annotation to specify where to look for Mapper interfaces.

Now create a JUnit test class and test our UserMapper methods.

@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@SpringApplicationConfiguration(SpringbootMyBatisDemoApplication.class)
public class SpringbootMyBatisDemoApplicationTests
{
    @Autowired
    private UserMapper userMapper;

    @Test
    public void findAllUsers() {
        List<User> users = userMapper.findAllUsers();
        assertNotNull(users);
        assertTrue(!users.isEmpty());
    }

    @Test
    public void findUserById() {
        User user = userMapper.findUserById(1);
        assertNotNull(user);
    }

    @Test
    public void createUser() {
        User user = new User(0, "Siva", "siva@gmail.com");
        userMapper.insertUser(user);
        User newUser = userMapper.findUserById(user.getId());
        assertEquals("Siva", newUser.getName());
        assertEquals("siva@gmail.com", newUser.getEmail());
    }
}

You can find the source code of the article at my GitHub repo https://github.com/sivaprasadreddy/springboot-tutorials

You can read more about MyBatis and Spring integration at http://blog.mybatis.org/p/products.html and http://www.mybatis.org/spring/.


If you want to learn more about SpringBoot take a look at my 

SpringBoot : Learn By Example book


2 comments:

  1. Is the source for your Spring Boot posts available for download?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. You can find the source code here at https://github.com/sivaprasadreddy/springboot-tutorials

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