Hibernate 4 bytecode enhancement not working for dirty checking optimization

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I am using the Hibernate 4.3.6 and I made use of the latest Maven bytecode enhancement to instrument all entities for self dirtiness awareness.

I added the maven plugin:

<build>
    <plugins>
        <plugin>
            <groupId>org.hibernate.orm.tooling</groupId>
            <artifactId>hibernate-enhance-maven-plugin</artifactId>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <phase>process-test-resources</phase>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>enhance</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
        </plugin>
    </plugins>
</build>

and I see my entities are being enhanced:

@Entity
public class EnhancedOrderLine
implements ManagedEntity, PersistentAttributeInterceptable, SelfDirtinessTracker
{
    @Id
  @GeneratedValue(strategy=GenerationType.AUTO)
  private Long id;
  private Long number;
  private String orderedBy;
  private Date orderedOn;

  @Transient
  private transient PersistentAttributeInterceptor $$_hibernate_attributeInterceptor;

  @Transient
  private transient Set $$_hibernate_tracker;

  @Transient
  private transient CollectionTracker $$_hibernate_collectionTracker;

  @Transient
  private transient EntityEntry $$_hibernate_entityEntryHolder;

  @Transient
  private transient ManagedEntity $$_hibernate_previousManagedEntity;

  @Transient
  private transient ManagedEntity $$_hibernate_nextManagedEntity;

  ...

While debugging, I am checking org.hibernate.event.internal.DefaultFlushEntityEventListener#dirtyCheck method:

        if ( entity instanceof SelfDirtinessTracker ) {
            if ( ( (SelfDirtinessTracker) entity ).$$_hibernate_hasDirtyAttributes() ) {
                dirtyProperties = persister.resolveAttributeIndexes( ( (SelfDirtinessTracker) entity ).$$_hibernate_getDirtyAttributes() );
            }
        }

and the $$_hibernate_hasDirtyAttributes() always returns false.

This is because $$_hibernate_attributeInterceptor is always null, so when setting any property:

private void $$_hibernate_write_number(Long paramLong)
{
 if (($$_hibernate_getInterceptor() == null) || ((this.number == null) || (this.number.equals(paramLong))))
  break label39;
 $$_hibernate_trackChange("number");
 label39: Long localLong = paramLong;
 if ($$_hibernate_getInterceptor() != null)
  localLong = (Long)$$_hibernate_getInterceptor().writeObject(this, "number", this.number, paramLong);
 this.number = localLong;
}

because the $$_hibernate_getInterceptor() is null the trackChange will be bypassed, hence the bytecode enhancement will not resolve the dirty properties and the default deep-comparison algorithm will be used.

What am I missing? How can I get the $$_hibernate_attributeInterceptor to be properly set so that the dirty properties are tracked by the bytecode instrumentation methods?

2

There are 2 best solutions below

7
On BEST ANSWER

Hibernate 5 fixes this issue and now the dirty checking for a setter looks like this:

public void $$_hibernate_write_title(String paramString)
{
    if (!EqualsHelper.areEqual(this.title, paramString)) {
      $$_hibernate_trackChange("title");
    }
    this.title = paramString;
}

public void $$_hibernate_trackChange(String paramString)
{
    if (this.$$_hibernate_tracker == null) {
      this.$$_hibernate_tracker = new SimpleFieldTracker();
    }
    this.$$_hibernate_tracker.add(paramString);
}

So, the solution is an upgrade to Hibernate 5.

4
On

I don't know if it will give you the correct behaviour in all situations, but you can generally get the dirty checks working (at least according to some skeleton code I tested it with) by doing the following:

  1. Register an entity listener by adding @EntityListeners(YourListener.class) to the entities
  2. Add implementations for all @Pre/@Post (eg @PrePersist etc) methods to your YourListener.class where you check if the entity is an instance of PersistentAttributeInterceptable, and if it is just call $$_hibernate_setInterceptor on it with a custom PersistentAttributeInterceptor that just returns the new values (that particular behaviour may need refined for general use, i'm not sure, but it was good enough to catch it for my simple tests - you know more about general use cases for the interceptor than me).

A hack solution for what is clearly a bug.