Beginning Hibernate, 2nd Edition
- Length: 400 pages
- Edition: 2
- Language: English
- Publisher: Apress
- Publication Date: 2010-05-28
- ISBN-10: 1430228504
- ISBN-13: 9781430228509
- Sales Rank: #4160426 (See Top 100 Books)
Beginning Hibernate, Second Edition is ideal if you’re experienced in Java with databases (the traditional, or “connected,” approach), but new to open-source, lightweight Hibernate—the de facto object-relational mapping and database-oriented application development framework.
This book packs in information about the release of the Hibernate 3.5 persistence layer and provides a clear introduction to the current standard for object-relational persistence in Java. And since the book keeps its focus on Hibernate without wasting time on nonessential third-party tools, you’ll be able to immediately start building transaction-based engines and applications.
Experienced authors Dave Minter and Jeff Linwood provide more in-depth examples than any other book for Hibernate beginners. The authors also present material in a lively, example-based manner—not a dry, theoretical, hard-to-read fashion.
What you’ll learn
- How to build enterprise Java-based transaction-type applications that access complex data with Hibernate, including Software as a Service (SaaS)
- How to work with Hibernate 3.5
- Where to integrate into the persistence lifecycle, including cloud application implications
- How to map using annotations, Hibernate XML files, and more
- How to search and query with the new version of Hibernate
- When to integrate with Spring, Grails, and more
Who this book is for
This book is for Java developers who want to learn about Hibernate.
Table of Contents
- An Introduction to Hibernate
- Integrating and Configuring Hibernate
- Building a Simple Application
- The Persistence Life Cycle
- An Overview of Mapping
- Mapping with Annotations
- Creating Mappings with Hibernate XML Files
- Using the Session
- Searches and Queries
- Advanced Queries Using Criteria
- Filtering the Results of Searches
- Case Study — Using Hibernate with an Existing Database