This section contains the following tasks for exposing JPA entities using RESTful Data Services:
Step 5: Issue Client Calls for Operations on the Persistence Unit
Step 7: Understand the Structure of RESTful Data Services Responses
To implement and use RESTful Data Services, you need:
Either of the following Java EE application servers:
Oracle WebLogic Server Release 2.4 or later.
Glassfish Server 3.1.2 or later.
Note: With Glassfish Server 3.1.2, you must upgrade the EclipseLink version to use the version of the RESTful Data Services shipped in EclipseLink 2.4.2 (and must also include DBWS). See |
Those servers include the following:
EclipseLink 2.4 or later, configured as the persistence provider.
Jersey, the reference implementation of the Java API for RESTful Web Services (JAX-RS) 1.0 specification.
The org.eclipse.persistence.jpars_
version_num
.jar
file, where version_num
is the version of the jpars file, for example, org.eclipse.persistence.jpars_2.4.1.v20121003-ad44345.jar
. This file is included in the EclipseLink distributions from the Eclipse foundation, at http://www.eclipse.org/eclipselink/downloads/
:
In the installer distribution, the file is located in eclipselink\jlib\jpa\
.
In the bundles distribution, the file is located with the other bundles.
Any compliant Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) database, including Oracle Database, Oracle Database Express Edition (Oracle Database XE), or MySQL. These instructions are based on Oracle Database XE 11g Release 2.
For the certification matrix, see
RESTful Data Services are designed to function with standard JPA applications, with little extra work required beyond enabling the service, as described below:
Develop an application using one or more standard JPA persistence units, package it in a Web ARchive (WAR) file, and deploy it normally.
Note: The fragment must be placed inside a WAR, because it offers Web services. That WAR may optionally be packaged inside an Enterprise Archive (EAR) file. |
Note: Weaving is required for several RESTful Data Services features to work: providing relationships as links, editing relationships, and dealing with lazy many-to-one relationships. Therefore, for those features, you must either deploy to a Java EE compliant server or statically weave your classes. |
Include the RESTful Data Services servlet in the WAR containing the application. (For instructions on downloading, see.Step 1: Prerequisites)
Note: The RESTful Data Services JAR file includes a |
Add the org.eclipse.persistence.jpars_
version_num
.jar
file to the WAR containing the application, under WEB-INF/lib
.
URIs used for making REST calls for RESTful Data Services follow these standard patterns:
The base URI for an application is: http://server:port/application-name/persistence/{version}
Note: As of EclipseLink 2.4.2, support for using RESTful Data Services URIs without a version number is deprecated and will be removed in future releases. The version of RESTful Data Services in EclipseLink 2.4.2 is |
For base operations on the persistence unit, add the persistence unit name:
/persistence/{version}/{unit-name}
For specific types of operations, add the type of operation, for example:
Entity operations: /persistence/{version}/{unit-name}/entity
Query operations: /persistence/{version}/{unit-name}/query
Single result query operations: /persistence/{version}/{unit-name}/singleResultQuery
Persistence unit level metadata operations: /persistence/{version}/{unit-name}/metadata
Base operations: /persistence/{version}
For complete documentation on how to construct these URIs, see RESTful Data Services API Reference.
Entities in RESTful Data Services are represented in two ways:
As JPA Entities - The mappings of the JPA entities must be represented in the typical JPA fashion, using either annotations or XML files. These mappings are used to interact with the data source.
As JAXB/JSON - No specific mapping information is required when using JAXB/JSON. By default, RESTful Data Services use the JAXB defaults (defined in the JAXB specification) to map to JAXB/JSON. You can optionally provide JAXB annotations on the classes to alter the way the objects are mapped. Additionally, the persistence unit property eclipselink.jpa-rs.oxm
can be specified in a persistence unit's persistence.xml
to specify XML-defined JAXB mappings.
In general, JAXB default mappings are sufficient to allow information exchange using JSON/JAXB. There are, however, some special cases when dealing with relationships.
Bidirectional Relationships and Cycles
Bidirectional relationships are typical in JPA and are easy to represent in a database using foreign keys. They are more difficult to represent in an XML or JSON document using standard JAXB. However, the EclipseLink JAXB implementation provides a way to define an inverse relationship. Inverse relationships are not directly written to XML or JSON but are populated when the XML or JSON is unmarshalled. The way this is handled is as follows:
JPA bidirectional relationships are defined to have an owning side and a non-owning side. The entity that has the table with a foreign key in the database is the owning entity. The other table--the one pointed to--is the inverse (non-owning) entity. JPA mapping provides a mapped-by attribute that defines which is which. The mappedBy
attribute must be on the inverse side. RESTful Data Services default the owning side to be an inverse relationship. As a result, when an object with an owned relationship is read or written, that relationship is ignored.
Consider the following pseudo-code:
@Entity ClassA{ @Id int id @OneToOne myB } @Entity ClassB{ @Id int id @OneToOne(mappedby="myB") myA }
If the objects are identified as follows...
A1
with id=1
and myB = B1
B1
with id=11
and myA = A1
...the following JSON corresponds to those objects:
A { id:1 } B { id:11 myA: { id: 1 } }
Passing By Value vs. Passing By Reference
RESTful Data Services allow relationship objects to be passed either by value or by reference in the REST request. JSON attributes hold resource references (see "Pass By Value"), while _relationship
s have "navigation" links (see "Pass By Reference").
Pass By Value
To pass an object by value, create typical JSON or XML that represents the object. The following JSON passes myA
by value:
B { id:11 myA { id: 1 } }
Pass By Reference
To pass an object by reference, use a _link
. The link represents the RESTful Data Services call necessary to get that object. The following JSON passes myA
by reference:
B { id:11 myA { _link:{ href: "http://localhost:8080/app/persistence/v1.0/pu/entity/A/1" method: "GET" rel: "self" } } }
A link
consists of href
, method
and rel
attributes.
The href
(Hypertext REFerence) is the URI of the entity linked to. The href
uniquely identifies the linked entity or attribute.
The method
identifies the operation the href
is to be used for.
The rel
represents the relationship between the containing entity and the entity linked to.
Lists can mix and match items represented by reference and by value. The corresponding entity must exist if an item is represented by reference in a request; otherwise RESTful Data Services returns an error.
The following example shows JSON that can be sent to RESTful Data Services as a request, in a regular-expression-like syntax:
{ "numericAttribute": 1 "stringAttribute": "auction1" "dateAttribute": 12-09-16 "singleRelatedItem": RELATED_ITEM? "listRelatedItem": { RELATED_ITEM* } } RELATED_ITEM = { "numericAttribute": 11 "stringAttribute": "myName" } OR "_link" { "rel"="self", "href" = "LINK_HREF", "method"="GET" }
The following JSON represents an entity called Auction
with several directly mapped fields and a collection of an entity called Bid
.
{ "description": "Auction 1", "endPrice": 0, "id": 2, "image": "auction1.jpg", "name": "A1", "sold": false, "startPrice": 100, "bids": [ { "_link": { "href": "http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/v1.0/auction/entity/Bid/5", "method": "GET", "rel": "self" } }, { "_link": { "href": "http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/v1.0/auction/entity/Bid/6", "method": "GET", "rel": "self" } } ] }
XML representation mimics the JSON representation. The following is sample XML for an entity called Auction
, with several directly mapped attributes and a list of an entity called Bid
.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <Auction> <description>Auction 1</description> <endPrice>0.0</endPrice> <id>2</id> <image>auction1.jpg</image> <name>A1</name> <sold>false</sold> <startPrice>100.0</startPrice> <bids> <_link href="http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/v1.0/auction/entity/Bid/5" method="GET" rel="self" /> </bids> <bids> <_link href="http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/v1.0/auction/entity/Bid/6" method="GET" rel="self" /> </bids> </Auction>
Clients use HTTP calls to perform operations on persistence units in a deployed application. The requirements and options for constructing the calls are described in RESTful Data Services API Reference.
This REST interface can handle both XML and JSON representations of data. The caller is responsible for using HTTP header values to indicate the format of the content:
Content-Type = application/json
indicates that the content being sent is JSON
Content-Type = application/xml
indicates that the content being sent is XML
Accept = application/json
indicates that the expected format of the result is JSON
Accept = application/xml
indicates that the expected format of the result is XML
If no header value is specified, JSON is used by default. If Content-type
is specified and Accept
is not specified, the returned format matches the Content-type
passed in.
Note: In many REST utilities, the |
Messages related to RESTful Data Services operations are logged to a logger called org.eclipse.persistence.jpars
. Most messages are logged at the FINE
level. Exception stacks are logged at FINER
.
Messages related to operations within EntityManager
s, EntityManagerFactory
s and JAXBContext
s are logged in the same manner as other EclipseLink logging.
Secure RESTful Data Services through typical REST security mechanisms.
The RESTful Data Services response messages, either in XML or in JSON, contain following categories:
Basic data types, such as int
, double
, String
, Integer
, Double
, Boolean
, etc.
Relationships (links and relationships)
The next sections explain the semantic and syntactic details of each category of data.
There is also a minor generic difference between the XML and JSON responses (other than format). The JSON responses do not include the root name of an entity, while XML responses do. See the employee
root/grouping name in the XML response below. The root name is derived from the name of the entity it represents.
JSON
{ "firstName":"John", "lastName": "Smith", … }
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <employee> <firstName>John</firstName> <lastName>Smith</lastName> … </employee>
In the RESTful Data Services responses, basic data types and primitives are presented as simple JSON or XML fields. For example:
JSON
{ "firstName":"John", "lastName": "Smith", … }
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <employee> <firstName>John</firstName> <lastName>Smith</lastName> … </employee>
RESTful Data Services operations return all relationships by reference, with the exception of JPA embeddables and element collections.
The relationships
are links pointing to the (JPA) relationships of an entity, such as one-to-one and one-to-many. For example, assume that an employee has multiple phone numbers (one-to-many). When the employee is read, the response will contain a relationship link pointing to the relationship between the employee and the phone entities, plus a list of the links, with each link pointing to a (unique) phone number that the employee owns. For example:
{ "firstName": "Jacob", "gender": "Male", "id": 743627, "lastName": "Smith", "version": 1, "_relationships": [ { "_link": { "href": "http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/hr/entity/Employee/743627/phoneNumbers", "rel": "phoneNumbers" } } ], "phoneNumbers": [ { "_link": { "href": "http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/hr/entity/PhoneNumber/743627+cell", "method": "GET", "rel": "self" } }, { "_link": { "href": "http://localhost:8080/eclipselink.jpars.test/persistence/hr/entity/PhoneNumber/743627+work", "method": "GET", "rel": "self" } } ] }
Embedded objects and element collections are strictly privately-owned (dependent) objects.They have no identity, and there is no cascade option on an ElementCollection
. The target objects are always persisted, merged, and removed with their parent. Therefore, RESTful Data Services embeds these objects directly in responses, rather than providing links to them. For example, assume the Employee
object has EmploymentPeriod
defined as Embedded
. When the Employee
is read, the response will contain EmploymentPeriod
as an embedded object, not a link to it. Relationships are currently not supported for embedded attributes. See the example below:
{ "firstName": "John", "lastName": "Smith", "employmentPeriod": { "startDate": "2010-04-23T14:12:03.905-04:00", "endDate": "2013-01-23T12:00:02.301-04:00", "_relationships": [] }, ... }
Similarly, element collections are also directly contained in RESTful Data Services responses as collections, not as links. For example, assume the Employee
object has a "certifications"
attribute defined as a collection of Certification
objects. When the Employee
is read, the response will contain list of Certification
objects, not links:
{ "firstName": "John", "lastName": "Smith", "certifications": [ { "issueDate": "2013-04-23T15:02:23.071-04:00", "name": "Java" }, { "issueDate": "2010-05-23T11:02:23.033-04:00", "name": "Weblogic" } ], ... }