May be applied to an entity that extends a mapped superclass
to override a relationship mapping defined by the mapped superclass.
If not specified, the association is mapped the same as in the
original mapping. When used to override a mapping defined by a
mapped superclass, AssociationOverride
is applied to the
entity class.
May be used to override a relationship mapping from an
embeddable within an entity to another entity when the embeddable
is on the owning side of the relationship. When used to override a
relationship mapping defined by an embeddable class (including an
embeddable class embedded within another embeddable class),
AssociationOverride
is applied to the field or property
containing the embeddable.
When AssociationOverride
is used to override a
relationship mapping from an embeddable class, the name()
element specifies the referencing relationship field or property
within the embeddable class. To override mappings at multiple
levels of embedding, a dot (.
) notation syntax must be used
in the name
element to indicate an attribute within an
embedded attribute. The value of each identifier used with the dot
notation is the name of the respective embedded field or property.
When AssociationOverride
is applied to override the
mappings of an embeddable class used as a map value, "value.
"
must be used to prefix the name of the attribute within the embeddable
class that is being overridden in order to specify it as part of the
map value.
If the relationship mapping is a foreign key mapping, the
joinColumns()
element is used. If the relationship mapping
uses a join table, the joinTable()
element must be specified
to override the mapping of the join table and/or its join columns.
Example 1: Overriding the mapping of a relationship defined by a mapped superclass
@MappedSuperclass
public class Employee {
...
@ManyToOne
protected Address address;
...
}
@Entity
@AssociationOverride(name = "address",
joinColumns = @JoinColumn(name = "ADDR_ID"))
// address field mapping overridden to ADDR_ID foreign key
public class PartTimeEmployee extends Employee {
...
}
Example 2: Overriding the mapping for phoneNumbers
defined
in the ContactInfo
class
@Entity
public class Employee {
@Id int id;
@AssociationOverride(
name = "phoneNumbers",
joinTable = @JoinTable(name = "EMPPHONES",
joinColumns = @JoinColumn(name = "EMP"),
inverseJoinColumns = @JoinColumn(name = "PHONE")))
@Embedded
ContactInfo contactInfo;
...
}
@Embeddable
public class ContactInfo {
@ManyToOne
Address address; // Unidirectional
@ManyToMany(targetEntity = PhoneNumber.class)
List phoneNumbers;
}
@Entity
public class PhoneNumber {
@Id
int number;
@ManyToMany(mappedBy = "contactInfo.phoneNumbers")
Collection<Employee> employees;
}
- Since:
- 1.0
- See Also:
-
Required Element Summary
-
Optional Element Summary
Modifier and TypeOptional ElementDescription(Optional) Used to specify or control the generation of a foreign key constraint for the columns corresponding to thejoinColumns
element when table generation is in effect.The join column(s) being mapped to the persistent attribute(s).The join table that maps the relationship.
-
Element Details
-
name
String name(Required) The name of the relationship property whose mapping is being overridden if property-based access is being used, or the name of the relationship field if field-based access is used. -
joinColumns
JoinColumn[] joinColumnsThe join column(s) being mapped to the persistent attribute(s). ThejoinColumns
elements must be specified if a foreign key mapping is used in the overriding of the mapping of the relationship. ThejoinColumns
element must not be specified if a join table is used in the overriding of the mapping of the relationship.- Default:
{}
-
foreignKey
ForeignKey foreignKey(Optional) Used to specify or control the generation of a foreign key constraint for the columns corresponding to thejoinColumns
element when table generation is in effect. If both this element and theforeignKey
element of any of thejoinColumns
elements are specified, the behavior is undefined. If no foreign key annotation element is specified in either location, the persistence provider's default foreign key strategy will apply.- Since:
- 2.1
- Default:
@jakarta.persistence.ForeignKey(PROVIDER_DEFAULT)
-
joinTable
JoinTable joinTableThe join table that maps the relationship. ThejoinTable
element must be specified if a join table is used in the overriding of the mapping of the relationship. ThejoinTable
element must not be specified if a foreign key mapping is used in the overriding of the relationship.- Since:
- 2.0
- Default:
@jakarta.persistence.JoinTable
-