mappedBy element of the OneToOne annotation to specify the relationship field or
property of the owning side.
The OneToOne annotation may be used within an embeddable class to specify a relationship from
the embeddable class to an entity class. If the relationship is bidirectional and the entity containing the
embeddable class is on the owning side of the relationship, the non-owning side must use the
mappedBy element of the OneToOne annotation to specify the relationship field or
property of the embeddable class. The dot (".") notation syntax must be used in the mappedBy
element to indicate the relationship attribute within the embedded attribute. The value of each identifier
used with the dot notation is the name of the respective embedded field or property.
Example 1: One-to-one association that maps a foreign key column
// On Customer class:
@OneToOne(optional=false)
@JoinColumn(
name="CUSTREC_ID", unique=true, nullable=false, updatable=false)
CustomerRecord customerRecord;
// On CustomerRecord class:
@OneToOne(optional=false, mappedBy="customerRecord")
Customer customer;
Example 2: One-to-one association that assumes both the source and target share the same primary key values.
// On Employee class:
@Entity
public class Employee {
@Id Integer id;
@OneToOne @MapsId
EmployeeInfo info;
...
}
// On EmployeeInfo class:
@Entity
public class EmployeeInfo {
@Id Integer id;
...
}
Example 3: One-to-one association from an embeddable class to another entity.
@Entity
public class Employee {
@Id int id;
@Embedded LocationDetails location;
...
}
@Embeddable
public class LocationDetails {
int officeNumber;
@OneToOne ParkingSpot parkingSpot;
...
}
@Entity
public class ParkingSpot {
@Id int id;
String garage;
@OneToOne(mappedBy="location.parkingSpot") Employee assignedTo;
...
}
- Since:
- Java Persistence 1.0
-
Optional Element Summary
Optional ElementsModifier and TypeOptional ElementDescription(Optional) The operations that must be cascaded to the target of the association.(Optional) Whether the association should be lazily loaded or must be eagerly fetched.(Optional) The field that owns the relationship.boolean(Optional) Whether the association is optional.boolean(Optional) Whether to apply the remove operation to entities that have been removed from the relationship and to cascade the remove operation to those entities.(Optional) The entity class that is the target of the association.
-
Element Details
-
targetEntity
Class targetEntity(Optional) The entity class that is the target of the association.Defaults to the type of the field or property that stores the association.
- Returns:
- target entity
- Default:
- void.class
-
cascade
CascadeType[] cascade(Optional) The operations that must be cascaded to the target of the association.By default no operations are cascaded.
- Returns:
- cascade type
- Default:
- {}
-
fetch
FetchType fetch(Optional) Whether the association should be lazily loaded or must be eagerly fetched. The EAGER strategy is a requirement on the persistence provider runtime that the associated entity must be eagerly fetched. The LAZY strategy is a hint to the persistence provider runtime.- Returns:
- fetch type
- Default:
- EAGER
-
optional
boolean optional(Optional) Whether the association is optional. If set to false then a non-null relationship must always exist.- Returns:
- optional?
- Default:
- true
-
mappedBy
String mappedBy(Optional) The field that owns the relationship. This element is only specified on the inverse (non-owning) side of the association.- Returns:
- mappedby
- Default:
- ""
-
orphanRemoval
boolean orphanRemoval(Optional) Whether to apply the remove operation to entities that have been removed from the relationship and to cascade the remove operation to those entities.- Returns:
- whether to remove orphans
- Since:
- Java Persistence 2.0
- Default:
- false
-