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Java BigTable ORM

This library abstracts the process of model creation for Google BigTable. Using annotation processing, Entity and DAO definitions are generated automatically, reducing the amount of boilerplate required for new Entities, thus removing the chance for copy/paste errors and making code reviews much simpler.

The design of this library takes a dual-front approach, attempting to create easy-to-use APIs for both the creation of new Entities and working with those entities and their respective DAOs from consuming code.

Table of Contents

Quick Start

Gradle

repositories {
    mavenCentral()
}

dependencies {
    annotationProcessor "com.bettercloud:bigtable-orm-compiler:$bigtableOrmVersion"
    compileOnly "com.bettercloud:bigtable-orm-annotations:$bigtableOrmVersion"
    api "com.bettercloud:bigtable-orm-core:$bigtableOrmVersion"
}

Entity Configuration

@Table("table_name")
class TableConfiguration {
    
    @Entity(keyDelimiter = "|", keyComponents = {
            @KeyComponent(constant = "my_entity"),
            @KeyComponent(name = "id")
    })
    private class MyEntity {
        
        @Column(family = "column_family", qualifier = "column_qualifier")
        private Boolean myBoolean;
        
        @Column(family = "another_column_family")
        private String hello;
    }
}

Establishing a BigTable Connection

final String gcpProjectId = ...
final String bigTableInstanceId = ...

final DaoFactory daoFactory = new DaoFactory(gcpProjectId, bigTableInstanceId);
final AsyncDaoFactory asyncDaoFactory = new AsyncDaoFactory(gcpProjectId, bigTableInstanceId);

or

final Connection connection = ... // Customized BigTable or HBase connection
final AsyncConnection asyncConnection = ... // Customized Async BigTable or HBase connection

final DaoFactory daoFactory = new DaoFactory(connection);
final AsyncDaoFactory asyncDaoFactory = new AsyncDaoFactory(asyncConnection);

Retrieving an Entity DAO

final Dao<MyEntity> myEntityDao = daoFactory.daoFor(MyEntity.class);

DAO Usage

The MyEntity class is not available until the first ./gradlew build, or by configuring annotation processing in your IDE.

Because of this, it is recommended to compile your Entity definitions into their own artifact, and declare a dependency on the resulting artifact from your service code.

final Key<MyEntity> key = MyEntity.keyBuilder()
        .id("a_string_id")
        .build();

assertEquals("my_entity|a_string_id", key.toString());

// Save a new entity
final MyEntity initialEntity = new MyEntity();
initialEntity.setMyBoolean(true);

myEntityDao.saveAll(Collections.singletonMap(key, initialEntity));

// Retrieve it and verify values
final Map<Key<MyEntity>, MyEntity> retrievedEntities1 = myEntityDao.getAll(Collections.singleton(key));
assertTrue(retrievedEntities1.containsKey(key));

final MyEntity retrievedEntity1 = retrievedEntities1.get(key);

assertTrue(retrievedEntity1.getMyBoolean());
assertNull(retrievedEntity1.getHello());

// Make an update and save it
retrievedEntity1.setHello("world");

myEntityDao.save(Collections.singletonMap(key, retrievedEntity1));

// Retrieve it again and verify the update
final Map<Key<MyEntity>, MyEntity> retrievedEntities2 = myEntityDao.getAll(Collections.singleton(key));
assertTrue(retrievedEntities2.containsKey(key));

final MyEntity retrievedEntity2 = retrievedEntities2.get(key);

assertTrue(retrievedEntity2.getMyBoolean());
assertEquals("world", retrievedEntity2.getHello());

// Delete it
myEntityDao.deleteAll(Collections.singleton(key));

// Retrieve it again and verify that it no longer exists
final Map<Key<MyEntity>, MyEntity> retrievedEntities3 = myEntityDao.getAll(Collections.singleton(key));
assertFalse(retrievedEntities3.containsKey(key));

Detailed Usage

Table Declarations

The @Table annotation requires a String value representing the name of the table within BigTable.

Any classes annotated with @Table must not be public, to prevent leaking into consuming code.

Tables will not be automatically created for you, and it is up to the developer to ensure that the table actually exists, or else runtime exceptions may occur.

Entity Declarations

Any classes annotated with @Entity must be an inner class within a class annotated with @Table.

Any classes annotated with @Entity must be private, to prevent leaking into consuming code. Generated Entities will always be public.

The @Entity annotation contains an optional keyDelimiter (defaulting to ::), as well as a required array of @KeyComponent annotations.

Generated Entities will be placed in the same package as the @Table within which it was declared.

Key Components

The array of @KeyComponent annotations is used to generate a KeyBuilder for the corresponding Entity.

Each @KeyComponent must declare either a constant value, or a name value with an optional type (defaulting to String.class).

If the constant value is defined, then the generated KeyBuilder will always place the defined constant in the position relative to the other components.

If the constant value is not defined, then the generated KeyBuilder will build a "step" named after the defined name using the defined type. The Object.toString() method is used to convert any non-String types into a String during key generation.

Most key type declarations will be either a String or a UUID, though any Object with a valid toString() method may be used.

Example

Take this @Entity declaration, for example:

@Entity(keyDelimiter = "|", keyComponents = {
        @KeyComponent(name = "global", type = UUID.class),
        @KeyComponent(name = "regional", type = UUID.class),
        @KeyComponent(constant = "MY_CONSTANT"),
        @KeyComponent(name = "local")
})
private class TestEntityPleaseIgnore {
    ...
}

The resulting KeyBuilder can generate a Key using the following syntax:

final Key<TestEntityPleaseIgnore> myKey = TestEntityPleaseIgnore.keyBuilder()
        .global(UUID.fromString("00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"))
        .regional(UUID.fromString("11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111"))
        .local("some random string")
        .build();

The String representation of the Key can then be accessed:

final String myKeyString = myKey.toString();

assertEquals("00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000|11111111-1111-1111-1111-111111111111|MY_CONSTANT|some random string", myKeyString);

The String representation is encoded using UTF-8 into a byte array before being used by BigTable, so any UTF-8 character (including spaces) is supported.

It is the responsibility of the developer to ensure keys for multiple Entities within the same Table do not collide, or else data loss may occur.

Column Declarations

Fields annotated with @Column will only be recognized if declared within a class annotated with @Entity.

The @Column annotation contains a required family and an optional qualifier. These values correspond to the column family and qualifier within BigTable. If qualifier is not defined, then the name of the field will be used as the column qualifier within BigTable.

The type and name of the field will be automatically detected, and corresponding getters and setters will be generated.

The field on the generated Entity will always be private, and its getter and setter will be public. Any other modifiers and default values are discarded.

Primitive Types

Because a column can contain no data, and is therefore inherently nullable, all primitive types will be boxed during processing.

For example, if your @Entity declares a primitive column:

@Column(family = "f")
private long timestamp;

Then the processor will generate the boxed equivalent instead:

private Long timestamp;

public Long getTimestamp() {
    return timestamp;
}

public void setTimestamp(final Long timestamp) {
    this.timestamp = timestamp;
}

This means that constructing your Entity for the first time will result in all fields being null, not their primitive default values.

Custom Types

The serialization step uses Jackson under the hood, and a TypeReference for each field is stored and used during the deserialization process.

This means that any POJO supported by the ObjectMapper is supported by this library. As always, thoroughly test your DAO interactions to ensure intended functionality works as expected.

It is recommended to put any non-table classes inside of a models package within the same package as your Table declaration.

It is up to the developer to implement any hashCode(), equals(Object o), and toString() methods on non-Entity classes.

It is supported (though optional) to omit setter methods for fields that you wish to keep effectively immutable on your custom types.

Column Sharing

Many different Entities within a single Table may (and should) refer to the same column family/qualifier, even if the declared type is completely different. It is the responsibility of this library to enforce pseudo-schemas on otherwise arbitrary values.

Example
@Table("Monsters")
class MonstersTableConfiguration {
    
    @Entity(keyComponents = {
            @KeyComponent(constant = "pokemon"),
            @KeyComponent(name = "id", type = Integer.class)
    })
    private class Pokemon {
        
        @Column(family = "combat", qualifier = "data")
        private List<Attack> attacks;
    }
    
    @Entity(keyComponents = {
            @KeyComponent(constant = "digimon"),
            @KeyComponent(name = "reference", type = UUID.class)
    })
    private class Digimon {
        
        @Column(family = "combat", qualifier = "data")
        private Digivolution digivolution;
    }
}

Note that both Entities store values within the "combat" column family and the "data" column qualifier, even though the type of data they store is completely different.

From the consuming code's perspective, there is nothing tying these values to any specific column family/qualifier; it just works!™

final Key<Pokemon> bulbasaurKey = Pokemon.keyBuilder().id(1).build();
final Map<Key<Pokemon>, Pokemon> results = pokemonDao.getAll(Collections.singleton(bulbasaurKey));
final Pokemon bulbasaur = results.get(bulbasaurKey);
bulbasaur.getAttacks().add(new Attack("Razor Leaf"));
pokemonDao.saveAll(Collections.singletonMap(bulbasaurKey, bulbasaur));

Column Versioning

The @Column annotation supports defining an optional versioned boolean which, when true, generates additional getters and setters for the annotated column, providing control over that column's "version" (typically a timestamp).

Example

For instance, let's assume we have a table containing people, keyed by their social security numbers, of whom we want to track heights (in inches) over time:

@Table("People")
class PeopleTableConfiguration {
    
    @Entity(keyComponents = {
            @KeyComponent(name = "ssn")
    })
    private class Person {
        
        @Column(family = "measurements", versioned = true)
        private int heightInches;
    }
}

To set the height for a person at a given timestamp, you can invoke the setter for the person's height, and provide the additional timestamp parameter:

final Key<Person> jeffKey = Person.keyBuilder().ssn("000-00-0000").build();

final long timestamp = Instant.now().toEpochMilli();

final Person jeff = new Person();
jeff.setHeightInches(72, timestamp);

final Map<Key<Person>, Person> persisted = personDao.saveAll(Collections.singletonMap(jeffKey, jeff));
final Person persistedJeff = persisted.get(jeffKey);

assertEquals(72, (int) persistedJeff.getHeightInches());
assertEquals(timestamp, (long) persistedJeff.getHeightInchesTimestamp());

Additionally, you may omit the timestamp parameter, and a timestamp will be set and reflected by the entity returned by save.

Invoking the setter for a column without defining the timestamp parameter will set the timestamp to null on the Java Object. A null timestamp is interpreted as a signal to auto-generate the column's timestamp on save:

final Person jeff = new Person();
jeff.setHeight(75);

assertNull(jeff.getHeightInchesTimestamp());

final long minimumExpectedTimestamp = Instant.now().toEpochMilli();

final Map<Key<Person>, Person> persisted = personDao.saveAll(Collections.singletonMap(jeffKey, jeff));
final Person persistedJeff = persisted.get(jeffKey);

assertEquals(75, (int) persistedJeff.getHeightInches());
assertTrue(persistedJeff.getHeightInchesTimestamp() >= minimumExpectedTimestamp);

It is important to note that only the column values are considered when checking for equality, not their associated timestamps. Therefore:

assertEquals(jeff, persistedJeff); // True, even though we did not define the timestamp ourselves

Unit Testing

You should use IoC/DI frameworks, and inject the Dao<T extends Entity> interface, typed to your entity, whenever possible.

When testing your code, the Dao<T extends Entity> interface can be effectively mocked to return expected values.

The Key<T extends Entity> interface can be mocked or constructed using the appropriate KeyBuilder, and used with mocked Dao instances.

All generated Entity models can be used directly from unit tests, but are left non-final to support mocking when desired. Generated models support hashCode(), equals(Object o), and toString(), which means they will work just fine with assertions and hash-based algorithms (such as HashMap).

Contributing

Contributions and feedback are welcome and encouraged!

For minor bug-fixes, simply submit a pull request with your changes and a short description of the problem being solved. For major/breaking changes, please open an issue for discussion prior to submitting code changes.

All changes are expected to be tested thoroughly prior to submission. Any untested code will simply be rejected.

License

The MIT License (MIT)

Copyright (c) 2019 BetterCloud

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.