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High-Performance Java Persistence

The High-Performance Java Persistence book and video course code examples. I wrote this article about this repository since it's one of the best way to test JDBC, JPA, Hibernate or even jOOQ code. Or, if you prefer videos, you can watch this presentation on YouTube.

Are you struggling with application performance issues?

<a href="https://vladmihalcea.com/hypersistence-optimizer/?utm_source=GitHub&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=hpjp"> <img src="https://vladmihalcea.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Hypersistence-Optimizer-300x250.jpg" alt="Hypersistence Optimizer"> </a>

Imagine having a tool that can automatically detect if you are using JPA and Hibernate properly. No more performance issues, no more having to spend countless hours trying to figure out why your application is barely crawling.

Imagine discovering early during the development cycle that you are using suboptimal mappings and entity relationships or that you are missing performance-related settings.

More, with Hypersistence Optimizer, you can detect all such issues during testing and make sure you don't deploy to production a change that will affect data access layer performance.

Hypersistence Optimizer is the tool you've been long waiting for!

Training

If you are interested in on-site training, I can offer you my High-Performance Java Persistence training which can be adapted to one, two or three days of sessions. For more details, check out my website.

Consulting

If you want me to review your application and provide insight into how you can optimize it to run faster, then check out my consulting page.

High-Performance Java Persistence Video Courses

If you want the fastest way to learn how to speed up a Java database application, then you should definitely enroll in my High-Performance Java Persistence video courses.

High-Performance Java Persistence Book

Or, if you prefer reading books, you are going to love my High-Performance Java Persistence book as well.

<a href="https://vladmihalcea.com/books/high-performance-java-persistence?utm_source=GitHub&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=hpjp"> <img src="https://i0.wp.com/vladmihalcea.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/HPJP_h200.jpg" alt="High-Performance Java Persistence book"> </a> <a href="https://vladmihalcea.com/courses?utm_source=GitHub&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=hpjp"> <img src="https://i0.wp.com/vladmihalcea.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/HPJP_Video_Vertical_h200.jpg" alt="High-Performance Java Persistence video course"> </a>

Java

All examples require at least Java 17 because of the awesome Text Blocks feature, which makes JPQL and SQL queries so much readable.

Maven

You need to use Maven 3.6.2 or newer to build the project.

IntelliJ IDEA

On IntelliJ IDEA, the project runs just fine. You will have to make sure to select Java 17 or newer.

Database setup

The project uses various database systems for integration testing, and you can configure the JDBC connection settings using the DatasourceProvider instances (e.g., PostgreSQLDataSourceProvider).

By default, without configuring any database explicitly, HSQLDB is used for testing.

However, since some integration tests are designed to work on specific relational databases, we will need to have those databases started prior to running those tests.

Therefore, when running a DB-specific test, this GitHub repository will execute the following steps:

  1. First, the test will try to find whether there's a local RDBMS it can use to run the test.
  2. If no local database is found, the integration tests will use Testcontainers to bootstrap a Docker container with the required Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, YugabyteDB, or CockroachDB instance on demand.

While you don't need to install any database manually on your local OS, this is recommended since your tests will run much faster than if they used Testcontainers.

Manual Database configuration

Maven

To build the project, don't use install or package. Instead, just compile test classes like this:

mvnw clean test-compile

Or you can just run the build.bat or build.sh scripts which run the above Maven command.

Afterward, just pick one test from the IDE and run it individually.

Don't you run all tests at once (e.g. mvn clean test) because the test suite will take a very long time to complete.

So, run the test you are interested in individually.

Enjoy learning more about Java Persistence, Hibernate, and database systems!