Mapping array with Hibernate

Hibernate can map only the primitive types. Check under the org.hibernate.type folder of hibernate jar package. int array is not one of them. So you would have to write a custom type that can implement the UserType interface.

public class MyClass{
     private Long id;
     private String name;
     private Integer[] values;

     @Type(type = "com.usertype.IntArrayUserType")
     public Integer[] getValues(){
         return values;
     }

     public void setValues(Integer[] values){
         this.values = values;
     }
 }

IntArrayUserType.class

package com.usertype.IntArrayUserType;

public class IntArrayUserType implements UserType {

protected static final int[] SQL_TYPES = { Types.ARRAY };

@Override
public Object assemble(Serializable cached, Object owner) throws HibernateException {
    return this.deepCopy(cached);
}

@Override
public Object deepCopy(Object value) throws HibernateException {
    return value;
}

@Override
public Serializable disassemble(Object value) throws HibernateException {
    return (Integer[]) this.deepCopy(value);
}

@Override
public boolean equals(Object x, Object y) throws HibernateException {

    if (x == null) {
        return y == null;
    }
    return x.equals(y);
}

@Override
public int hashCode(Object x) throws HibernateException {
    return x.hashCode();
}

@Override
public boolean isMutable() {
    return true;
}

@Override
public Object nullSafeGet(ResultSet resultSet, String[] names, SessionImplementor session, Object owner)
        throws HibernateException, SQLException {
    if (resultSet.wasNull()) {
        return null;
    }
    if(resultSet.getArray(names[0]) == null){
        return new Integer[0];
    }

    Array array = resultSet.getArray(names[0]);
    Integer[] javaArray = (Integer[]) array.getArray();
    return javaArray;
}

@Override
public void nullSafeSet(PreparedStatement statement, Object value, int index, SessionImplementor session)
        throws HibernateException, SQLException {
    Connection connection = statement.getConnection();
    if (value == null) {
        statement.setNull(index, SQL_TYPES[0]);
    } else {
        Integer[] castObject = (Integer[]) value;
        Array array = connection.createArrayOf("integer", castObject);
        statement.setArray(index, array);
    }
}

@Override
public Object replace(Object original, Object target, Object owner)       throws HibernateException {
    return original;
}

@Override
public Class<Integer[]> returnedClass() {
    return Integer[].class;
}

@Override
public int[] sqlTypes() {
    return new int[] { Types.ARRAY };
}

When you query for the MyClass entity you can add something like this:

Type intArrayType = new TypeLocatorImpl(new TypeResolver()).custom(IntArrayUserType.class);
Query query = getSession().createSQLQuery("select values from MyClass")
   .addScalar("values", intArrayType);
List<Integer[]> results = (List<Integer[]>) query.list();

Hibernate (and JPA) can't directly map the PostgreSQL array type. See this question for how to proceed if you really need to retain your database structure as it is. This thread has an example of the required custom type.

If you can change your schema, you can let hibernate create an additional table to handle the collection - List<Integer>. Then, depending on the version of hibernate you are using:

  • JPA 2.0 compliant - use @ElementCollection
  • JPA 1.0 compliant - use @CollectionOfElements

Maven dependency

The first thing you need to do is to set up the following Hibernate Types Maven dependency in your project pom.xml configuration file:

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.vladmihalcea</groupId>
    <artifactId>hibernate-types-52</artifactId>
    <version>${hibernate-types.version}</version>
</dependency>

Maven ARRAY columns

Assuming you have this table in your database:

create table event (
    id int8 not null, 
    version int4, 
    sensor_names text[], 
    sensor_values integer[], 
    primary key (id)
)

And you want to map it like this:

@Entity(name = "Event")
@Table(name = "event")
@TypeDefs({
    @TypeDef(
        name = "string-array", 
        typeClass = StringArrayType.class
    ),
    @TypeDef(
        name = "int-array", 
        typeClass = IntArrayType.class
    )
})
public static class Event extends BaseEntity {
 
    @Type( type = "string-array" )
    @Column(
        name = "sensor_names", 
        columnDefinition = "text[]"
    )
    private String[] sensorNames;
 
    @Type( type = "int-array" )
    @Column(
        name = "sensor_values", 
        columnDefinition = "integer[]"
    )
    private int[] sensorValues;
 
    //Getters and setters omitted for brevity
}

The string-array and int-array are custom types which can be defined in the BaseEntity superclass:

@TypeDefs({
    @TypeDef(
        name = "string-array", 
        typeClass = StringArrayType.class
    ),
    @TypeDef(
        name = "int-array", 
        typeClass = IntArrayType.class
    )
})
@MappedSuperclass
public class BaseEntity {

    @Id
    private Long id;

    @Version
    private Integer version;

    //Getters and setters omitted for brevity
}

The StringArrayType and IntArrayType are classes offered by the Hibernate Types project.

Testing time

Now, when you insert a couple of entities;

Event nullEvent = new Event();
nullEvent.setId(0L);
entityManager.persist(nullEvent);
 
Event event = new Event();
event.setId(1L);
event.setSensorNames(
    new String[] {
        "Temperature", 
        "Pressure"
    }
);
event.setSensorValues( 
    new int[] {
        12, 
        756
    } 
);
entityManager.persist(event);

Hibernate is going to generate the following SQL statements:

INSERT INTO event (
    version, 
    sensor_names, 
    sensor_values, 
    id
) 
VALUES (
    0, 
    NULL(ARRAY), 
    NULL(ARRAY), 
    0
)
     
INSERT INTO event (
    version, 
    sensor_names, 
    sensor_values, 
    id
) 
VALUES ( 
    0, 
    {"Temperature","Pressure"}, 
    {"12","756"}, 
    1
)