/******************************************************************************* * Copyright (c) 2008 - 2013 Oracle Corporation. All rights reserved. * * This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the * terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0 and Eclipse Distribution License v. 1.0 * which accompanies this distribution. * The Eclipse Public License is available at http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html * and the Eclipse Distribution License is available at * http://www.eclipse.org/org/documents/edl-v10.php. * * Contributors: * Linda DeMichiel - Java Persistence 2.1 * Linda DeMichiel - Java Persistence 2.0 * ******************************************************************************/ package javax.persistence; import java.lang.annotation.Target; import java.lang.annotation.Retention; import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.FIELD; import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.METHOD; import static java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME; import static javax.persistence.ConstraintMode.PROVIDER_DEFAULT; /** * Specifies the mapping of associations. It is applied to the * owning side of an association. * *
A join table is typically used in the mapping of many-to-many * and unidirectional one-to-many associations. It may also be used to * map bidirectional many-to-one/one-to-many associations, * unidirectional many-to-one relationships, and one-to-one * associations (both bidirectional and unidirectional). * *
When a join table is used in mapping a relationship with an *embeddable class on the owning side of the relationship, the *containing entity rather than the embeddable class is considered the *owner of the relationship. * *
If the JoinTable
annotation is missing, the
* default values of the annotation elements apply.
* The name of the join table is assumed to be the table names of the
* associated primary tables concatenated together (owning side
* first) using an underscore.
*
*
* * Example: * * @JoinTable( * name="CUST_PHONE", * joinColumns= * @JoinColumn(name="CUST_ID", referencedColumnName="ID"), * inverseJoinColumns= * @JoinColumn(name="PHONE_ID", referencedColumnName="ID") * ) ** * @see JoinColumn * @see JoinColumns * * @since Java Persistence 1.0 */ @Target({METHOD, FIELD}) @Retention(RUNTIME) public @interface JoinTable { /** * (Optional) The name of the join table. * *
Defaults to the concatenated names of * the two associated primary entity tables, * separated by an underscore. */ String name() default ""; /** (Optional) The catalog of the table. *
Defaults to the default catalog. */ String catalog() default ""; /** (Optional) The schema of the table. *
Defaults to the default schema for user. */ String schema() default ""; /** * (Optional) The foreign key columns * of the join table which reference the * primary table of the entity owning the * association. (I.e. the owning side of * the association). * *
Uses the same defaults as for {@link JoinColumn}. */ JoinColumn[] joinColumns() default {}; /** * (Optional) The foreign key columns * of the join table which reference the * primary table of the entity that does * not own the association. (I.e. the * inverse side of the association). * *
Uses the same defaults as for {@link JoinColumn}.
*/
JoinColumn[] inverseJoinColumns() default {};
/**
* (Optional) Used to specify or control the generation of a
* foreign key constraint for the columns corresponding to the
* joinColumns
element when table generation is in
* effect. If both this element and the foreignKey
* element of any of the joinColumns
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 Java Persistence 2.1
*/
ForeignKey foreignKey() default @ForeignKey(PROVIDER_DEFAULT);
/**
* (Optional) Used to specify or control the generation of a
* foreign key constraint for the columns corresponding to the
* inverseJoinColumns
element when table generation
* is in effect. If both this element and the
* foreignKey
element of any of the
* inverseJoinColumns
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 Java Persistence 2.1
*/
ForeignKey inverseForeignKey() default @ForeignKey(PROVIDER_DEFAULT);
/**
* (Optional) Unique constraints that are
* to be placed on the table. These are
* only used if table generation is in effect.
*
Defaults to no additional constraints. */ UniqueConstraint[] uniqueConstraints() default {}; /** * (Optional) Indexes for the table. These are only used if * table generation is in effect. * * @since Java Persistence 2.1 */ Index[] indexes() default {}; }