Chapter 84. MyBatis
MyBatis
Available as of Camel 2.7
The mybatis: component allows you to query, poll, insert, update and delete data in a relational database using MyBatis.
Maven users will need to add the following dependency to their
pom.xml
for this component:
<dependency> <groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId> <artifactId>camel-mybatis</artifactId> <version>x.x.x</version> <!-- use the same version as your Camel core version --> </dependency>
URI format
mybatis:statementName[?options]
Where statementName is the statement name in the MyBatis XML mapping file which maps to the query, insert, update or delete operation you wish to evaluate.
You can append query options to the URI in the following format,
?option=value&option=value&...
This component will by default load the MyBatis SqlMapConfig file from the root of the classpath with the expected name of
SqlMapConfig.xml
. If the file is located in another location, you will need to configure the configurationUri
option on the MyBatisComponent
component.
Options
Option | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
consumer.onConsume
|
String
|
null
|
Statements to run after consuming. Can be used, for example, to update rows after they have been consumed and processed in Camel. See sample later. Multiple statements can be separated with commas. |
consumer.useIterator
|
boolean
|
true
|
If true each row returned when polling will be processed individually. If false the entire List of data is set as the IN body.
|
consumer.routeEmptyResultSet
|
boolean
|
false
|
Sets whether empty result sets should be routed. |
statementType
|
StatementType
|
null
|
Mandatory to specify for the producer to control which kind of operation to invoke. The enum values are: SelectOne , SelectList , Insert , InsertList , Update , UpdateList , Delete , and DeleteList . Notice:InsertList is available as of Camel 2.10, and UpdateList , DeleteList is available as of Camel 2.11.
|
maxMessagesPerPoll
|
int
|
0
|
An integer to define the maximum messages to gather per poll. By default, no maximum is set. Can be used to set a limit of e.g. 1000 to avoid when starting up the server that there are thousands of files. Set a value of 0 or negative to disable it. |
executorType
|
String
|
null
|
Camel 2.11: The executor type to be used while executing statements. The supported values are: simple, reuse, batch. By default, the value is not specified and is equal to what MyBatis uses, i.e. simple. simple executor does nothing special. reuse executor reuses prepared statements. batch executor reuses statements and batches updates. |
Message Headers
Camel will populate the result message, either IN or OUT with a header with the statement used:
Header | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
CamelMyBatisStatementName
|
String
|
The statementName used (for example: insertAccount). |
CamelMyBatisResult
|
Object
|
The response returned from MtBatis in any of the operations. For instance an INSERT could return the auto-generated key, or number of rows etc.
|
Message Body
The response from MyBatis will only be set as the body if it's a
SELECT
statement. That means, for example, for INSERT
statements Camel will not replace the body. This allows you to continue routing and keep the original body. The response from MyBatis is always stored in the header with the key CamelMyBatisResult
.
Samples
For example if you wish to consume beans from a JMS queue and insert them into a database you could do the following:
from("activemq:queue:newAccount"). to("mybatis:insertAccount?statementType=Insert");
Notice we have to specify the
statementType
, as we need to instruct Camel which kind of operation to invoke.
Where insertAccount is the MyBatis ID in the SQL mapping file:
<!-- Insert example, using the Account parameter class --> <insert id="insertAccount" parameterType="Account"> insert into ACCOUNT ( ACC_ID, ACC_FIRST_NAME, ACC_LAST_NAME, ACC_EMAIL ) values ( #{id}, #{firstName}, #{lastName}, #{emailAddress} ) </insert>
Using StatementType for better control of MyBatis
When routing to an MyBatis endpoint you will want more fine grained control so you can control whether the SQL statement to be executed is a
SELECT
, UPDATE
, DELETE
or INSERT
etc. So for instance if we want to route to an MyBatis endpoint in which the IN body contains parameters to a SELECT
statement we can do:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:selectAccountById?statementType=SelectOne") .to("mock:result");
In the code above we can invoke the MyBatis statement
selectAccountById
and the IN body should contain the account id we want to retrieve, such as an Integer
type.
We can do the same for some of the other operations, such as
SelectList
:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:selectAllAccounts?statementType=SelectList") .to("mock:result");
And the same for
UPDATE
, where we can send an Account
object as the IN body to MyBatis:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:updateAccount?statementType=Update") .to("mock:result");
Using InsertList StatementType
Available as of Camel 2.10
MyBatis allows you to insert multiple rows using its for-each batch driver. To use this, you need to use the <foreach> in the mapper XML file. For example as shown below:
<!-- Batch Insert example, using the Account parameter class --> <insert id="batchInsertAccount" parameterType="java.util.List"> insert into ACCOUNT ( ACC_ID, ACC_FIRST_NAME, ACC_LAST_NAME, ACC_EMAIL ) values ( <foreach item="Account" collection="list" open="" close="" separator="),("> #{Account.id}, #{Account.firstName}, #{Account.lastName}, #{Account.emailAddress} </foreach> ) </insert>
Then you can insert multiple rows, by sending a Camel message to the
mybatis
endpoint which uses the InsertList
statement type, as shown below:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:batchInsertAccount?statementType=InsertList") .to("mock:result");
Using UpdateList StatementType
Available as of Camel 2.11
MyBatis allows you to update multiple rows using its for-each batch driver. To use this, you need to use the <foreach> in the mapper XML file. For example as shown below:
<update id="batchUpdateAccount" parameterType="java.util.Map"> update ACCOUNT set ACC_EMAIL = #{emailAddress} where ACC_ID in <foreach item="Account" collection="list" open="(" close=")" separator=","> #{Account.id} </foreach> </update>
Then you can update multiple rows, by sending a Camel message to the mybatis endpoint which uses the UpdateList statement type, as shown below:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:batchUpdateAccount?statementType=UpdateList") .to("mock:result");
Using DeleteList StatementType
Available as of Camel 2.11
MyBatis allows you to delete multiple rows using its for-each batch driver. To use this, you need to use the <foreach> in the mapper XML file. For example as shown below:
<delete id="batchDeleteAccountById" parameterType="java.util.List"> delete from ACCOUNT where ACC_ID in <foreach item="AccountID" collection="list" open="(" close=")" separator=","> #{AccountID} </foreach> </delete>
Then you can delete multiple rows, by sending a Camel message to the mybatis endpoint which uses the DeleteList statement type, as shown below:
from("direct:start") .to("mybatis:batchDeleteAccount?statementType=DeleteList") .to("mock:result");
Notice on InsertList, UpdateList and DeleteList StatementTypes
Parameter of any type (List, Map, etc.) can be passed to mybatis and an end user is responsible for handling it as required with the help of mybatis dynamic queries capabilities.
Scheduled polling example
Since this component does not support scheduled polling, you need to use another mechanism for triggering the scheduled polls, such as the Timer or Quartz components.
In the sample below we poll the database, every 30 seconds using the Timer component and send the data to the JMS queue:
from("timer://pollTheDatabase?delay=30000").to("mbatis:selectAllAccounts").to("activemq:queue:allAccounts");
And the MyBatis SQL mapping file used:
<!-- Select with no parameters using the result map for Account class. --> <select id="selectAllAccounts" resultMap="AccountResult"> select * from ACCOUNT </select>
Using onConsume
This component supports executing statements after data have been consumed and processed by Camel. This allows you to do post updates in the database. Notice all statements must be
UPDATE
statements. Camel supports executing multiple statements whose names should be separated by commas.
The route below illustrates we execute the consumeAccount statement data is processed. This allows us to change the status of the row in the database to processed, so we avoid consuming it twice or more.
from("mybatis:selectUnprocessedAccounts?consumer.onConsume=consumeAccount").to("mock:results");
And the statements in the sqlmap file:
<select id="selectUnprocessedAccounts" resultMap="AccountResult"> select * from ACCOUNT where PROCESSED = false </select>
<update id="consumeAccount" parameterType="Account"> update ACCOUNT set PROCESSED = true where ACC_ID = #{id} </update>
Participating in transactions
Setting up a transaction manager under camel-mybatis can be a little bit fiddly, as it involves externalising the database configuration outside the standard MyBatis
SqlMapConfig.xml
file.
The first part requires the setup of a
DataSource
. This is typically a pool (either DBCP, or c3p0), which needs to be wrapped in a Spring proxy. This proxy enables non-Spring use of the DataSource
to participate in Spring transactions (the MyBatis SqlSessionFactory
does just this).
<bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.TransactionAwareDataSourceProxy"> <constructor-arg> <bean class="com.mchange.v2.c3p0.ComboPooledDataSource"> <property name="driverClass" value="org.postgresql.Driver"/> <property name="jdbcUrl" value="jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/myDatabase"/> <property name="user" value="myUser"/> <property name="password" value="myPassword"/> </bean> </constructor-arg> </bean>
This has the additional benefit of enabling the database configuration to be externalised using property placeholders.
A transaction manager is then configured to manage the outermost
DataSource
:
<bean id="txManager" class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DataSourceTransactionManager"> <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/> </bean>
<bean id="sqlSessionFactory" class="org.mybatis.spring.SqlSessionFactoryBean"> <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/> <!-- standard mybatis config file --> <property name="configLocation" value="/META-INF/SqlMapConfig.xml"/> <!-- externalised mappers --> <property name="mapperLocations" value="classpath*:META-INF/mappers/**/*.xml"/> </bean>
The camel-mybatis component is then configured with that factory:
<bean id="mybatis" class="org.apache.camel.component.mybatis.MyBatisComponent"> <property name="sqlSessionFactory" ref="sqlSessionFactory"/> </bean>
Finally, a transaction policy is defined over the top of the transaction manager, which can then be used as usual:
<bean id="PROPAGATION_REQUIRED" class="org.apache.camel.spring.spi.SpringTransactionPolicy"> <property name="transactionManager" ref="txManager"/> <property name="propagationBehaviorName" value="PROPAGATION_REQUIRED"/> </bean> <camelContext id="my-model-context" xmlns="http://camel.apache.org/schema/spring"> <route id="insertModel"> <from uri="direct:insert"/> <transacted ref="PROPAGATION_REQUIRED"/> <to uri="mybatis:myModel.insert?statementType=Insert"/> </route> </camelContext>