| name | spring-data-jpa |
| description | Implement persistence layers with Spring Data JPA. Use when creating repositories, configuring entity relationships, writing queries (derived and @Query), setting up pagination, database auditing, transactions, UUID primary keys, multiple databases, and database indexing. Covers repository interfaces, JPA entities, custom queries, relationships, and performance optimization patterns. |
| allowed-tools | Read, Write, Bash, Grep |
| category | backend |
| tags | spring-data, jpa, database, hibernate, orm, persistence |
| version | 1.2.0 |
Spring Data JPA
Overview
To implement persistence layers with Spring Data JPA, create repository interfaces that provide automatic CRUD operations, entity relationships, query methods, and advanced features like pagination, auditing, and performance optimization.
When to Use
Use this Skill when:
- Implementing repository interfaces with automatic CRUD operations
- Creating entities with relationships (one-to-one, one-to-many, many-to-many)
- Writing queries using derived method names or custom @Query annotations
- Setting up pagination and sorting for large datasets
- Implementing database auditing with timestamps and user tracking
- Configuring transactions and exception handling
- Using UUID as primary keys for distributed systems
- Optimizing performance with database indexes
- Setting up multiple database configurations
Instructions
Create Repository Interfaces
To implement a repository interface:
Extend the appropriate repository interface:
@Repository public interface UserRepository extends JpaRepository<User, Long> { // Custom methods defined here }Use derived queries for simple conditions:
Optional<User> findByEmail(String email); List<User> findByStatusOrderByCreatedDateDesc(String status);Implement custom queries with @Query:
@Query("SELECT u FROM User u WHERE u.status = :status") List<User> findActiveUsers(@Param("status") String status);
Configure Entities
Define entities with proper annotations:
@Entity @Table(name = "users") public class User { @Id @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY) private Long id; @Column(nullable = false, length = 100) private String email; }Configure relationships using appropriate cascade types:
@OneToMany(mappedBy = "user", cascade = CascadeType.ALL, orphanRemoval = true) private List<Order> orders = new ArrayList<>();Set up database auditing:
@CreatedDate @Column(nullable = false, updatable = false) private LocalDateTime createdDate;
Apply Query Patterns
- Use derived queries for simple conditions
- Use @Query for complex queries
- Return Optional
for single results - Use Pageable for pagination
- Apply @Modifying for update/delete operations
Manage Transactions
- Mark read-only operations with @Transactional(readOnly = true)
- Use explicit transaction boundaries for modifying operations
- Specify rollback conditions when needed
Examples
Basic CRUD Repository
@Repository
public interface ProductRepository extends JpaRepository<Product, Long> {
// Derived query
List<Product> findByCategory(String category);
// Custom query
@Query("SELECT p FROM Product p WHERE p.price > :minPrice")
List<Product> findExpensiveProducts(@Param("minPrice") BigDecimal minPrice);
}
Pagination Implementation
@Service
public class ProductService {
private final ProductRepository repository;
public Page<Product> getProducts(int page, int size) {
Pageable pageable = PageRequest.of(page, size, Sort.by("name").ascending());
return repository.findAll(pageable);
}
}
Entity with Auditing
@Entity
@EntityListeners(AuditingEntityListener.class)
public class Order {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private Long id;
@CreatedDate
@Column(nullable = false, updatable = false)
private LocalDateTime createdDate;
@LastModifiedDate
private LocalDateTime lastModifiedDate;
@CreatedBy
@Column(nullable = false, updatable = false)
private String createdBy;
}
Best Practices
Entity Design
- Use constructor injection exclusively (never field injection)
- Prefer immutable fields with
finalmodifiers - Use Java records (16+) or
@Valuefor DTOs - Always provide proper
@Idand@GeneratedValueannotations - Use explicit
@Tableand@Columnannotations
Repository Queries
- Use derived queries for simple conditions
- Use
@Queryfor complex queries to avoid long method names - Always use
@Paramfor query parameters - Return
Optional<T>for single results - Apply
@Transactionalon modifying operations
Performance Optimization
- Use appropriate fetch strategies (LAZY vs EAGER)
- Implement pagination for large datasets
- Use database indexes for frequently queried fields
- Consider using
@EntityGraphto avoid N+1 query problems
Transaction Management
- Mark read-only operations with
@Transactional(readOnly = true) - Use explicit transaction boundaries
- Avoid long-running transactions
- Specify rollback conditions when needed
Reference Documentation
For comprehensive examples, detailed patterns, and advanced configurations, see: