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Building MongoDB Applications using JavaEE 6

Shekhar Gulati
January 18, 2013
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Building MongoDB Applications using JavaEE 6

Building MongoDB Applications using JavaEE 6

Shekhar Gulati

January 18, 2013
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  1. About Me ~ Shekhar Gulati • OpenShift Evangelist at Red

    Hat • Hands on developer • Speaker • Writer and Blogger • Twitter Handle : shekhargulati
  2. Agenda • NoSQL Ecosystem • Hibernate OGM • MongoDB in

    Action • Demo – Developing Todo Application – Deploying to OpenShift
  3. Why NoSQL? • Read Scalability • Write Scalability • Tries

    to solve a particular problem – are not one size fit all • Schema less • Write configurability
  4. What is Hibernate OGM? • Persistence engine providing JPA support

    for NoSQL datastores. • Reuses mature projects like hibernate core, hibernate search • Keeps good part of relational model • Still evolving
  5. Hibernate OGM Goals • Simplify programmatic model for NoSQL •

    Provide full JPA support • Help scale existing applications with a NoSQL front end to a traditional database • Provide familiar environment to developers which leads to productivity Note : Currently does not meet all the goals
  6. OGM Current Status • Store data in key/value stores Infinispan's

    datagrid and Ehcache • Store data in MongoDB • Create, Read, Update and Delete operations (CRUD) for entities • Polymorphic entities (support for superclasses, subclasses etc). • Embeddable objects (aka components) • Support for basic types (numbers, String, URL, Date, enums, etc) • Support for associations • Support for collections (Set, List, Map, etc) • Support for Hibernate Search's full-text queries • JPA and native Hibernate ORM API support
  7. What is MongoDB? • Document based NoSQL database – Each

    document can be heterogeneous, and may have completely different structure compared to other documents • Stores data in BSON(Binary JSON) • Fast • Smart • Scalable
  8. Getting started with MongoDB $ wget http://fastdl.mongodb.org/osx/mongodb-osx-x86_64-2.2.2.tgz $ tar -xf

    mongodb-osx-x86_64-2.2.2.tgz $ mkdir -p /data/db (might face permission issues) $ mongodb-osx-x86_64-2.2.2/bin/mongod
  9. Running some commands • show dbs • use demo •

    show collections • db.todos.help() • db.todos.insert({todo:”learn openshift”,createdOn : new Date(),tags:[“openshift”,”cloud”,”paas”]}) • db.todos.findOne() { "_id" : ObjectId("50f588127104f8d8c81b2c77"), "todo" : "Learning OpenShift", "createdOn" : ISODate("2013-01-15T16:47:14.163Z"), "tags" : ["openshift","cloud","paas"] }
  10. MongoDB Dynamic Queries • db.todos.find({"todo":"Learning OpenShift"}) • db.todos.find({"todo":/openshift/i,"tags":"paas"}) • db.todos.find({todo

    : {$regex : /openshift/i}}) • db.todos.find({tags:{$in : ["cloud","java"]}}) • db.todos.find({tags:{$nin : ["cloud","java"]}}) • db.todos.find({tags:{$all : ["cloud","java"]}}) Lot of other operators available http://docs.mongodb.org/manual/reference/operator/
  11. Getting Started with OpenShift Sign up with Promo Code JUDCON.IN

    https://openshift.redhat.com/app/account/new
  12. Setting up OGM template project $ git remote add template

    -m master git://github.com/shekhargulati/hibernate-ogm-openshift- template.git $ git pull -s recursive -X theirs template master
  13. Demo Steps • Create domain model • Create EJB service

    • Make service RESTFul by @Path • Make web service calls