ArangoDB v3.13 is under development and not released yet. This documentation is not final and potentially incomplete.
Document
Annotation @Document
The annotations @Document
applied to a class marks this class as a candidate
for mapping to the database. The most relevant parameter is value
to specify
the collection name in the database. The annotation @Document
specifies the
collection type to DOCUMENT
.
@Document(value="persons")
public class Person {
...
}
Spring Expression support
Spring Data ArangoDB supports the use of SpEL expressions within
@Document#value
. This feature lets you define a dynamic collection name which
can be used to implement multi tenancy applications.
@Component
public class TenantProvider {
public String getId() {
// threadlocal lookup
}
}
@Document("#{tenantProvider.getId()}_persons")
public class Person {
...
}
Annotation @From and @To
With the annotations @From
and @To
applied on a collection or array field in
a class annotated with @Document
the nested edge objects are fetched from the
database. Each of the nested edge objects has to be stored as separate edge
document in the edge collection described in the @Edge
annotation of the
nested object class with the _id of the parent document as field _from
or _to.
@Document("persons")
public class Person {
@From
private List<Relation> relations;
}
@Edge(name="relations")
public class Relation {
...
}
The database representation of Person
in collection persons looks as follow:
{
"_key" : "123",
"_id" : "persons/123"
}
and the representation of Relation
in collection relations:
{
"_key" : "456",
"_id" : "relations/456",
"_from" : "persons/123"
"_to" : ".../..."
}
{
"_key" : "789",
"_id" : "relations/456",
"_from" : "persons/123"
"_to" : ".../..."
}
...
Note: Since arangodb-spring-data 3.0.0 the annotations @From
and @To
also work on non-collection/non-array fields. If multiple edges are linked with
the entity, it is not guaranteed that the same edge is returned every time.
Use at your own risk.