ArangoDB v3.13 is under development and not released yet. This documentation is not final and potentially incomplete.
Edge
Annotation @Edge
The annotations @Edge
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 @Edge
specifies the collection
type to EDGE
.
@Edge("relations")
public class Relation {
...
}
Spring Expression support
Spring Data ArangoDB supports the use of SpEL expressions within @Edge#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
}
}
@Edge("#{tenantProvider.getId()}_relations")
public class Relation {
...
}
Annotation @From and @To
With the annotations @From
and @To
applied on a field in a class annotated
with @Edge
the nested object is fetched from the database. The nested object
has to be stored as a separate document in the collection described in the
@Document
annotation of the nested object class. The _id field of this
nested object is stored in the fields _from
or _to
within the edge document.
@Edge("relations")
public class Relation {
@From
private Person c1;
@To
private Person c2;
}
@Document(value="persons")
public class Person {
@Id
private String id;
}
The database representation of Relation
in collection relations looks as follow:
{
"_key" : "123",
"_id" : "relations/123",
"_from" : "persons/456",
"_to" : "persons/789"
}
and the representation of Person
in collection persons:
{
"_key" : "456",
"_id" : "persons/456",
}
{
"_key" : "789",
"_id" : "persons/789",
}
Note: If you want to save an instance of Relation
, both Person
objects
(from & to) already have to be persisted and the class Person
needs a field
with the annotation @Id
so it can hold the persisted _id
from the database.