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David Nguyen
David Nguyen

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Spring Data JPA Stream Query Methods

Introduction

Traditionally, fetching large amounts of data can strain memory resources, as it often involves loading the entire result set into memory.

=> Stream query methods offer a solution by providing a way to process data incrementally using Java 8 Streams. This ensures that only a portion of the data is held in memory at any time, enhancing performance and scalability.

In this blog post, we'll dive deep into how stream query methods work in Spring Data JPA, explore their use cases, and demonstrate their implementation.

For this guide, we’re using:

  • IDE: IntelliJ IDEA (recommended for Spring applications) or Eclipse
  • Java Version: 17
  • Spring Data JPA Version: 2.7.x or higher (compatible with Spring Boot 3.x)
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-data-jpa</artifactId>
</dependency>
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NOTE: For more detailed examples, please visit my GitHub repository here

1. What are Stream Query Methods?

Stream query methods in Spring Data JPA allow us to return query results as a Stream instead of a List or other collection types. This approach provides several benefits:

  • Efficient Resource Management: Data is processed incrementally, reducing memory overhead.

  • Lazy Processing: Results are fetched and processed on-demand, which is ideal for scenarios like pagination or batch processing.

  • Integration with Functional Programming: Streams fit with Java's functional programming features, enabling operations like filter, map, and collect.

2. How To Use Stream Query Methods?

=> Let's imagine that we are developing an e-commerce application and want to:

  • Retrieve all customers who placed orders after a specific date.
  • Filter orders with a total amount above a specific provided amount.
  • Group customers by their total order value within the last 6 months.
  • Return the data as a summary of customer names and their total order values.

Entities

  • Customer: Represents a customer.
@Setter
@Getter
@Entity
@Entity(name = "tbl_customer")
public class Customer {
    @Id
    @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
    private Long id;

    private String name;
    private String email;

    @OneToMany(mappedBy = "customer", cascade = CascadeType.ALL, fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
    private List<Order> orders;
}
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  • Order: Represents an order placed by a customer.
@Setter
@Getter
@Entity(name = "tbl_order")
public class Order {
    @Id
    @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
    private Long id;

    private Double amount;
    private LocalDateTime orderDate;

    @ManyToOne
    @JoinColumn(name = "customer_id")
    private Customer customer;
}
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Repository

  • CustomerRepository used for selecting customers and their associated orders placed after a specific date. And we used Stream<Customer> instead of List<Customer> to handle result of query.
public interface CustomerRepository extends JpaRepository<Customer, Long> {
    @Query("""
                SELECT c FROM tbl_customer c JOIN FETCH c.orders o WHERE o.orderDate >= :startDate
            """)
    @QueryHints(
            @QueryHint(name = AvailableHints.HINT_FETCH_SIZE, value = "25")
    )
    Stream<Customer> findCustomerWithOrders(@Param("startDate") LocalDateTime startDate);
}
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NOTE:

  • The JOIN FETCH ensures orders are eagerly loaded.

  • The @QueryHints used to provide additional hints to the JPA provides (e.g,. Hibernate) to optimize the query execution.

=> For example, when my query return 100 records:

  • The first 25 records are fetched and processed by the application.
  • Once those are processed, the next 25 are fetched, and so on, until all 100 records are processed.
  • This behavior minimizes memory usage and avoids loading all 100 records into memory at once.

Service

@Service
@RequiredArgsConstructor
public class CustomerOrderService {
    private final CustomerRepository customerRepository;

    @Transactional(readOnly = true)
    public Map<String, Double> getCustomerOrderSummary(LocalDateTime startDate, Double minOrderAmount) {
        try (Stream<Customer> customerStream = customerRepository.findCustomerWithOrders(startDate)) {
            return customerStream
                    // Filter customers with orders above the threshold
                    .flatMap(customer -> customer.getOrders().stream()
                            .filter(order -> order.getAmount() >= minOrderAmount)
                            .map(order -> new AbstractMap.SimpleEntry<>(customer.getName(), order.getAmount())))
                    // Group by customer name and sum order amounts
                    .collect(Collectors.groupingBy(
                            AbstractMap.SimpleEntry::getKey,
                            Collectors.summingDouble(AbstractMap.SimpleEntry::getValue)
                    ));
        }
    }
}
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Here's the service class to process the data with two parameters startDate and minOrderAmount. As you can see, we don't filter by using sql query and load all data as stream then filter and group by our Java code.

Controller

@RestController
@RequestMapping("/customers")
@RequiredArgsConstructor
public class CustomerOrderController {
    private final CustomerOrderService customerOrderService;

    @GetMapping("/orders")
    public ResponseEntity<Map<String, Double>> getCustomerOrderSummary(
            @RequestParam @DateTimeFormat(iso = DateTimeFormat.ISO.DATE_TIME) LocalDateTime startDate,
            @RequestParam Double minOrderAmount
    ) {
        Map<String, Double> orderSummary = customerOrderService.getCustomerOrderSummary(startDate, minOrderAmount);
        return ResponseEntity.ok(orderSummary);
    }
}
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Testing

=> To create data for testing, you can execute the following script inside my source code or add by yourself.

src/main/resources/dummy-data.sql

Request:

  • startDate: 2024-05-01T00:00:00
  • minOrderAmount: 100
curl --location 'http://localhost:8090/customers/orders?startDate=2024-05-01T00%3A00%3A00&minOrderAmount=100'
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Response:

  • Return all customers with their total amount which equal or greater than minOrderAmount.
{
  "Jane Roe": 500.0,
  "John Doe": 150.0,
  "Bob Brown": 350.0,
  "Alice Smith": 520.0
}
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3. Stream vs List

=> You can use IntelliJ Profiler to monitor memory usage and execution time. For more detail about how to add and test with large data set, you can find in my GitHub repository

Small Dataset: (10 customers, 100 orders)

  • Stream: Execution time (~5ms), Memory usage (Low)
  • List: Execution time (~4ms), Memory usage (Low)

Large Dataset (10.000 customers, 100.000 orders)

  • Stream: Execution time (~202ms), Memory usage (Moderate)
  • List: Execution time (~176ms), Memory usage (High)

Performance Metrics

Metric Stream List
Initial Fetch Time Slightly slower (due to lazy loading) Faster (all at once)
Memory Consumption Low (incremental processing) High (entire dataset in memory)
Memory Consumption Low (incremental processing) High (entire dataset in memory)
Processing Overhead Efficient for large datasets May cause memory issues for large datasets
Batch Fetching Supported (with fetch size) Not applicable
Error Recovery Graceful with early termination Limited, as data is preloaded

Wrapping up

Spring Data JPA stream query methods offer an elegant way to process large datasets efficiently while leveraging the power of Java Streams. By processing data incrementally, they reduce memory consumption and integrate seamlessly with modern functional programming paradigms.

What are your thoughts on stream query methods? Share your experiences and use cases in the comments below!

See you in the next posts. Happy Coding!

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