This is actually the expected behaviour if I understood your configuration correctly.
Hibernate does not return distinct results for a query with outer join fetching enabled for a collection (even if I use the distinct
keyword)? First, you need to understand SQL and how OUTER JOINs work
in SQL. If you do not fully understand and comprehend outer joins in
SQL, do not continue reading this FAQ item but consult a SQL manual or
tutorial. Otherwise you will not understand the following explanation
and you will complain about this behavior on the Hibernate forum.
Typical examples that might return duplicate references of the same
Order object:
List result = session.createCriteria(Order.class)
.setFetchMode("lineItems", FetchMode.JOIN)
.list();
<class name="Order">
...
<set name="lineItems" fetch="join">
List result = session.createCriteria(Order.class)
.list();
List result = session.createQuery("select o from Order o left join fetch o.lineItems").list();
All of these examples produce the same SQL statement:
SELECT o.*, l.* from ORDER o LEFT OUTER JOIN LINE_ITEMS l ON o.ID = l.ORDER_ID
Want to know why the duplicates are there? Look at the SQL resultset,
Hibernate does not hide these duplicates on the left side of the outer
joined result but returns all the duplicates of the driving table. If
you have 5 orders in the database, and each order has 3 line items,
the resultset will be 15 rows. The Java result list of these queries
will have 15 elements, all of type Order. Only 5 Order instances will
be created by Hibernate, but duplicates of the SQL resultset are
preserved as duplicate references to these 5 instances. If you do not
understand this last sentence, you need to read up on Java and the
difference between an instance on the Java heap and a reference to
such an instance.
(Why a left outer join? If you'd have an additional order with no line
items, the result set would be 16 rows with NULL filling up the right
side, where the line item data is for other order. You want orders
even if they don't have line items, right? If not, use an inner join
fetch in your HQL).
Hibernate does not filter out these duplicate references by default.
Some people (not you) actually want this. How can you filter them out?
Like this:
Collection result = new LinkedHashSet( session.create*(...).list() );