Spring Data – CrudRepository save() Method

1. Overview

CrudRepository is a Spring Data interface for generic CRUD operations on a repository of a specific type. It provides several methods out of the box for interacting with a database.

In this tutorial, we’ll explain how and when to use the CrudRepository save() method.

To learn more about Spring Data repositories take a look at our article that compares CrudRepository to other repository interfaces of the framework.

Further reading:

Spring Data JPA @Query

Learn how to use the @Query annotation in Spring Data JPA to define custom queries using JPQL and native SQL.

Read more

Spring Data JPA – Derived Delete Methods

Learn how to define Spring Data deleteBy and removeBy methods

Read more

2. Dependencies

We’ll have to add Spring Data and H2 database dependencies to our pom.xml file:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
    <artifactId>spring-boot-starter-data-jpa</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
    <groupId>com.h2database</groupId>
    <artifactId>h2</artifactId>
    <scope>runtime</scope>
</dependency>

3. Example Application

Let’s first create our Spring Data entity called MerchandiseEntity. This class will define the data types that will get persisted to the database when we call the save() method:

@Entity
public class MerchandiseEntity {

    @Id
    @GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.AUTO)
    private Long id;

    private double price;

    private String brand;

    public MerchandiseEntity() {
    }

    public MerchandiseEntity(String brand, double price) {
        this.brand = brand;
        this.price = price;
    }
}

Next, let’s create a CrudRepository interface to work with the MerchandiseEntity:

@Repository
public interface InventoryRepository
  extends CrudRepository<MerchandiseEntity, Long> {
}

Here we specify the entity’s class and the entity id’s class, MerchandiseEntity and Long. When an instance of this repository is instantiated, the underlying logic will automatically be in place for working with our MerchandiseEntity class.

So with very little code, we’re already ready to start using the save() method.

4. CrudRepository save() to Add a New Instance

Let’s create a new instance of MerchandiseEntity and save it to the database using the InventoryRepository:

InventoryRepository repo = context
  .getBean(InventoryRepository.class);

MerchandiseEntity pants = new MerchandiseEntity(
  "Pair of Pants", BigDecimal.ONE);
pants = repo.save(pants);

Running this will create a new entry in the database table for MerchandiseEntity. Notice that we never specified an id. The instance is initially created with a null value for its id and when we call the save() method, an id is automatically generated.

The save() method returns the saved entity, including the updated id field.

5. CrudRepository save() to Update an Instance

We can use the same save() method to update an existing entry in our database. Suppose we had saved a MerchandiseEntity instance with a specific title:

MerchandiseEntity pants = new MerchandiseEntity(
  "Pair of Pants", 34.99);
pants = repo.save(pants);

But later we found that we wanted to update the price of the item. We could then simply get the entity from the database, make the change and use the save() method as before.

Assuming we know the id of the item (pantsId), we can use the CRUDRepository method findById to get our entity from the database:

MerchandiseEntity pantsInDB = repo.findById(pantsId).get();
pantsInDB.setPrice(44.99);
repo.save(pantsInDB);

Here, we’ve updated our original entity with a new price and saved the changes back to the database.

6. Conclusion

In this quick article, we’ve covered the use of CrudRepository‘s save() method. This method can be used to add a new entry into your database as well as updating an existing one.

As usual, the code for the article is over on GitHub.

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