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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T20:19:54+00:00 2026-05-10T20:19:54+00:00

I have mapped several java classes like Customer, Assessment, Rating, … to a database

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I have mapped several java classes like Customer, Assessment, Rating, … to a database with Hibernate. Now i am thinking about a history-mode for all changes to the persistent data. The application is a web application. In case of deleting (or editing) data another user should have the possibility to see the changes and undo it. Since the changes are out of the scope of the current session, i don’t know how to solve this in something like the Command pattern, which is recommended for undo functionality.

For single value editing an approach like in this question sounds OK. But what about the deletion of a whole persistent entity? The simplest way is to create a flag in the table if this customer is deleted or not. The complexest way is to create a table for each class where deleted entities are stored. Is there anything in between? And how can i integrate these two things in a O/RM system (in my case Hibernate) comfortably, without messing around to much with SQL (which i want to avoid because of portability) and still have enough flexibility?

Is there a best practice?

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  1. 2026-05-10T20:19:55+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 8:19 pm

    One way to do it would be to have a ‘change history’ entity with properties for entity id of the entity changed, action (edit/delete), property name, orginal value, new value. Maybe also reference to the user performing the edit. A deletion would create entities for all properties of the deleted entity with action ‘delete’.

    This entity would provide enough data to perform undos and viewing of change history.

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