IDEs like Netbeans allow generation of entity classes through a persistence context. If you had access to underlying generation method (not sure if it is an external tool or part of the IDE), could you generate database entity classes dynamically at runtime? The idea being that you could hook into the entity classes using reflection.
I know you can go the other way and generate the database from the entity class, however due to permissions issues in my work environment that would be a no go. However, if you reverse the process and pull the classes from the database it may be feasible in my environment. The idea being that the database would serve as a single point of configuration/control.
It’s theoretically possible but what would be the point? Java is statically typed so you would only be able to use the generated classes by reflection and you would have no way of giving them behaviour, so removing the whole point of object-relational mapping. Loading the data into Maps or just using SQL record sets would be more convenient.
If you have an existing schema you can write classes that act in the way your application needs and declaratively map them onto the schema. That way the code is the simplest expression of your application logic and is persistence-agnostic.