Chapter 4, Entity of the JPA Overview discusses persistent class basics in JPA. Chapter 4, PersistenceCapable of the JDO Overview does the same for JDO. This chapter details the persistent class features Kodo offers beyond the core JPA and JDO specifications.
Unlike many ORM products, Kodo does not need to know about all of your persistent classes at startup. Kodo discovers new persistent classes automatically as they are loaded into the JVM; in fact you can introduce new persistent classes into running applications under Kodo. However, there are certain situations in which providing Kodo with a persistent class list is helpful:
Kodo must be able to match entity names in JPQL queries to persistent classes. Kodo automatically knows the entity names of any persistent classes already loaded into the JVM. To match entity names to classes that have not been loaded, however, you must supply a persistent class list.
				Under JDO's 
				
				application identity, Kodo must be able to match an
				identity object passed to the PersistenceManager
				 to the corresponding persistent class.  If the
				persistent class hasn't been loaded into the JVM yet, Kodo will
				not be able to find it.  One workaround for this is to
				load your persistent class within your identity class' static
				initializer, as demonstrated in 
				Example 4.5, “Application Identity Class” of the
				JDO Overview. 
				
When Kodo manipulates classes in a persistent inheritance hierarchy, Kodo must be aware of all the classes in the hierarchy. If some of the classes have not been loaded into the JVM yet, Kodo may not know about them, and queries may return incorrect results.
				If you use JDO's 
				
				class-name discriminator strategy, Kodo will
				discover all persistent classes in the hierarchy on its own by
				issuing a SELECT DISTINCT against the 
				database discriminator column; however, this can be inefficient
				for a large table.  Thus it may still be preferable to provide
				a persistent types list, as described below.
				
If you configure Kodo to create the needed database schema on startup (see Section 7.1.4, “Runtime Forward Mapping”), Kodo must know all of your persistent classes up-front.
		When any of these conditions are a factor in your JPA 
		application, use the class, 
		mapping-file, and jar-file elements of 
		JPA's standard XML format to list your 
		persistent classes.  See
		Section 6.1, “persistence.xml” for details.
		
		Under JDO,
		Kodo allows you to explicitly specify all of your persistent 
		classes in the various attributes of the 
		
		kodo.MetaDataFactory configuration property.  
		See Section 6.2, “Metadata Factory” for details.
		
| ![[Note]](img/note.gif) | Note | 
|---|---|
| Listing persistent classes (or their metadata or jar files) is an all-or-nothing endeavor. If your persistent class list is non-empty, Kodo will assume that any unlisted class is not persistent. | 
|    |