I am trying to understand the reason behind using transaction in the following piece of code retrieved from Hibernate Documentation.
Session session1 = factory1.openSession();
Transaction tx1 = session1.beginTransaction();
Cat cat = session1.get(Cat.class, catId);
tx1.commit();
session1.close();
//reconcile with a second database
Session session2 = factory2.openSession();
Transaction tx2 = session2.beginTransaction();
session2.replicate(cat, ReplicationMode.LATEST_VERSION);
tx2.commit();
session2.close();
What I understand from this JBOSS Docs that even though if I dont use a transaction that should not be a problem in this case. Can some body educate me more on this in terms of isolation etc . what actually happens if we do or dont use transaction in the above scenario
Working nontransactionally with Hibernate Look at the following code, which accesses the database without transaction boundaries:
Session session = sessionFactory.openSession();
session.get(Item.class, 123l);
session.close();
*By default, in a Java SE environment with a JDBC configuration, this is what happens if you execute this snippet:
- A new Session is opened. It doesn’t obtain a database connection at this point.
- The call to get() triggers an SQL SELECT. The Session now obtains a JDBC Connection from the connection pool. Hibernate, by default, immediately turns off the autocommit mode on this connection with setAutoCommit(false). This effectively starts a JDBC transaction!
- The SELECT is executed inside this JDBC transaction. The Session is closed, and the connection is returned to the pool and released by Hibernate — Hibernate calls close() on the JDBC Connection. What happens to the uncommitted transaction? The answer to that question is, “It depends!” The JDBC specification doesn’t say anything about pending transactions when close() is called on a connection. What happens depends on how the vendors implement the specification. With Oracle JDBC drivers, for example, the call to close() commits the transaction! Most other JDBC vendors take the sane route and roll back any pending transaction when the JDBC Connection object is closed and the resource is returned to the pool. Obviously, this won’t be a problem for the SELECT you’ve executed, but look at this variation:*