I'm working on a project that has in the last couple of months developed an incredibly annoying bug involving object updates. Certain objects (most notably users) when updated in hibernate are never marked as dirty and flushed. For example:
Session session = factory.openSession(interceptor);
Transaction tx = session.beginTransaction();
Object object = session.load(someId);
// Modify object ...
session.update(object);
tx.commit();
session.flush();
session.close();
All the appropriate methods on the interceptor get called by hibernate except Interceptor.onFlushDirty and Interceptor.findDirty. My initial assumption was that this was an issue with detached objects as we were storing the user object in an http session; however a refactor that removed all detached objects did not solve the problem.
The transaction is definitely getting committed and the session is being flushed and closed on completion. I also double checked to ensure the session wasn't in read-only mode.
I have also tried using Session.merge in place of Session.update to no effect. When using Session.merge the object returned contains the correct updated information but again the database is never updated.
I have found this SO question that seems to describe a similar issue (relevant because the object I'm working stores a custom enum field) and a good description of Hibernate's dirty checking mechanism but other than that information has been kind of sparse.
My cfg.xml looks like this:
<property name="hibernate.current_session_context_class">thread</property>
<property name="hibernate.default_batch_fetch_size">1024</property>
<property name="hibernate.order_inserts">true</property>
<property name="hibernate.order_updates">true</property>
<property name="hibernate.show_sql">false</property>
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.aquire_increment">1</property>
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.initial_pool_size">1</property>
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.min_size">4</property>
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.max_size">32</property>
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.idle_test_period">100</property> <!-- seconds -->
<property name="hibernate.c3p0.timeout">600</property> <!-- seconds -->
<property name="hibernate.cache.use_second_level_cache">false</property>
<property name="hibernate.cache.use_query_cache">true</property>
<property name="hibernate.cache.region.factory_class">net.sf.ehcache.hibernate.EhCacheRegionFactory</property>
<property name="hibernate.connection.provider_class">org.hibernate.connection.C3P0ConnectionProvider</property>
<property name="hibernate.jdbc.fetch_size">1024</property>
<property name="hibernate.transaction.factory_class">org.hibernate.transaction.JDBCTransactionFactory</property>
<property name="hibernate.search.worker.execution">async</property>
<property name="hibernate.search.default.directory_provider">org.hibernate.search.store.RAMDirectoryProvider</property>
<property name="hibernate.search.default.indexwriter.batch.ram_buffer_size">256</property>
<property name="hibernate.search.default.optimizer.transaction_limit.max">1000</property>
UPDATE: I have tried both disabling and enabling Hibernates second-level cache as Finbarr suggested to no effect.
Anyone have any suggestions on other things I might try?