The "save" method is used to save an entity to the database. When you call the "save" method, the entity is first persisted to the database's transactional buffer, and then, when the transaction is committed, the entity is saved to the database. The "save" method returns the saved entity.
The "save and flush" method, on the other hand, does the same thing as "save", but additionally forces the database to immediately write the pending changes to disk. This can be useful in cases where you need to ensure that the data is immediately persisted to the database, rather than waiting for the transaction to commit.
In summary, the main difference between "save" and "save and flush" in Spring Data is that the latter immediately writes the pending changes to the database, while the former waits until the transaction is committed to do so.
If you want to save a new entity and use its ID within the same transaction, you should use the "save" method followed by a call to the "flush" method.
When you call the "save" method, the entity is persisted to the transactional buffer, and a temporary ID is assigned to the entity. This ID is generated by the underlying persistence framework and is not the final ID that will be assigned to the entity when it is saved to the database.
By calling the "flush" method, you force the underlying persistence framework to immediately write the pending changes to the database. This causes the temporary ID assigned to the entity to be replaced with the final ID assigned by the database.
Once the "flush" method has been called, you can safely use the ID of the newly saved entity within the same transaction.