3

I am working on an application wherein I have to connect to different database depending upon an customer id that is passed from the client side. The schema for all the databases is same. It is a kind of multi-tenant application. Since I don't know how many customers will be there, I cannot use xml configuration to statically create the datasources, hence I have to create datasources manually.

We are using Spring JdbcTemplate for connecting to the databases and the connection parameter comes from another database which holds the configuration for the application. I am able to connect to the databases properly, but the method calls are not happening in a transaction. Following is the code snippet which does the database connectivity for only one database and I was going to extend it for multiple databases:

BasicDataSource datasource = new BasicDataSource();
// set database connection params
....
// create jdbcTemplate, 
jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(datasource);
// create transaction managers
PlatformTransactionManager txManager = new DataSourceTransactionManager(datasource);

My idea is to create the transaction manager manually and somehow bind it in the spring container so that all the methods/classes with @Transactional annotation can use this transaction manager. I am not able to figure how do I bind the txManager, so that all the methods/classes with @Transactional will use this transaction manager. I am not sure whether this is the right way and should I be creating a transaction manager for every datasource, since, I don't want the transaction to span multiple databases, but I want that every service method call should be in a transaction. Note: All my service classes have @Component and @Transactional annotation.

Am I solving the problem in the correct way?

2
  • Possible duplicate stackoverflow.com/questions/12641666/… Jan 21, 2014 at 15:36
  • @PradeepKrKaushal, thanks for your comment, but I had seen that question before posting. Using TransactionTemplate is not an efficient option for me because I lots of methods in my serivce classes and all of them will have to be wrapped using TransactionTemplate. I was looking for a solution which will be similar to the one mentioned in the 3rd paragraph of the accepted answer, but couldn't find how to do it.
    – jayendrap
    Jan 21, 2014 at 16:00

2 Answers 2

0

I think the following answer provides what you are looking for. Otherwise, you are going to need a global transaction manager. A global transaction manager will come bundled with a JEE container, or can be provided standalone by a trnsaction manager such as Atomikos. The Spring documentation covers both

0

You can use the spring's AbstractRoutingDatasource.

Please check the below link. The AbstractRoutingDatasource is explained.Here database is changed dynamically based on language selected.

Spring AbstractRoutingDatasource

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.