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Does the User class from the question JSF Controller, Service and DAO need to be serializable?

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Once the server throws java.io.NotSerializableException, then the class name will just appear in the exception message. It's sufficient hint that the server expects the class to be Serializable.

Usually, it are those classes which (in)directly end up in the HttpSession, because the server may need to convert (serialize) all HttpSession instances to InputStream/byte[], so they can be saved to local disk file system to remember open sessions during a restart, or transferred over network when being placed in a cluster.

In a JSF (+CDI) web application, all @ViewScoped, @FlowScoped, @ConversationScoped and @SessionScoped beans will (in)directly be saved in the HttpSession. So, it's obvious that at least those beans and all their properties need to be Serializable.

As to general design practice, anything which is classified as "Java Bean" throughout the codebase needs to implement Serializable. This is even mentioned in JavaBeans Specification. This only won't be actively used when it concerns e.g. a @RequestScoped or @ApplicationScoped bean, so that's why most developers just omit them from those beans. From the other side on, a java.io.NotSerializableException could be a good hint prevent the developers/maintainers from (re)using backing beans in the "wrong" scope than where the backing bean is originally designed for.

See also:

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Every Class in your JSF application has to implement the serializable interface.

If you want to override this, use the transient keyword to skip serialization of unserializable classes.

Additional info :

  • Serialization of Objects explained:

It lets you take an object or group of objects, put them on a disk or send them through a wire or wireless transport mechanism, then later, perhaps on another computer, reverse the process: resurrect the original object(s). The basic mechanisms are to flatten object(s) into a one-dimensional stream of bits, and to turn that stream of bits back into the original object(s).

Like the Transporter on Star Trek, it's all about taking something complicated and turning it into a flat sequence of 1s and 0s, then taking that sequence of 1s and 0s (possibly at another place, possibly at another time) and reconstructing the original complicated "something."

isocpp.org(Serialization and Unserialization)

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