2

I have implemented the persistence layer using Speedment and I would like to test the code using spring boot unit tests. I have annotated my unit tests with the following annotations:

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest
@Transactional
public class MovieServiceTest {
  ...
}

By default, Spring will start a new transaction surrounding each test method and @Before/@After callbacks, performing a roll back of the transaction at the end. With Speedment however this does not seem to work.

Does Speedment support transactions across several invocations, and if yes, how do I have to configure Spring to use the Speedment transactions or how doe I have to configure Speedment to use the data source provided by Spring?

3 Answers 3

1

Transaction support was added in Speedment 3.0.17. However, it does not integrate with the Spring @Transactional-annotation yet so you will have to wrap the code you want to execute as a single transaction like shown here:

txHandler.createAndAccept(tx ->

    Account sender = accounts.stream()
        .filter(Account.ID.equal(1))
        .findAny()
        .get();

    Account receiver = accounts.stream()
        .filter(Account.ID.equal(2))
        .findAny()
        .get();

    accounts.update(sender.setBalance(sender.getBalance() - 100));
    accounts.update(receiver.setBalance(receiver.getBalance() + 100));

    tx.commit();
}
2
  • I just added transactions to my code as described, but I run into a java.sql.SQLException:Streaming result set com.mysql.jdbc.RowDataDynamic@8c83ced is still active. No statements may be issued when any streaming result sets are open and in use on a given connection. Ensure that you have called .close() on any active streaming result sets before attempting more queries. How can this problem be fixed?
    – Dominik
    Nov 20, 2017 at 21:38
  • Sounds like a bug. You should report it to github.com/speedment/speedment/issues and add the full stacktrace. Nov 21, 2017 at 13:05
1

It is likely that you are streaming over a table and then conducts an update/remove operation while the stream is still open. Most database cannot handle having an open ResultSet on a Connection and then perform update operations on the same connection.

Luckily, there is an easy work around: consider collecting the entities you would like to modify in an intermediate Collection (such as a List or Set) and then use that Collection to perform the desired operations.

This case is described in the Speedment User's Guide here

txHandler.createAndAccept(
    tx -> {
       // Collect to a list before performing actions
        List<Language> toDelete = languages.stream()
            .filter(Language.LANGUAGE_ID.notEqual((short) 1))
            .collect(toList());

        // Do the actual actions
        toDelete.forEach(languages.remover());

        tx.commit();
    }
);
0

AFAIK it does not (yet) - correction: it seems to setup one transaction per stream / statement.

See this article: https://dzone.com/articles/best-java-orm-frameworks-for-postgresql

But it should be possible to implement with writing a custom extension: https://github.com/speedment/speedment/wiki/Tutorial:-Writing-your-own-extensions

Edit:

According to a speedment developer one stream maps to one transaction: https://www.slideshare.net/Hazelcast/webinar-20150305-speedment-2

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.