What is it?
On occasion, the application developer requires finer grained control over the lifecycle of JTA transactions and JPA Entity Managers than the defaults provided by the Java EE container. This example shows how the developer can override these defaults and take control of aspects of the lifecycle of JPA and transactions.
This example demonstrates how to manually manage transaction demarcation while accessing JPA entities in JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 or JBoss AS 7.
When you run this example, you will be provided with a Use bean managed Entity Managers checkbox.
* If you check the checkbox, it shows the developer responsibilities when injecting an Entity Manager into a managed (stateless) bean.
* If you uncheck the checkbox, shows the developer responsibilities when using JPA and transactions with an unmanaged component.
JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 and JBoss AS 7 ship with H2, an in-memory database written in Java. This example shows how to transactionally insert key value pairs into the H2 database and demonstrates the requirements on the developer with respect to the JPA Entity Manager.
NOTE: A Java EE container is designed with robustness in mind, so you should carefully analyse the scaleabiltiy, concurrency and performance needs of you application before taking advantage of these techniques in your own applications.
System requirements
All you need to build this project is Java 6.0 (Java SDK 1.6) or better, Maven 3.0 or better.
The application this project produces is designed to be run on JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 or JBoss AS 7.
Configure Maven
If you have not yet done so, you must Configure Maven before testing the quickstarts.
Start JBoss Enterprise Application Platform 6 or JBoss AS 7 with the Web Profile
- Open a command line and navigate to the root of the JBoss server directory.
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The following shows the command line to start the server with the web profile:
For Linux: JBOSS_HOME/bin/standalone.sh For Windows: JBOSS_HOME\bin\standalone.bat
Build and Deploy the Quickstart
NOTE: The following build command assumes you have configured your Maven user settings. If you have not, you must include Maven setting arguments on the command line. See Build and Deploy the Quickstarts for complete instructions and additional options.
- Make sure you have started the JBoss Server as described above.
- Open a command line and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.
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Type this command to build and deploy the archive:
mvn clean package jboss-as:deploy This will deploy
target/jboss-as-bmt.warto the running instance of the server.
Access the application
The application will be running at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/jboss-as-bmt/.
You will be presented with a simple form for adding key/value pairs and a checkbox to indicate whether the updates should be executed using an unmanaged component. Effectively this will run the transaction and JPA updates in the servlet, not session beans. If the box is checked then the updates will be executed within a session bean method.
- To list all pairs leave the key input box empty.
- To add or update the value of a key fill in the key and value input boxes.
- Press the submit button to see the results.
Undeploy the Archive
- Make sure you have started the JBoss Server as described above.
- Open a command line and navigate to the root directory of this quickstart.
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When you are finished testing, type this command to undeploy the archive:
mvn jboss-as:undeploy
Run the Quickstart in JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse
You can also start the server and deploy the quickstarts from Eclipse using JBoss tools. For more information, see Use JBoss Developer Studio or Eclipse to Run the Quickstarts
Debug the Application
If you want to debug the source code or look at the Javadocs of any library in the project, run either of the following commands to pull them into your local repository. The IDE should then detect them.
mvn dependency:sources
mvn dependency:resolve -Dclassifier=javadoc
Share the Knowledge
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Feedback
Find a bug in the guide? Something missing? You can fix it by forking the repository, making the correction and sending a pull request. If you're just plain stuck, feel free to ask a question in the user discussion forum.
Recent Changelog
- Feb 12, 2013: Add quickstart source repository of record to the readme files Sande Gilda
- Sep 11, 2012: Add target product (https://issues.jboss.org/browse/jdf-108) Sande Gilda
- May 11, 2012: Readme maven config updates, change header titles to quickstart folder name, update experience levels, issue 258 Sande Gilda
- May 18, 2012: Move metadata to quickstarts Pete Muir
- Apr 11, 2012: Remove odd trailing slashes Pete Muir
- Apr 10, 2012: Solve issue #194 :-) auto transform links from readme.md -> readme.html Pete Muir
- Apr 05, 2012: Missed adding the arquillian instructions, fixed indentations, modified jta-crash-rec and jts-distributed-crash-rec, add missing authors Sande Gilda
- Apr 03, 2012: Fix issues 170,171,172. modify jta-crash-rec to follow template and change web form instructions Sande Gilda
- Apr 01, 2012: More readme cleanup Sande Gilda
- Mar 26, 2012: Attempt to standardize readme.md files Sande Gilda
- Jan 26, 2012: Make the readme files consistent with titles, sections (what is it?, etc), and project and product names. uppercase readme.html file names Sande Gilda
- Jan 16, 2012: Jira as7-2323: add getting started developing applications guide link to all readme.md files. change readme.md files to uppercase for consistency Sande Gilda
- Jan 05, 2012: Implement pete's review comments Mmusgrov
- Jan 05, 2012: Integrate petes review comments Mmusgrov
- Jan 03, 2012: Example of how to manually manage transactions and jpa entity managers Mmusgrov