I’m trying to make simple application using Spring, JPA and embedded H2 database. Recently I’ve come across this strange issue with declarative transactions. They just doesn’t commit if I autowire my DAO with @Repository annotation. More specifically I get exception on flush:
javax.persistence.TransactionRequiredException:
Exception Description: No transaction is currently active
Here is my setup:
persistence.xml
<persistence-unit name="schedulePU" transaction-type="RESOURCE_LOCAL">
<provider>org.eclipse.persistence.jpa.PersistenceProvider</provider>
<exclude-unlisted-classes>false</exclude-unlisted-classes>
<properties>
<property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.driver" value="org.h2.Driver" />
<property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.url" value="jdbc:h2:~/scheduleDB" />
<property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.user" value="sa" />
<property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.password" value="" />
<property name="eclipselink.target-database" value="org.eclipse.persistence.platform.database.H2Platform" />
<property name="eclipselink.ddl-generation" value="drop-and-create-tables" />
<property name="eclipselink.logging.level" value="FINE"/>
</properties>
</persistence-unit>
Entity
@Entity
@Table(name = "Professors")
public class Professor {
@Id
@GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private int id;
private String name;
public Professor() { }
public Professor(String name) {
this.name = name;
}
}
DAO
@Repository
public class JpaDao {
@PersistenceContext
private EntityManager em;
@Transactional
public void addProfessor(Professor professor) {
em.persist(professor);
em.flush();
}
}
database.xml (included from root spring context)
<beans>
<context:component-scan base-package="com.spybot.schedule.dao" />
<bean class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.support.PersistenceAnnotationBeanPostProcessor" />
<bean id="entityManagerFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalEntityManagerFactoryBean">
<property name="persistenceUnitName" value="schedulePU" />
</bean>
<bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.JpaTransactionManager">
<property name="entityManagerFactory" ref="entityManagerFactory" />
</bean>
<tx:annotation-driven transaction-manager="transactionManager" />
</beans>
Controller
@Controller
public class HomeController {
@Inject
JpaDao dao;
@RequestMapping("/add")
public @ResponseBody String add(String name) {
Professor p = new Professor(name);
dao.addProfessor(p);
return ":)";
}
}
And now the interesting part. If I remove @Repository annotation from DAO and specify it explicitly in database.xml, everything works fine.
Update
Putting another <tx:annotation-driven /> into spring servlet config fixes the problem, but why?
Probably because the
component-scanin yourspring-servlet.xmlis also including your DAO classes in its scanning and therefore creating instances for them in its application context (not the “database” one)… so that when your web accesses these DAOs from web controllers, it is accessing non-transactional versions of them (unless you add thattx:annotation-driventag).Therefore, adding that tag is in fact a bad solution because it still creates your DAO instances in the wrong application context: better create a more specific
base-packageconfiguration for your web layer component creation.I had this same problem because I thought a
<context:include-filter>in myspring-servlet.xmlwas taking care of only scanning@Controllerclasses… but no 🙁