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Home/ Questions/Q 342915
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T10:50:56+00:00 2026-05-12T10:50:56+00:00

There are two options when setting up your JBPM session. You can put your

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There are two options when setting up your JBPM session.

  1. You can put your JBPM mappings in the same Hibernate session, and as a result, have their tables in the database with the applications tables.

  2. You can put the JBPM mappings in a separate Hibernate session, and have them in a separate database.

I have seen one article that recommends method 1, and I can see why because it allows you to have foreign key references to the JBPM data objects directly. The only issue that I have seen pop up is if you try and save the jbpm object while a JBPM process is running, you get a deadlock on the database.

Other than that, which method would be better, and for what reasons?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T10:50:56+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 10:50 am

    It depends on the architecture you want to build.

    If you want one centrally managed workflow component, where several different applications communicate with, a single database is the way to go.

    Otoh, if workflow is specific to only some applications, it is better to keep the databases separated. That way, you can upgrade jBPM later in some applications and leave it as it is in others.

    But you can also decide to have a separate DB for every app, even if there are a lot. This way, the runtime performance stays great since there is no huge table to manage)

    As you can see, jBPM is very flexible in how to embed it into your architecture. So you will need to make the analysis for yourself and decide what’s the best approach, taken into account current and future evolutions of your architecture.

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