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Home/ Questions/Q 6837515
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T23:29:12+00:00 2026-05-26T23:29:12+00:00

What should happen, if both the entity class and its superclass implements methods annotated

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What should happen, if both the entity class and its superclass implements methods annotated with javax.persistence.PostLoad? Which method must be called and which as first? Does it dependent on the visibility of the method (private, public)?

(Hibernate default session doesn’t calls such methods at all and I am about to implement a workaround using the Hibernate PostLoadEventListener.)

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T23:29:12+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 11:29 pm

    Let me copy some parts of the Java Persistence API 2.0 FR specification which I believe might answer your question.

    3.5.1 Lifecycle Callback Methods

    The callback methods can have public, private, protected, or package
    level access
    , but must not be static or final.

    3.5.4 Multiple Lifecycle Callback Methods for an Entity Lifecycle Event

    If multiple classes in an inheritance
    hierarchy—entity classes and/or mapped superclasses—define entity
    listeners, the listeners defined for a superclass are invoked before
    the listeners defined for its subclasses in this order
    .

    (…)

    If a lifecycle callback method for the same lifecycle event is also
    specified on the entity class and/or one or more of its entity or
    mapped superclasses, the callback methods on the entity class and/or
    superclasses are invoked after the other lifecycle callback methods,
    most general superclass first.

    And following section brings a very detailed example which might solve your problem:

    3.5.5 Example

    There are several entity classes and listeners for animals:

    @Entity
    public class Animal {
        ....
        @PostPersist
        protected void postPersistAnimal() { .... }
    }
    
    @Entity
    @EntityListeners(PetListener.class)
    public class Pet extends Animal {
        ....
    }
    
    @Entity
    @EntityListeners({CatListener.class, CatListener2.class})
    public class Cat extends Pet {
        ....
    }
    
    public class PetListener {
        @PostPersist
        protected void postPersistPetListenerMethod(Object pet) { .... }
    }
    
    public class CatListener {
        @PostPersist
        protected void postPersistCatListenerMethod(Object cat) { .... }
    }
    
    public class CatListener2 {
        @PostPersist
        protected void postPersistCatListener2Method(Object cat) { .... }
    }
    

    If a PostPersist event occurs on an instance of Cat, the following
    methods are called in order:
    – postPersistPetListenerMethod
    – postPersistCatListenerMethod
    – postPersistCatListener2Method
    – postPersistAnimal

    Hope that helps!

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