How does Spring's JPARepository and #Transactional behave together? - spring

I have two methods (in a Spring boot application) that handle an entity. The entity has two fields, both boolean isDefault and isPdfGenerated. The first method (which is called from a controller) changes the isDefault flag when a new entity is created while the second one (called from a #Scheduled annotated method) changes the isPdfGenrated after it generates a pdf file for that entity.
My problem is that sometimes the second method finds entities with the isPdfGenerated flag set to false even though the file has been generated and saved in the database.
Both the methods have the #Transactional annotation and the repository interface for the entity extends JpARepository.
My guess is that the first method loads the entity from the database before the second method does but saves the entity after the second method does its job, thus overriding the isPdfGenerated flag.
Is this possible ? If the answer is yes, how should one handle such cases ? Shouldn't JPARepository handle the case when an entity gets updated from an external source ?
Bellow is some code to better illustrate the situation.
MyController:
#Controller
#RequestMapping("/customers")
public class MyController {
#Autowired
private EntityService entityService;
#RequestMapping(value = "/{id}/changeDefault", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String changeDefault(#PathVariable("id") Long customerId, #ModelAttribute EntityForm entityForm, Model model) {
Entity newDefaultEntity = entityService.updateDefaultEntity(customerId, entityForm);
if (newDefaultEntity == null)
return "redirect:/customers/" + customerId;
return "redirect:/customers/" + customerId + "/entity/default;
}
}
EntityService:
import org.springframework.transaction.annotation.Transactional;
#Service
public class EntityService {
#Autowired
private EntityRepository entityRepository;
#Autowired
private CustomerRepository customerRepository;
#Transactional
public Entity updateDefaultEntity(Long customerId, submittedData) {
Customer customer = customerRepository.findById(customerId);
if(customer == null)
return customer; // I know there are better ways to do this
Entity currentDefaultEntity = entityRepository.findUniqueByCustomerAndDefaultFlag(customer, true);
if(currentDefaultEntity == null)
return null; // I know there are better ways to do this also
Entity newDefaultEntity = new Entity();
newDefaultEntity.setField1(submittedData.getField1());
newDefaultEntity.setField2(submittedData.getField2());
newDefaultEntity.setCustomer(customer);
oldDefaultEntity.setDefaultFlag(false);
newDefaultEntity.setDefaultFlag(true);
entityRepository.save(newDefaultEntity);
}
#Transactional
public void generatePdfDocument(Entity entity) {
Document pdfDocument = generateDocument(entity);
if(pdfDocument == null)
return;
documentRepository.save(pdfDocument);
entity.setPdfGeneratedFlag(true);
entityRepository.save(entity);
}
}
ScheduledTasks:
#Component
public class ScheduledTasks {
private static final int SECOND_IN_MILLISECONDS = 1000;
private static final int MINUTE_IN_SECONDS = 60;
#Autowired
private EntityRepository entityRepository;
#Autowired
private DocumentService documentService;
#Scheduled(fixedDelay = 20 * SECOND_IN_MILLISECONDS)
#Transactional
public void generateDocuments() {
List<Quotation> quotationList = entityRepository.findByPdfGeneratedFlag(false);
for(Entity entity : entitiesList) {
documentService.generatePdfDocument(entity);
}
}
}
DocumentService:
#Service
public class DocumentService {
#Autowired
private EntityRepository entityRepository;
#Autowired
private DocumentRepository documentRepository;
#Transactional
public void generatePdfDocument(Entity entity) {
Document pdfDocument = generateDocument(entity);
if(pdfDocument == null)
return;
documentRepository.save(pdfDocument);
entity.setPdfGeneratedFlag(true);
entityRepository.save(entity);
}
}
EntityRepository:
#Repository
public interface EntityRepository extends JpaRepository<Entity, Long> {
Entity findById(#Param("id") Long id);
List<Entity> findByPdfGeneratedFlag(#Param("is_pdf_generated") Boolean pdfGeneratedFlag);
Entity findUniqueByCustomerAndDefaultFlag(
#Param("customer") Customer customer,
#Param("defaultFlag") Boolean defaultFlag
);
}
DocumentRepository:
#Repository
public interface DocumentRepository extends JpaRepository<Document, Long> {
Document findById(#Param("id") Long id);
}
Entity:
#Entity
#Table(name = "entities")
#JsonIdentityInfo(generator = ObjectIdGenerators.IntSequenceGenerator.class, property = "id")
public class Entity {
private Long id;
private boolean defaultFlag;
private boolean pdfGeneratedFlag;
private String field1;
private String field2;
private Customer customer;
public Entity() { }
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
#Column(name = "id")
public Long getId() {
return id;
}
public void setId(Long id) {
this.id = id;
}
#Column(name = "is_default")
public boolean isDefaultFlag() {
return defaultFlag;
}
public void setDefaultFlag(boolean defaultFlag) {
this.defaultFlag = defaultFlag;
}
#Column(name = "is_pdf_generated")
public boolean isPdfGeneratedFlag() {
return pdfGeneratedFlag;
}
public void setPdfGeneratedFlag(boolean pdfGeneratedFlag) {
this.pdfGeneratedFlag = pdfGeneratedFlag;
}
#Column(name = "field_1")
public String getField1() {
return field1;
}
public void setField1(String field1) {
this.field1 = field1;
}
#Column(name = "field_2")
public String getField2() {
return field2;
}
public void setField2(String field2) {
this.field2 = field2;
}
#ManyToOne
#JoinColumn(name = "customer_id", referencedColumnName = "id", nullable = false)
public Customer getCustomer() {
return customer;
}
public void setCustomer(Customer customer) {
this.customer = customer;
}
#Override
public boolean equals(Object o) {
if (this == o) return true;
if (o == null || getClass() != o.getClass()) return false;
Entity quotation = (Entity) o;
return id != null ? id.equals(entity.id) : entity.id == null;
}
#Override
public int hashCode() {
return id != null ? id.hashCode() : 0;
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return "Entity{" +
"id=" + id +
", pdfGeneratedFlag=" + pdfGeneratedFlag +
", defaultFlag=" + defaultFlag +
", field1=" + field1 +
", field2=" + field2 +
", customer=" + (customer == null ? null : customer.getId()) +
"}";
}
}
I have omitted the other classes because they are either POJOs ( EntityForm ) or the same as other domain model classes ( Document ).

If you're talking about a row on the database that is getting updated by another process after the first process has read it but before it has been updated, then you need to put in some sort of optimistic locking strategy.
This will be handled by the underlying ORM api (e.g. Hibernate or Eclipselink) rather than Spring Data (which will just handle an optimistic locking errors thrown by the ORM).
Have a look at this article. Bear in mind that if you want optimistic locking you need some way of determining a row's version. In JPA this is normally done using a column annotated with the #Version tag.
https://vladmihalcea.com/hibernate-locking-patterns-how-does-optimistic-lock-mode-work/

Related

How do I insert values of elements that are part of the EmbeddedId in JPA?

I have a case where I need to execute an insert statement via createNativeQuery. I have an entity list I'm looping through in order to set the properties accordingly from another bean class, and then persist that data to the oracle database.
The problem I am facing is persisting the data that is part of the embeddedId (item, loc, weekstart, type, forecastId, insertTS). I need to persist that data for the new records to be inserted into the database. When I try to set the values from the POJO bean to my set method for the properties of my entity bean, nothing happens. Below is my code for setting the values of the properties from the POJO bean to my entity bean, along with my persistence method and the insert query being executed:
Validation class where validation occurs beforehand (missing to get the point) that includes the setting of my entity properties from the POJO bean:
List <InsertPromoData> insertPromos = new ArrayList<InsertPromoData>();
promo.forEach(record -> {
if (record.getErrorList().size() == 0) {
rowsSuccessful++;
Util.writeSuccessToFile(templateCd, successFile, record, successFields);
try {
InsertPromoData insertData = new InsertPromoData();
insertData.getId().setItem(record.getItem());
insertData.getId().setLoc(record.getLoc());
insertData.getId().setWeekStart(record.getWeek_Start_Date());
insertData.setNumberOfWeeks(record.getNumber_Of_Weeks());
insertData.getId().setType(record.getType());
insertData.getId().setForecastId(record.getForecast_ID());
insertData.setQty(record.getUnits());
insertPromos.add(insertData);
}
catch (Exception e) {
logger.error("Error with setting insertPromolist from promo list values and the error is " + e.getMessage());
}
}
else {
if (rowsFailure == 0) {
Util.writeHeaderToFile(templateCd, errorFile);
}
rowsFailure++;
Util.writeErrorToFile(templateCd, errorFile, record, record.getErrorList());
}
});
errorFile.close();
successFile.close();
OracleImpl.insertPromoData(insertPromos);
POJO bean (promo is the variable representing this list of beans in validation class above):
public class PromoBean extends ErrorListBean
{
public String Item;
public String Loc;
public String Week_Start_Date;
public String Units;
public String Forecast_ID;
public String Type;
public String Number_Of_Weeks;
public String getItem() {
return Item;
}
public void setItem(String item) {
Item = item;
}
public String getLoc() {
return Loc;
}
public void setLoc(String loc) {
Loc = loc;
}
public String getWeek_Start_Date() {
return Week_Start_Date;
}
public void setWeek_Start_Date(String week_Start_Date) {
Week_Start_Date = week_Start_Date;
}
public String getNumber_Of_Weeks() {
return Number_Of_Weeks;
}
public void setNumber_Of_Weeks(String number_Of_Weeks) {
Number_Of_Weeks = number_Of_Weeks;
}
public String getType() {
return Type;
}
public void setType(String type) {
Type = type;
}
public String getForecast_ID() {
return Forecast_ID;
}
public void setForecast_ID(String forecast_ID) {
Forecast_ID = forecast_ID;
}
public String getUnits() {
return Units;
}
public void setUnits(String units) {
Units = units;
}
}
Embeddable class representing the composite primary key of the table:
#Embeddable
public class PromoID implements Serializable {
#Column(name = "ITEM")
private String item;
#Column(name = "LOC")
private String loc;
#Column(name = "WK_START")
private String weekStart;
#Column(name = "TYPE")
private String type;
#Column(name = "FCSTID")
private String forecastId;
#Column(name = "U_TIMESTAMP")
private String insertTS;
public PromoID() {
}
public PromoID (String item, String loc, String weekStart, String type, String forecastId, String insertTS) {
this.item = item;
this.loc = loc;
this.weekStart = weekStart;
this.type = type;
this.forecastId = forecastId;
this.insertTS = insertTS;
}
public String getItem() {
return item;
}
public void setItem(String item) {
this.item = item;
}
public String getLoc() {
return loc;
}
public void setLoc(String loc) {
this.loc = loc;
}
public String getWeekStart() {
return weekStart;
}
public void setWeekStart(String weekStart) {
this.weekStart = weekStart;
}
public String getType() {
return type;
}
public void setType(String type) {
this.type = type;
}
public String getForecastId() {
return forecastId;
}
public void setForecastId(String forecastId) {
this.forecastId = forecastId;
}
public String getInsertTS() {
return insertTS;
}
public void setInsertTS(String insertTS) {
this.insertTS = insertTS;
}
//hashcode and equals methods
Persistence Bean:
#Entity
#Table(name = "U_USER_PROMO")
public class InsertPromoData {
#EmbeddedId
private PromoID id;
#Column(name="NUMBER_OF_WEEKS")
String numberOfWeeks;
#Column(name="QTY")
String qty;
#Id
#AttributeOverrides(
{
#AttributeOverride(name = "item",column = #Column(name="ITEM")),
#AttributeOverride(name = "loc", column = #Column(name="LOC")),
#AttributeOverride(name = "weekStart", column = #Column(name="WK_START")),
#AttributeOverride(name = "type", column = #Column(name="TYPE")),
#AttributeOverride(name = "forecastId", column = #Column(name="FCSTID"))
}
)
public PromoID getId() {
return id;
}
public void setId(PromoID id) {
this.id = id;
}
public String getNumberOfWeeks() {
return numberOfWeeks;
}
public void setNumberOfWeeks(String numberOfWeeks) {
this.numberOfWeeks = numberOfWeeks;
}
public String getQty() {
return qty;
}
public void setQty(String qty) {
this.qty = qty;
}
}
DAO class method to execute the update (entitymanagerfactory emf already initialized):
public static void insertPromoData(List<InsertPromoData> insertData) {
logger.debug("Execution of method insertPromoData in Dao started");
System.out.println("Size of the insertData list is " + insertData.size());
EntityManager em = emf.createEntityManager();
try {
em.getTransaction().begin();
System.out.println("Beginning transaction for insertPromoData");
Query query = em.createNativeQuery(env.getProperty("insertPromoUploadData"));
for (InsertPromoData promoData : insertData) {
query.setParameter("item", promoData.getId().getItem());
query.setParameter("location", promoData.getId().getLoc());
query.setParameter("wkStart", promoData.getId().getWeekStart());
query.setParameter("numberOfWeeks", promoData.getNumberOfWeeks());
query.setParameter("type", promoData.getId().getType());
query.setParameter("fcstId", promoData.getId().getForecastId());
query.setParameter("quantity", promoData.getQty());
query.executeUpdate();
}
em.getTransaction().commit();
}
catch(Exception e) {
logger.error("Exception in beginning transaction");
e.printStackTrace();
}
finally {
em.clear();
em.close();
}
logger.debug("Execution of method insertPromoData in Dao ended");
}
Query in properties file:
insertPromoUploadData = INSERT INTO {h-schema}U_USER_PROMO (ITEM, LOC, WK_START, NUMBER_OF_WEEKS, TYPE, FCSTID, QTY, U_TIMESTAMP) VALUES (:item, :location, TO_DATE(:wkStart,'MM DD YYYY'), :numberOfWeeks, :type, :fcstId, :quantity, SYSDATE)
My list size from my DAO class is returning as 0 once I begin the transaction and not sure why it is empty. Is there a reason that it is empty? I'm trying to persist each of the fields to the database (including the composite key fields) via insert query. Any help appreciated.
After looking into this for hours, I finally came to the conclusion that the simplest way to executeUpdate() without running into issues due to my current #EmbeddedId/#Embeddable logic was to change it to use #IdClass for my composite PK class, and annotate the fields from the PK in my entity with #Id. This allowed my data to be persisted to the database. Another slight difference was adding the insertTS in my entity class and annotating with #Id and generating getters/setters. This was necessary for JPA to recognize all the properties being referenced that I am wanting to persist, though I am persisting insertTS using SYSDATE function from the oracle DB instead of utilizing the get/set methods and setting to the current time from the java side.
I am sure there is a way to use #EmbeddedId/#Embeddable logic and be able to persist the fields that are part of the EmbeddedId, however, this I found to be a more simplistic way of doing it without further complexity in the code.

JHipster - Insert in the database with the GET method

I have to create an application with Jhipster but i never use it before.
When a user send a GET request to the address http://localhost:8080/api/newmesure/{mac-address}/{value}
I want to insert a new mesure in my database.
First i created 3 entity "Plantes", "Capteurs" and "Mesures" with this format :
Image here : https://i.stack.imgur.com/zJqia.png (I'm not allowed to post)
I activated the JPA Filtering to create a #Query to insert data in my database but i read that was not possible.
In /src/main/java/com/mycompany/myapp/web/rest/MesuresRessources.java :
/**
* REST controller for managing {#link com.mycompany.myapp.domain.Mesures}.
*/
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/api")
public class MesuresResource {
private final Logger log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(MesuresResource.class);
private static final String ENTITY_NAME = "mesures";
#Value("${jhipster.clientApp.name}")
private String applicationName;
private final MesuresService mesuresService;
private final MesuresQueryService mesuresQueryService;
public MesuresResource(MesuresService mesuresService, MesuresQueryService mesuresQueryService) {
this.mesuresService = mesuresService;
this.mesuresQueryService = mesuresQueryService;
}
#GetMapping("/newMesure/{mac}/{value}")
public String newMesure(#PathVariable String mac,#PathVariable int value) {
log.debug("Adresse MAC : "+mac);
log.debug("Valeur : "+value);
#Query("SELECT valeur FROM Mesures WHERE id = 1") //not working
Mesures getValeur(); //not working
return "Mesure ajoutée";
}
}
In /src/main/java/com/mycompany/myapp/domain/Mesures.java :
/**
* A Mesures.
*/
#Entity
#Table(name = "mesures")
public class Mesures implements Serializable {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
#Id
#GeneratedValue(strategy = GenerationType.IDENTITY)
private Long id;
#Column(name = "valeur")
private Integer valeur;
#ManyToOne(optional = false)
#NotNull
#JsonIgnoreProperties("macs")
private Capteurs mac;
// jhipster-needle-entity-add-field - JHipster will add fields here, do not remove
public Long getId() {
return id;
}
public void setId(Long id) {
this.id = id;
}
public Integer getValeur() {
return valeur;
}
public Mesures valeur(Integer valeur) {
this.valeur = valeur;
return this;
}
public void setValeur(Integer valeur) {
this.valeur = valeur;
}
public Capteurs getMac() {
return mac;
}
public Mesures mac(Capteurs capteurs) {
this.mac = capteurs;
return this;
}
public void setMac(Capteurs capteurs) {
this.mac = capteurs;
}
// jhipster-needle-entity-add-getters-setters - JHipster will add getters and setters here, do not remove
#Override
public boolean equals(Object o) {
if (this == o) {
return true;
}
if (!(o instanceof Mesures)) {
return false;
}
return id != null && id.equals(((Mesures) o).id);
}
#Override
public int hashCode() {
return 31;
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return "Mesures{" +
"id=" + getId() +
", valeur=" + getValeur() +
"}";
}
}
Louan
Learning java with JHipster is probably not a wise idea, it uses a very rich technology stack which might lose you unless you invest enough time to learn the basics.
There are many things wrong in your code and approach:
You can't use #Query annotation inside the body of method a of your REST controller, it must be used in your #Repository interface, this code can't compile. See https://www.baeldung.com/spring-data-jpa-query for a quick introduction
JPA filtering is not related to inserting into database
In HTTP/REST, GET method is supposed to be idempotent. For making changes in your database you should use POST or PUT methods. See What is idempotency in HTTP methods?
Your entity naming convention is not consistent: use singular for entity classes because each entity object represents one single instance of Mesure. Here you have Plantes (plural), Capteur (singular) and Mesures (plural). For table names, JHipster uses singular but plural is quite common too because a table holds many rows. Of course, this is just a convention and you or your team may decide to apply another (like a prefix for table names) but the key point is to be consistent.

#Transactional in Service

I have created a voting application and I have method that changes the number of votes. It implements an interface with #Transactional annotation.
#Transactional(readOnly = true)
public interface VotingService {
Vote getByRestaurantId(int restaurantId);
Vote get(int id);
List<Vote> getWithRestaurantsByDate(LocalDateTime date);
List<Vote> getWithRestaurantsToday(HttpServletResponse response, int id);
#Transactional
Vote voteFor(int restaurantId, int userId);
}
I use SpringBoot. Will it work correctly while simultaneously voting several users. And how can you test such an action?
The sequential voting is working properly.
Code for changes the number of voices like this:
#Service
public class VotingServiceImpl implements VotingService {
...
#Override
public Vote voteFor(int restaurantId, int userId) {
...
Vote vote = getByRestaurantId(restaurantId);
vote.setNumberOfVotes(vote.getNumberOfVotes() + 1)
...
return vote;
...
}
...
}
#Entity
#Table(name = "votes", uniqueConstraints = {#UniqueConstraint(columnNames = {"restaurant_id", "date", "votes"}, name = "votes_unique_restaurant_date_votes_idx")})
public class Vote extends AbstractEntity {
#Column(name = "votes")
private int numberOfVotes;
#ManyToOne(fetch = FetchType.LAZY)
#JoinColumn(name = "restaurant_id", nullable = false)
#NotNull
private Restaurant restaurant;
public int getNumberOfVotes() {
return numberOfVotes;
}
public void setNumberOfVotes(int numberOfVotes) {
this.numberOfVotes = numberOfVotes;
}
public Vote() {
}
public Restaurant getRestaurant() {
return restaurant;
}
public void setRestaurant(Restaurant restaurant) {
this.restaurant = restaurant;
}
#Override
public String toString() {
return "Vote{" +
super.toString() +
"numberOfVotes=" + numberOfVotes +
", restaurant=" + restaurant +
'}';
}
}
Thanks!
VotingService is an interface.
The implementing class
VotingServiceImplis singleton class by default in spring. It is
shared between threads.
It should not have instance variable for
holding voting information.
You can verify the correctness of the service by executing parallel request using postman or jmeter

Problems with WebDataBinder and Set.Class

i am having trouble with binding my data from a form :
I have two class
#Entity
#Table(name = "ROLES")
public class Role implements GenericDomain {
private Long id;
private String code;
private String name;
private Set<Privilege> privileges = new HashSet<Privilege>(0);
public Role() {}
/* getter and setter*/
#ManyToMany(cascade=CascadeType.ALL)
#JoinTable(name = "ROLES_PRIVILEGES"
, joinColumns = { #JoinColumn(name = "ROLE_ID") }
, inverseJoinColumns = { #JoinColumn(name = "PRIVILEGE_ID") }
)
public Set<Privilege> getPrivileges() {
return this.privileges;
}
public void setPrivileges(Set<Privilege> privileges) {
this.privileges = privileges;
}
/* overide of hascode, equals*/
}
And
#Entity
#Table(name = "PRIVILEGES")
public class Privilege implements GenericDomain {
private Long id;
private String code;
private Set<Role> roles = new HashSet<Role>(0);
public Privilege() {}
/* getter and setter*/
#ManyToMany(cascade=CascadeType.REFRESH, mappedBy="privileges")
public Set<Role> getRoles() {
return this.roles;
}
public void setRoles(Set<Role> roles) {
this.roles = roles;
}
#Override
public String toString(){
return this.getCode() + this.getComment();
}
/*overide equals and hascode*/
and in my controller i have :
#InitBinder
public void initBinder(WebDataBinder binder) {
binder.registerCustomEditor(Set.class, "privileges", new CustomCollectionEditor(Set.class) {
#Override
protected Object convertElement(Object element) {
return (element == null)?null:privilegeService.getOne(Integer.parseInt((String)element));
}
});
}
#RequestMapping(value = "edit", method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String saveOldRole( #ModelAttribute("role") Role role
, BindingResult result
, ModelMap model
) {
validator.validate(role, result);
if (result.hasErrors()){
logger.error(result.getAllErrors());
model.addAllAttributes(result.getModel());
return "/admin/role/edit";
}
logger.info(role.getPrivileges());
Iterator p = role.getPrivileges().iterator();
while(p.hasNext()){
logger.info(p.next().getClass());
}
roleService.saveOrUpdate(role);
model.addAttribute("roles", roleService.getAll());
sessionStatus.setComplete();
return "redirect:/admin/role/list.do";
}
and my debug is
role.RoleController:93 - [[MANAGE_USERS], [MANAGE_ROLES]]
role.RoleController:96 - class java.util.LinkedHashSet
role.RoleController:96 - class java.util.LinkedHashSet
22:29:44,915 ERROR tomcat-http--7 property.BasicPropertyAccessor:194 - IllegalArgumentException in class: com.stunaz.domain.Privilege, getter method of property: id
I dont understand why at 96, the class type is java.util.LinkedHashSet, i thought it should be Privileges.
I dont understand why my role.getPrivileges() is a Set of Set, it should be a Set of Privilege.
Of course at saveOrUpdate am getting an error.
finaly!!!
there were no bug at all!
i updated my spring jar from 3.0.5.RELEASE to 3.1.0.M1, and voila : somthing stopped working with webdatabinder and CustomCollectionEditor.
i just rollback to 3.0.5.RELEASE and everything is fine.

Cannot delete entity (JPA & Spring)

What ever I try, I cannot delete a user entity when I call delete() from my userService class. I get an exception java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Entity must be managed to call remove: com.blackbox.genesis.entities.User#30168a, try merging the detached and try the remove again. I'm obviously doing something wrong - despite merging, but I can't see what. Everything else works fine - I can create and update user entities without any problem.
Regards
My entity class;
#Entity
#Table(uniqueConstraints = {#UniqueConstraint(columnNames = "EMAIL")})
public class User implements Serializable {
#Id
#Column(name="username", length=50)
private String username;
#OneToOne(cascade = {CascadeType.ALL})
private Password password;
private boolean enabled;
private int serial;
private String email;
#Version
private int version;
#ElementCollection(targetClass=Authority.class)
#CollectionTable(name="USER_AUTHORITY")
private List<Authority> authorities;
#OneToMany(mappedBy="user", fetch=FetchType.LAZY, cascade=CascadeType.ALL, ``orphanRemoval=true)
private Set<License> licenses;
private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;
public User() {
super();
this.authorities = new ArrayList<Authority>();
}
.... getters/setters.
My DAO class;
#Repository
public class UserJpaController {
#PersistenceContext
EntityManager em;
protected static final Logger logger = Logger.getLogger("com.blackbox.genesisng.entities.UsersJpaController");
public void create(User user) throws PreexistingEntityException, Exception {
if (findUser(user.getUsername()) != null) {
throw new PreexistingEntityException("Users " + user + " already exists.");
}
em.persist(user);
em.flush();
}
public void edit(User user) throws NonexistentEntityException, Exception {
user = em.merge(user);
em.flush();
}
public void destroy(String id) throws NonexistentEntityException {
User user = em.find(User.class, id);
user = em.merge(user);
em.remove(user);
}
public List<User> findUserEntities() {
return findUserEntities(true, -1, -1);
}
public List<User> findUserEntities(int maxResults, int firstResult) {
return findUserEntities(false, maxResults, firstResult);
}
private List<User> findUserEntities(boolean all, int maxResults, int firstResult) {
Query q = em.createQuery("select object(o) from User as o");
if (!all) {
q.setMaxResults(maxResults);
q.setFirstResult(firstResult);
}
return q.getResultList();
}
public User findUser(String id) {
return em.find(User.class, id);
}
public int getUserCount() {
Query q = em.createQuery("select count(o) from User as o");
return ((Long) q.getSingleResult()).intValue();
}
public User findUserByEmail(String email) {
Query q = em.createQuery("select Object(o) from User as o where o.email = :email");
q.setParameter("email", email);
List list = q.getResultList();
if (list.size() == 0) {
return null;
}
return (User) list.get(0);
}
public boolean exists(String id) {
try {
em.getReference(User.class,id);
return true;
}
catch (EntityNotFoundException e) {
return false;
}
}
}
and finally, the relevant portion of my service class
#Service
public class UserService {
#Autowired
UserJpaController dao;
#Autowired
LicenseJpaController licenseDao;
#Transactional
public void delete(UserDTO userDTO) {
if (exists(userDTO.getUserName())){
try {
dao.destroy(userDTO.getUserName());
} catch (NonexistentEntityException e) {
// ignore as the previous test should prevent this.
}
}
}
So sorry, but I'm an idiot! I was not calling the service class that I thought I was. Fixed that and everything works as expected. Once again, sorry folks.
Regards
Remove the
user = em.merge(user);
statement in your DAO destroy method. I am not sure if it causes the probem, but it is not needed because the user is loaded in the statement before.

Resources