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9.4. Demarcation by Declarative Transactions
Overview
You can also demarcate transactions by declaring transaction policies in your blueprint XML file. By applying the appropriate transaction policy to a bean or bean method (for example, the
Required
policy), you can ensure that a transaction is started whenever that particular bean or bean method is invoked. At the end of the bean method, the transaction will be committed. (This approach is analogous to the way that transactions are dealt with in Enterprise Java Beans).
OSGi declarative transactions enable you to define transaction policies at the following scopes in your blueprint file:
Bean-level declaration
To declare transaction policies at the bean level, insert a
tx:transaction
element as a child of the bean
element, as follows:
<blueprint xmlns="http://www.osgi.org/xmlns/blueprint/v1.0.0" xmlns:tx="http://aries.apache.org/xmlns/transactions/v1.1.0"> <bean id="accountFoo" class="org.fusesource.example.Account"> <tx:transaction method="*" value="Required"/> <property name="accountName" value="Foo"/> </bean> <bean id="accountBar" class="org.fusesource.example.Account"> <tx:transaction method="*" value="Required"/> <property name="accountName" value="Bar"/> </bean> </blueprint>
In the preceding example, the
Required
transaction policy is applied to all methods of the accountFoo
bean and the accountBar
bean (where the method
attribute specifies the wildcard, *
, to match all bean methods).
Top-level declaration
To declare transaction policies at the top level, insert a
tx:transaction
element as a child of the blueprint
element, as follows:
<blueprint xmlns="http://www.osgi.org/xmlns/blueprint/v1.0.0" xmlns:tx="http://aries.apache.org/xmlns/transactions/v1.1.0"> <tx:transaction bean="account*" value="Required"/> <bean id="accountFoo" class="org.fusesource.example.Account"> <property name="accountName" value="Foo"/> </bean> <bean id="accountBar" class="org.fusesource.example.Account"> <property name="accountName" value="Bar"/> </bean> </blueprint>
In the preceding example, the
Required
transaction policy is applied to all methods of every bean whose ID matches the pattern, account*
.
tx:transaction attributes
The
tx:transaction
element supports the following attributes:
bean
- (Top-level only) Specifies a list of bean IDs (comma or space separated) to which the transaction policy applies. For example:
<blueprint ...> <tx:transaction bean="accountFoo,accountBar" value="..."/> </blueprint>
You can also use the wildcard character, *, which may appear at most once in each list entry. For example:<blueprint ...> <tx:transaction bean="account*,jms*" value="..."/> </blueprint>
If thebean
attribute is omitted, it defaults to*
(matching all non-synthetic beans in the blueprint file). method
- (Top-level and bean-level) Specifies a list of method names (comma or space separated) to which the transaction policy applies. For example:
<bean id="accountFoo" class="org.fusesource.example.Account"> <tx:transaction method="debit,credit,transfer" value="Required"/> <property name="accountName" value="Foo"/> </bean>
You can also use the wildcard character, *, which may appear at most once in each list entry.If themethod
attribute is omitted, it defaults to*
(matching all methods in the applicable beans). value
- (Top-level and bean-level) Specifies the transaction policy. The policy values have the same semantics as the policies defined in the EJB 3.0 specification, as follows:
Required
—support a current transaction; create a new one if none exists.Mandatory
—support a current transaction; throw an exception if no current transaction exists.RequiresNew
—create a new transaction, suspending the current transaction if one exists.Supports
—support a current transaction; execute non-transactionally if none exists.NotSupported
—do not support a current transaction; rather always execute non-transactionally.Never
—do not support a current transaction; throw an exception if a current transaction exists.