For the latest stable version, please use Spring Data JPA 3.3.5! |
Usage
You can now use the methods from RevisionRepository
to query the revisions of the entity, as the following test case shows:
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
@Import(EnversDemoConfiguration.class) (1)
class EnversIntegrationTests {
final PersonRepository repository;
final TransactionTemplate tx;
EnversIntegrationTests(@Autowired PersonRepository repository, @Autowired PlatformTransactionManager tm) {
this.repository = repository;
this.tx = new TransactionTemplate(tm);
}
@Test
void testRepository() {
Person updated = preparePersonHistory();
Revisions<Long, Person> revisions = repository.findRevisions(updated.id);
Iterator<Revision<Long, Person>> revisionIterator = revisions.iterator();
checkNextRevision(revisionIterator, "John", RevisionType.INSERT);
checkNextRevision(revisionIterator, "Jonny", RevisionType.UPDATE);
checkNextRevision(revisionIterator, null, RevisionType.DELETE);
assertThat(revisionIterator.hasNext()).isFalse();
}
/**
* Checks that the next element in the iterator is a Revision entry referencing a Person
* with the given name after whatever change brought that Revision into existence.
* <p>
* As a side effect the Iterator gets advanced by one element.
*
* @param revisionIterator the iterator to be tested.
* @param name the expected name of the Person referenced by the Revision.
* @param revisionType the type of the revision denoting if it represents an insert, update or delete.
*/
private void checkNextRevision(Iterator<Revision<Long, Person>> revisionIterator, String name,
RevisionType revisionType) {
assertThat(revisionIterator.hasNext()).isTrue();
Revision<Long, Person> revision = revisionIterator.next();
assertThat(revision.getEntity().name).isEqualTo(name);
assertThat(revision.getMetadata().getRevisionType()).isEqualTo(revisionType);
}
/**
* Creates a Person with a couple of changes so it has a non-trivial revision history.
* @return the created Person.
*/
private Person preparePersonHistory() {
Person john = new Person();
john.setName("John");
// create
Person saved = tx.execute(__ -> repository.save(john));
assertThat(saved).isNotNull();
saved.setName("Jonny");
// update
Person updated = tx.execute(__ -> repository.save(saved));
assertThat(updated).isNotNull();
// delete
tx.executeWithoutResult(__ -> repository.delete(updated));
return updated;
}
}
1 | This references the application context configuration presented earlier (in the Configuration section). |
Further Resources
You can download the Spring Data Envers example in the Spring Data Examples repository and play around with to get a feel for how the library works.
You should also check out the Javadoc for RevisionRepository
and related classes.
You can ask questions at Stackoverflow by using the spring-data-envers
tag.
The source code and issue tracker for Spring Data Envers is hosted at GitHub (as a module of Spring Data JPA).