@Target(value={METHOD,TYPE}) @Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Inherited @Documented public @interface Transactional
This annotation type is generally directly comparable to Spring's
RuleBasedTransactionAttribute
class, and in fact AnnotationTransactionAttributeSource
will directly
convert the data to the latter class, so that Spring's transaction support code
does not have to know about annotations. If no rules are relevant to the exception,
it will be treated like
DefaultTransactionAttribute
(rolling back on RuntimeException
and Error
but not on checked
exceptions).
For specific information about the semantics of this annotation's attributes,
consult the TransactionDefinition
and
TransactionAttribute
javadocs.
TransactionAttribute
,
DefaultTransactionAttribute
,
RuleBasedTransactionAttribute
Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description |
---|---|
Isolation |
isolation
The transaction isolation level.
|
Class<? extends Throwable>[] |
noRollbackFor
|
String[] |
noRollbackForClassName
Defines zero (0) or more exception names (for exceptions which must be a
subclass of
Throwable ) indicating which exception types must not
cause a transaction rollback. |
Propagation |
propagation
The transaction propagation type.
|
boolean |
readOnly
true if the transaction is read-only. |
Class<? extends Throwable>[] |
rollbackFor
|
String[] |
rollbackForClassName
Defines zero (0) or more exception names (for exceptions which must be a
subclass of
Throwable ), indicating which exception types must cause
a transaction rollback. |
int |
timeout
The timeout for this transaction.
|
String |
transactionManager
A qualifier value for the specified transaction.
|
String |
value
Alias for
transactionManager() . |
@AliasFor(value="transactionManager") public abstract String value
transactionManager()
.transactionManager()
@AliasFor(value="value") public abstract String transactionManager
May be used to determine the target transaction manager,
matching the qualifier value (or the bean name) of a specific
PlatformTransactionManager
bean definition.
value()
public abstract Propagation propagation
Defaults to Propagation.REQUIRED
.
public abstract Isolation isolation
Defaults to Isolation.DEFAULT
.
public abstract int timeout
Defaults to the default timeout of the underlying transaction system.
TransactionDefinition.getTimeout()
public abstract boolean readOnly
true
if the transaction is read-only.
Defaults to false
.
This just serves as a hint for the actual transaction subsystem; it will not necessarily cause failure of write access attempts. A transaction manager which cannot interpret the read-only hint will not throw an exception when asked for a read-only transaction but rather silently ignore the hint.
TransactionDefinition.isReadOnly()
public abstract Class<? extends Throwable>[] rollbackFor
classes
, which must be
subclasses of Throwable
, indicating which exception types must cause
a transaction rollback.
By default, a transaction will be rolling back on RuntimeException
and Error
but not on checked exceptions (business exceptions). See
DefaultTransactionAttribute.rollbackOn(Throwable)
for a detailed explanation.
This is the preferred way to construct a rollback rule (in contrast to
rollbackForClassName()
), matching the exception class and its subclasses.
Similar to RollbackRuleAttribute.RollbackRuleAttribute(Class clazz)
.
public abstract String[] rollbackForClassName
Throwable
), indicating which exception types must cause
a transaction rollback.
This can be a substring of a fully qualified class name, with no wildcard
support at present. For example, a value of "ServletException"
would
match javax.servlet.ServletException
and its subclasses.
NB: Consider carefully how specific the pattern is and whether
to include package information (which isn't mandatory). For example,
"Exception"
will match nearly anything and will probably hide other
rules. "java.lang.Exception"
would be correct if "Exception"
were meant to define a rule for all checked exceptions. With more unusual
Exception
names such as "BaseBusinessException"
there is no
need to use a FQN.
Similar to RollbackRuleAttribute.RollbackRuleAttribute(String exceptionName)
.
public abstract Class<? extends Throwable>[] noRollbackFor
Classes
, which must be
subclasses of Throwable
, indicating which exception types must
not cause a transaction rollback.
This is the preferred way to construct a rollback rule (in contrast
to noRollbackForClassName()
), matching the exception class and
its subclasses.
Similar to NoRollbackRuleAttribute.NoRollbackRuleAttribute(Class clazz)
.
public abstract String[] noRollbackForClassName
Throwable
) indicating which exception types must not
cause a transaction rollback.
See the description of rollbackForClassName()
for further
information on how the specified names are treated.
Similar to NoRollbackRuleAttribute.NoRollbackRuleAttribute(String exceptionName)
.