This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use Spring Framework 6.2.1!

@Rollback

@Rollback indicates whether the transaction for a transactional test method should be rolled back after the test method has completed. If true, the transaction is rolled back. Otherwise, the transaction is committed (see also @Commit). Rollback for integration tests in the Spring TestContext Framework defaults to true even if @Rollback is not explicitly declared.

When declared as a class-level annotation, @Rollback defines the default rollback semantics for all test methods within the test class hierarchy. When declared as a method-level annotation, @Rollback defines rollback semantics for the specific test method, potentially overriding class-level @Rollback or @Commit semantics.

The following example causes a test method’s result to not be rolled back (that is, the result is committed to the database):

  • Java

  • Kotlin

@Rollback(false) (1)
@Test
void testProcessWithoutRollback() {
	// ...
}
1 Do not roll back the result.
@Rollback(false) (1)
@Test
fun testProcessWithoutRollback() {
	// ...
}
1 Do not roll back the result.