jakarta.transaction.Transactional Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (c) 2013, 2018 Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
*
* This program and the accompanying materials are made available under the
* terms of the Eclipse Public License v. 2.0, which is available at
* http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-2.0.
*
* This Source Code may also be made available under the following Secondary
* Licenses when the conditions for such availability set forth in the
* Eclipse Public License v. 2.0 are satisfied: GNU General Public License,
* version 2 with the GNU Classpath Exception, which is available at
* https://www.gnu.org/software/classpath/license.html.
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: EPL-2.0 OR GPL-2.0 WITH Classpath-exception-2.0
*/
package jakarta.transaction;
import jakarta.enterprise.util.Nonbinding;
import jakarta.interceptor.InterceptorBinding;
import java.lang.annotation.*;
/**
* The jakarta.transaction.Transactional annotation provides the application
* the ability to declaratively control transaction boundaries on CDI managed beans, as
* well as classes defined as managed beans by the Jakarta EE specification, at both the class
* and method level where method level annotations override those at the class level.
* See the Jakarta Enterprise Beans specification for restrictions on the use of @Transactional with Jakarta Enterprise Beans.
* This support is provided via an implementation of CDI interceptors that conduct the
* necessary suspending, resuming, etc. The Transactional interceptor interposes on business method
* invocations only and not on lifecycle events. Lifecycle methods are invoked in an unspecified
* transaction context.
* If an attempt is made to call any method of the UserTransaction interface from within the
* scope of a bean or method annotated with @Transactional and a Transactional.TxType other than
* NOT_SUPPORTED or NEVER, an IllegalStateException must be thrown. The use of the UserTransaction
* is allowed within life cycle events. The use of the TransactionSynchronizationRegistry is allowed
* regardless of any @Transactional annotation.
* The Transactional interceptors must have a priority of
* Interceptor.Priority.PLATFORM_BEFORE+200.
* Refer to the Interceptors specification for more details.
* The TxType element of the annotation indicates whether a bean method is to be executed within
* a transaction context. TxType.REQUIRED is the default.
*
* By default checked exceptions do not result in the transactional interceptor marking the
* transaction for rollback and instances of RuntimeException and its subclasses do. This default
* behavior can be modified by specifying exceptions that result in the interceptor marking the
* transaction for rollback and/or exceptions that do not result in rollback.
* The rollbackOn element can be set to indicate exceptions that must cause the interceptor to mark
* the transaction for rollback.
* Conversely, the dontRollbackOn element can be set to indicate
* exceptions that must not cause the interceptor to mark the transaction for rollback.
* When a class is specified for either of these elements, the designated behavior applies to subclasses
* of that class as well. If both elements are specified, dontRollbackOn takes precedence.
*
* @since JTA 1.2
*/
@Inherited
@InterceptorBinding
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD})
@Retention(value = RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface Transactional {
/**
* The TxType element of the Transactional annotation indicates whether a bean method
* is to be executed within a transaction context.
*/
TxType value() default TxType.REQUIRED;
/**
* The TxType element of the annotation indicates whether a bean method is to be
* executed within a transaction context where the values provide the following
* corresponding behavior.
*/
public enum TxType {
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, the interceptor must begin a new
* Jakarta Transactions transaction, the managed bean method execution must then continue
* inside this transaction context, and the transaction must be completed by
* the interceptor.
* If called inside a transaction context, the managed bean
* method execution must then continue inside this transaction context.
*/
REQUIRED,
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, the interceptor must begin a new
* Jakarta Transactions transaction, the managed bean method execution must then continue
* inside this transaction context, and the transaction must be completed by
* the interceptor.
* If called inside a transaction context, the current transaction context must
* be suspended, a new Jakarta Transactions transaction will begin, the managed bean method
* execution must then continue inside this transaction context, the transaction
* must be completed, and the previously suspended transaction must be resumed.
*/
REQUIRES_NEW,
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, a TransactionalException with a
* nested TransactionRequiredException must be thrown.
* If called inside a transaction context, managed bean method execution will
* then continue under that context.
*/
MANDATORY,
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, managed bean method execution
* must then continue outside a transaction context.
* If called inside a transaction context, the managed bean method execution
* must then continue inside this transaction context.
*/
SUPPORTS,
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, managed bean method execution
* must then continue outside a transaction context.
* If called inside a transaction context, the current transaction context must
* be suspended, the managed bean method execution must then continue
* outside a transaction context, and the previously suspended transaction
* must be resumed by the interceptor that suspended it after the method
* execution has completed.
*/
NOT_SUPPORTED,
/**
* If called outside a transaction context, managed bean method execution
* must then continue outside a transaction context.
* If called inside a transaction context, a TransactionalException with
* a nested InvalidTransactionException must be thrown.
*/
NEVER
}
/**
* The rollbackOn element can be set to indicate exceptions that must cause
* the interceptor to mark the transaction for rollback. Conversely, the dontRollbackOn
* element can be set to indicate exceptions that must not cause the interceptor to mark
* the transaction for rollback. When a class is specified for either of these elements,
* the designated behavior applies to subclasses of that class as well. If both elements
* are specified, dontRollbackOn takes precedence.
* @return Class[] of Exceptions
*/
@Nonbinding
public Class[] rollbackOn() default {};
/**
* The dontRollbackOn element can be set to indicate exceptions that must not cause
* the interceptor to mark the transaction for rollback. Conversely, the rollbackOn element
* can be set to indicate exceptions that must cause the interceptor to mark the transaction
* for rollback. When a class is specified for either of these elements,
* the designated behavior applies to subclasses of that class as well. If both elements
* are specified, dontRollbackOn takes precedence.
* @return Class[] of Exceptions
*/
@Nonbinding
public Class[] dontRollbackOn() default {};
}