org.hibernate.LockMode Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Hibernate, Relational Persistence for Idiomatic Java
*
* Copyright (c) 2008, Red Hat Middleware LLC or third-party contributors as
* indicated by the @author tags or express copyright attribution
* statements applied by the authors. All third-party contributions are
* distributed under license by Red Hat Middleware LLC.
*
* This copyrighted material is made available to anyone wishing to use, modify,
* copy, or redistribute it subject to the terms and conditions of the GNU
* Lesser General Public License, as published by the Free Software Foundation.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY
* or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License
* for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License
* along with this distribution; if not, write to:
* Free Software Foundation, Inc.
* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor
* Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
*
*/
package org.hibernate;
/**
* Instances represent a lock mode for a row of a relational
* database table. It is not intended that users spend much
* time worrying about locking since Hibernate usually
* obtains exactly the right lock level automatically.
* Some "advanced" users may wish to explicitly specify lock
* levels.
*
* @author Gavin King
* @see Session#lock(Object, LockMode)
*/
public enum LockMode {
/**
* No lock required. If an object is requested with this lock
* mode, a READ lock will be obtained if it is
* necessary to actually read the state from the database,
* rather than pull it from a cache.
*
* This is the "default" lock mode.
*/
NONE( 0 ),
/**
* A shared lock. Objects in this lock mode were read from
* the database in the current transaction, rather than being
* pulled from a cache.
*/
READ( 5 ),
/**
* An upgrade lock. Objects loaded in this lock mode are
* materialized using an SQL select ... for update.
*
* @deprecated instead use PESSIMISTIC_WRITE
*/
UPGRADE( 10 ),
/**
* Attempt to obtain an upgrade lock, using an Oracle-style
* select for update nowait. The semantics of
* this lock mode, once obtained, are the same as
* UPGRADE.
*/
UPGRADE_NOWAIT( 10 ),
/**
* A WRITE lock is obtained when an object is updated
* or inserted. This lock mode is for internal use only and is
* not a valid mode for load() or lock() (both
* of which throw exceptions if WRITE is specified).
*/
WRITE( 10 ),
/**
* Similiar to {@link #UPGRADE} except that, for versioned entities,
* it results in a forced version increment.
*
* @deprecated instead use PESSIMISTIC_FORCE_INCREMENT
*/
FORCE( 15 ),
/**
* start of javax.persistence.LockModeType equivalent modes
*/
/**
* Optimisticly assume that transaction will not experience contention for
* entities. The entity version will be verified near the transaction end.
*/
OPTIMISTIC( 3 ),
/**
* Optimisticly assume that transaction will not experience contention for entities.
* The entity version will be verified and incremented near the transaction end.
*/
OPTIMISTIC_FORCE_INCREMENT( 4 ),
/**
* Implemented as PESSIMISTIC_WRITE.
* TODO: introduce separate support for PESSIMISTIC_READ
*/
PESSIMISTIC_READ( 12 ),
/**
* Transaction will obtain a database lock immediately.
* TODO: add PESSIMISTIC_WRITE_NOWAIT
*/
PESSIMISTIC_WRITE( 13 ),
/**
* Transaction will immediately increment the entity version.
*/
PESSIMISTIC_FORCE_INCREMENT( 17 );
private final int level;
private LockMode(int level) {
this.level = level;
}
/**
* Check if this lock mode is more restrictive than the given lock mode.
*
* @param mode LockMode to check
*
* @return true if this lock mode is more restrictive than given lock mode
*/
public boolean greaterThan(LockMode mode) {
return level > mode.level;
}
/**
* Check if this lock mode is less restrictive than the given lock mode.
*
* @param mode LockMode to check
*
* @return true if this lock mode is less restrictive than given lock mode
*/
public boolean lessThan(LockMode mode) {
return level < mode.level;
}
}