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  • Spring - @Transactional - What happens in background?
    I want to know what actually happens when you annotate a method with @Transactional? Of course, I know that Spring will wrap that method in a Transaction But, I have the following doubts: I heard
  • How to use @Transactional with Spring Data? - Stack Overflow
    0 We use @Transactional annotation when we create update one more entity at the same time If the method which has @Transactional throws an exception, the annotation helps to roll back the previous inserts
  • java - Rollback transaction after @Test - Stack Overflow
    Annotating a test method with @Transactional causes the test to be run within a transaction that will, by default, be automatically rolled back after completion of the test
  • java - javax. transaction. Transactional vs org. springframework . . .
    268 I don't understand what is the actual difference between annotations javax transaction Transactional and org springframework transaction annotation Transactional? Is org springframework transaction annotation Transactional an extension of javax transaction Transactional or they have totally different meaning? When should each of them be used?
  • How does @Transactional work on test methods? - Stack Overflow
    I'm wondering how @Transactional works with Spring Data JPA Hibernate on test methods I searched some explanations on the web but it still seems obscure Below is the code I'm using: Member ja
  • Spring nested transactions - Stack Overflow
    But @Transactional never rolls back a transaction for any checked exception Thus, Spring allows you to define Exception for which transaction should be rollbacked Exception for which transaction shouldn't be rollbacked Try annotating your child method: update with @Transactional (no-rollback-for="ExceptionName") or your parent method
  • Why use @Transactional with @Service instead of with @Controller
    I have seen many comments in stack-overflow articles I found certain things about either @Transactional use with @Service or with @Controller quot;Usually, one should put a transaction at the ser
  • Spring transaction: rollback on Exception or Throwable
    Since you are using @Transactional, we can safely assume you are doing your database operations through Spring, Hibernate, or other JDBC wrappers These JDBC wrappers don't typically throw checked exceptions, they throw runtime exceptions that wrap the JDBC SQLException types @Transactional is setup to rollback, by default, only when an unchecked exception is thrown Consider a use case like so




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