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cmt: Container Managed Transactions (CMT)

The cmt quickstart demonstrates Container-Managed Transactions (CMT), showing how to use transactions managed by the container.

What is it?

The cmt quickstart demonstrates how to use container-managed transactions (CMT), which are transactions managed by the container in WildFly Application Server. It is a fairly typical scenario of updating a database and sending a JMS message in the same transaction. A simple MDB is provided that prints out the message sent but this is not a transactional MDB and is purely provided for debugging purposes.

Aspects touched upon in the code:

  • XA transaction control using the container managed transaction annotations

  • XA access to the standard default datasource using the JPA API

  • XA access to a JMS queue

After you complete this quickstart, you are invited to run through the following quickstarts:

  • jts - The jts quickstart builds upon this quickstart by distributing the CustomerManager and InvoiceManager.

  • jts-distributed-crash-rec - The crash recovery quickstart builds upon the jts quickstart by demonstrating the fault tolerance of WildFly.

What are Container Managed Transactions?

Prior to EJB, getting the right incantation to ensure sound transactional operation of the business logic was a highly specialized skill. Although this still holds true to a great extent, EJB has provided a series of improvements to allow simplified transaction demarcation notation that is therefore easier to read and test.

With CMT, the EJB container sets the boundaries of a transaction. This differs from BMT (bean-managed transactions), where the developer is responsible for initiating and completing a transaction using the begin, commit, and rollback methods on a javax.transaction.UserTransaction.

What Makes This an Example of Container Managed Transactions?

Take a look at org.jboss.as.quickstarts.cmt.ejb.CustomerManagerEJB. You can see that this stateless session bean has been marked up with the @javax.ejb.TransactionAttribute annotation.

The following options are available for this annotation.

Required

As demonstrated in the quickstart. If a transaction does not already exist, this will initiate a transaction and complete it for you, otherwise the business logic will be integrated into the existing transaction.

RequiresNew

If there is already a transaction running, it will be suspended, the work performed within a new transaction which is completed at exit of the method and then the original transaction resumed.

Mandatory

If there is no transaction running, calling a business method with this annotation will result in an error.

NotSupported

If there is a transaction running, it will be suspended and no transaction will be initiated for this business method.

Supports

This will run the method within a transaction if a transaction exists, alternatively, if there is no transaction running, the method will not be executed within the scope of a transaction.

Never

If the client has a transaction running and does not suspend it but calls a method annotated with Never then an EJB exception will be raised.

Access the Application

The application will be running at the following URL: http://localhost:8080/{artifactId}/

You are presented with a simple form for adding customers to a database.

After a customer is successfully added to the database, a message is produced containing the details of the customer. An example MDB dequeues this message and print the following contents.

Received Message: Created invoice for customer named:  Jack

If an existing customer name is provided, no JMS message is sent. Instead of the above message, a duplicate warning is displayed.

The customer name should match: letter & '-', otherwise an error is given. This is to show that a LogMessage entity is still stored in the database. That is because the logCreateCustomer method in the LogMessageManagerEJB EJB is decorated with the @TransactionAttribute(TransactionAttributeType.REQUIRES_NEW) annotation.

Server Log: Expected Warnings and Errors

You will see the following warnings in the server log. You can ignore these warnings.

HHH000431: Unable to determine H2 database version, certain features may not work
Note
Within JBoss Developer Studio, make sure you define a server runtime environment that uses the standalone-full.xml configuration file.