[
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2162?page=all ]
Steve Ebersole closed HHH-2162:
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Resolution: Rejected
Assign To: Steve Ebersole
I am going to reject this patch. First, I am pretty certain that the current underlying
causes for HHH-1401 are exactly the same as for this issue (I am pretty sure the early
bugs in determining when writes to PersistentCollection actually dirtied the collection
caused parts of the issue there). Secondly, the proposed patch here can actually cause
unecessary reads from the database to resolve the containsAll() check.
So, see HHH-1401 for tracking purposes...
Optimisitic Locking unusable with 1..N of Set or List
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Key: HHH-2162
URL:
http://opensource.atlassian.com/projects/hibernate/browse/HHH-2162
Project: Hibernate3
Type: Patch
Components: core
Versions: 3.2.0.ga
Environment: Core 3.2 GA
EM 3.2 GA
HSQLDB 1.8.0.2 in memory
Reporter: Olli Blackburn
Assignee: Steve Ebersole
Priority: Minor
Attachments: CollectionType.patch, Playpen.zip
Calling merge() on an unmodified entity with 1..N relationship using Set or List results
in the entity being marked dirty, its version number is increased and an SQL UPDATE
performed on it. This makes it impossible to achieve any kind of sensible concurrency in
our application which makes extensive use of detached objects.
See the attached test case (packaged as a complete eclipse 3.2 project). Set EJB3_HOME,
HIBERNATE_HOME and HSQLDB_HOME in your eclipse workspace preferences and then run the
included PojoTest launcher to see it run.
The test populates the DB, does a select by name, merge, merge and select by name again.
Each of these five steps is in its own Tx and entity manager. The test is repeated for
Set, Map and List. Interesting Map seems to work, but as our application doesn't use
Maps that's little comfort to us. The pojo is not being modified (by my code) between
the merge calls(), yet I get the following output (each print is before the commit
following the operation):
findByUniqueName: PojoHashSet4 version=2
merge: PojoHashSet4 version=2
merge: PojoHashSet4 version=3
findByUniqueName: PojoHashSet4 version=5
findByUniqueName: PojoHashMap4 version=0
merge: PojoHashMap4 version=0
merge: PojoHashMap4 version=0
findByUniqueName: PojoHashMap4 version=0
findByUniqueName: PojoArrayList4 version=0
merge: PojoArrayList4 version=0
merge: PojoArrayList4 version=1
findByUniqueName: PojoArrayList4 version=2
HHH-1401 and HHH-1668 seem like they might be related to my problem, but debugging my
test case shows otherwise. The problem seems to be caused by the replacement of the empty
collection with a new empty collection. More specifically, the empty target collection is
cleared, marking it dirty, even though it contains no members is is about to have nothing
copied in it. This occurs in org.hibernate.type.CollectionType.replaceElements().
Looking at the code paths I think the problem runs deeper than my empty collection case.
If the source and target being copied by replaceElements() are identical (whether zero
length or not), the target will be marked dirty due to the result.clear() call in
replaceElements(). It seems there needs to be a pre-check for this case to avoid the whole
clear and copy process with it's associated setting of "dirtiness".
I'm attaching a patch for CollectionType which fixes the problem in the testing
we've performed.
Feedback and comments appreciated.
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