I'd also add that we are using transactions in the Faces module to provide managed transactions integrated into the JSF lifecycle. So again, we see the transaction support used as a top-level feature.
On Fri, Mar 11, 2011 at 20:15, George Gastaldi <gegastaldi@gmail.com> wrote:Nice, I agree that it is the right way to go. I was almost suggesting separating that on a separate module also.However it must be considered that JTA would not always be used (when running on tomcat for example). How would this module handle these scenarios ? Would it depend on persistence module itself ?
The Seam transaction API is an abstraction over JTA. It provides the same interface, but can accommodate a different providers underneath.For instance, you should be able to adapt it to any single resource transaction (recognizing that you lose multiple resource enlistment) (similar to what spring does: http://www.infoq.com/articles/spring-modules-jcr). The module could even go a step further and provide simplified transaction configuration for JTA in a standalone environment. I think there is a lot of interesting avenues to explore, which is why having it in a separate module makes a ton of sense. The floor is open for discussion.-Dan--Dan AllenPrincipal Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
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