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http://jira.jboss.com/jira/browse/JBSEAM-2877?page=comments#action_12411342 ]
Clint Popetz commented on JBSEAM-2877:
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That is what I'm trying to do. But in our case "logging" means more than
just log.error(). We have pretty exact business requirements on who has to be notified,
and how they have to be notified, when the site fails.
I completely understand that the persistence context has to be considered dead when a
runtime exception occurs. I think my complaint about Seam not rolling back its
marked-as-rolledBackOnly-tx is still valid, because I see that as a reasonable expectation
of consistent behavior from the framework. But I won't be obnoxious and pester you
all about it, and I can certainly have my own Exceptions component do that.
Seam Managed Transactions doesn't always clean up transactions it
starts
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Key: JBSEAM-2877
URL:
http://jira.jboss.com/jira/browse/JBSEAM-2877
Project: Seam
Issue Type: Bug
Affects Versions: 2.0.2.CR1
Reporter: Clint Popetz
Attachments: seamPhaseListener-cleanup-tx.diff, tx_except.tar.gz
The behavior I'm describing is in servlet code; I have no idea how portlets work. So
the attached patch is not complete.
The SeamPhaseListener is starting a tx before the restoreView phase. However, if a
runtime exception is thrown in, for example, the conversion and propagation of page
request parameters to the event context, this transaction is marked rollbackOnly by the
RollbackInterceptor, but afterServletPhase() will never call
handleTransactionsAfterPhase(), and the transaction will never be rolled back. This
leaves an active-but-aborted tx live for that thread. and any subsequent code that tries
to use an EJB session bean will trigger further spurious exceptions, because the EJB3 tx
is dead.
My solution locally was to wrap the final half of afterServletPhase in a finally().
That's kind of a hack, but it does work correctly for me. It probably needs further
investigation.
I realize that post-exception code is tricky at best, but it seems reasonable to require
SeamPhaseListener to at least roll back the tx if it started it, so that whatever work the
Exceptions component does has a reasonable JTA state to work with.
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