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http://jira.jboss.com/jira/browse/JBSEAM-2320?page=comments#action_12394253 ]
Dan Allen commented on JBSEAM-2320:
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Within the refresh() method in Query.java I suggestion putting:
if (Events.exists()) {
Events.instance().raiseEvent("org.jboss.seam.refreshQuery." +
getClass().getName()); }
We can either append the class name or use Seam.searchComponentName(getClass()) to resolve
the name from the @Name annotation. There is still some limitation here since the
EntityQuery class could be used multiple times via component configuration and there would
be no good way to tell them apart.
Query#refresh() should generate an event
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Key: JBSEAM-2320
URL:
http://jira.jboss.com/jira/browse/JBSEAM-2320
Project: JBoss Seam
Issue Type: Feature Request
Components: Framework
Affects Versions: 2.0.0.GA
Reporter: Dan Allen
Priority: Minor
Fix For: 2.0.x
Original Estimate: 1 hour
Remaining Estimate: 1 hour
It is very useful to know when a query is refreshed, either because a parameter is dirty
or because some other part of the application forced it to refresh itself. This message
passing is extremely important when working in a caching situation.
I am thinking something like:
org.jboss.seam.queryRefreshed
perhaps we pass the ejbql or the Query component as an parameter to the event
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