]
Pete Muir closed CDITCK-80.
---------------------------
Resolution: Done
Assignee: Pete Muir
Already done.
Needs forward port to trunk still.
Issue surrounding Bean.destroy() behavior
-----------------------------------------
Key: CDITCK-80
URL:
https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/CDITCK-80
Project: CDI TCK
Issue Type: Bug
Security Level: Public(Everyone can see)
Components: Tests
Affects Versions: 1.0.0.GA
Environment: jdk6 u15, glassfish v3
Reporter: Vivek Pandey
Assignee: Pete Muir
Fix For: 1.0.1.CR1, 1.1.0.CR1
org.jboss.jsr299.tck.tests.implementation.simple.resource.persistenceContext.PersistenceContextDesctructionTest
seems to be invalid or jsr299 7.3.6 needs to clarify. Read below:
Sec 7.3.6 Lifecycle of resources of JSR299 layout this asseertion:
"When the create() method of a Bean object that represents a resource is called, the
container creates and returns a con- tainer-specific internal reference to the Java EE
component environment resource, entity manager, entity manager factory, remote EJB
instance or web service reference. This reference is not directly exposed to the
application.
Before injecting or returning a contextual instance to the application, the container
transforms its internal reference into an object that implements the bean types expected
by the application and delegates method invocations to the underlying re- source, entity
manager, entity manager factory, remote EJB instance or web service reference. This object
must be passiva- tion capable.
When the destroy() method is called, the container discards this internal reference and
performs any cleanup required of state associated with the client or transaction."
And there is this TCK test
org.jboss.jsr299.tck.tests.implementation.simple.resource.persistenceContext.PersistenceContextDesctructionTest
which does the following :
CreationalContext<ManagedBean> creationalContext =
getCurrentManager().createCreationalContext(managedBean);
ManagedBean instance = managedBean.create(creationalContext);
EntityManager em = instance.getPersistenceContext();
assert em.isOpen();
==>managedBean.destroy(instance, creationalContext);
assert !em.isOpen();
When I looked in to the debugger I see that managedBean.destroy() call results in to
calling GlassFish injected EntityManagerWarpper.close() which correctly throws
InvalidStateException. This is as per JPA spec where EntityManager.close() is supposed to
thro IllegalStateException for container manager EntityManager. See
http://java.sun.com/javaee/5/docs/api/javax/persistence/EntityManager.htm....
--
This message is automatically generated by JIRA.
-
If you think it was sent incorrectly contact one of the administrators: