Hi
Am 04.02.2014 um 22:16 schrieb Jason Greene <jason.greene(a)redhat.com>:
On Feb 4, 2014, at 3:13 PM, Jason Greene <jason.greene(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
> On Feb 4, 2014, at 3:01 PM, James R. Perkins <jperkins(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> On 02/04/2014 12:40 PM, Scott Marlow wrote:
>>> On 02/04/2014 02:42 PM, James R. Perkins wrote:
>>>>
>>>> On 02/04/2014 08:16 AM, Jason Greene wrote:
>>>>> On Feb 4, 2014, at 9:56 AM, Cheng Fang <cfang(a)redhat.com>
wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On 2/4/14, 9:57 AM, Stuart Douglas wrote:
>>>>>>> I would use a transaction synchronization, so you don't
spawn the other thread until the transaction is successfully committed.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>> yes, we could implement it in wildfly-batch integration module.
>>>>>>> What does the spec say about transactions? If a job is create
in a thread that is part of a transaction and the transaction is rolled back should the
job actually go ahead? Common sense would suggest not.
>>>>>> The transaction treatment in the batch spec is mostly around item
processing, not much on how it interacts with the transaction in the running environment.
The only place that it touches on Java EE environment is section 9.7 Transactionality:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Chunk type check points are transactional. The batch runtime uses
global transaction mode on the Java EE platform and local transaction mode on the Java SE
platform. Global transaction timeout is configurable at step-level with a step-level
property:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Yes, I agree if the batch client side transaction is rolled back,
the job execution should not proceed. With the current jberet impl, the job execution in
this case will fail since the job repository is not in good state, like in the above bug.
If we have transaction syncrhonization in place, then the job will not start running till
transaction 1 is committed.
>>>>> There is a consistency problem here though. If you expect the client
side to rollback on transaction failure, then the in-memory job store should as well. IMO
before committing to such a big feature, I would recommend looking at what the RI does
here. If the spec doesn’t describe it, and the RI doesn’t do it, then we should avoid
investing time on it at least right now where we really need to get WF8 out the door.
>>>> I don't see in the spec where it requires any kind of transaction
around
>>>> a job repository. In fact the spec states "Note the implementation
of
>>>> the job repository is outside the scope of this specification.".
>>>>
>>>> The RI does have a JDBC repository, but it doesn't insert anything
into
>>>> the tables in a transaction.
>>>>
>>>> If we're only seeing this in PostgreSQL and a workaround with
putting
>>>> JobOperator.start() outside a transaction works, I would suggest
that's
>>>> okay for now. I do agree it needs to be fixed, but we might want to look
>>>> at how we're handling transaction in JBeret as a whole. The RI, not
that
>>>> I want to model anything after it, uses it's own
>>>> TransactionManagerAdapter. It might make sense for JBeret to use a
>>>> TransactionManager rather than a UserTransaction. Or put the ownness on
>>>> the SPI implementation of the BatchEnvironment to handle the
transactions.
>>>
>>> Are you saying that the application should work around this by calling a
different bean method that is marked NOT_SUPPORTED to facilitate suspending the JTA
transaction?
>> No I'm just saying they need to invoke the JobOperator.start() outside a
transaction. At least from my understand on the JIRA that seems to workaround the issue. I
will admit to not fully looking into this in detail though ;)
>
> That would be silly :)
Requiring a NOT_SUPPORTED method that is. It’s pretty easy for JBeret to isolate the
transaction if it wanted to
tx = TransactionManager.suspend()
TransactionManager.begin()
// write the record
TransactionManager.commit()
TransactionManager.resume(tx);
What will happened to suspended Transaction when you get Exception on
TransactionManager.commit() ?