Hi Scott,
yes, in my sample the EJB jar contains the only piece of code that works directly with the database/persistence unit. The application client does not use it. As a app client probably runs on a different machine than the application server, it should probably not even have network access to the real database.
The JPA standard seems to allow "persistence.xml" etc. in app
clients, but as far as I understand chapter 8.2.2, the client
could only use the one that is defined inside the client jar (or
maybe its utility jars), but not the ones from other modules. So a
use case could be that the EJB jar uses a persistence unit
pointing to a "real" database server, while the app client uses
its own EntityManager to e.g. store local data in a database.
I am not an expert on JakartaEE at all, I just have the feeling that the curren behavior (introduced by WFLY-19020) is wrong. So, if you consider the current implementation correct, I am probably the one that is wrong ;-).
My issue WFLY-19020 was just about the problem that the server returned an entity bean to the app client and there was a ClassNotFoundException. So, on the client side some jar seemed to be missing. You added the code that deploys the persistence unit, which fixes my error, but gives me a bad feeling...
Best regards
Wolfgang
On 6/9/24 5:45 AM, Wolfgang Knauf wrote:
Hi Scott,
using "jboss.as.jpa.managed=false" would change the usage of the persistence unit also for the EJB jar, wouldn't it?
What about this chapter in the JPA spec? https://jakarta.ee/specifications/persistence/3.1/jakarta-persistence-spec-3.1#a12459
8.2.2. Persistence Unit Scope
An EJB-JAR, WAR, application client jar, or EAR can define a persistence unit.
When referencing a persistence unit using the unitName annotation element or persistence-unit-name deployment descriptor element, the visibility scope of the persistence unit is determined by its point of definition:
A persistence unit that is defined at the level of an EJB-JAR, WAR, or application client jar is scoped to that EJB-JAR, WAR, or application jar respectively and is visible to the components defined in that jar or war.
So the app client should not be able to access the persistence unit defined in the EJB jar, as far as I understand it. I conclude from this that the persistence unit should also not be deployed in the client container.In this discussion, I think that we are more of trying to understand if WildFly missed any Persistence unit deployment level requirements. By deployment, I mean the creation of the container managed entity manager factory for the specified persistence unit definition.
I think that the 8.2.2 Persistence Unit Scope rules are more about how a persistence unit name specified in a @PersistenceUnit or @PersistenceContext is mapped to a deployed persistence unit definition.
Based on your earlier feedback, I don't think that you are actually expecting to use the persistence unit in your app client container deployment. So your application could benefit from ensuring that the persistence unit is not deployed in the application client container.
Scott
Best regards
Wolfgang
Am 06.06.24 um 23:32 schrieb Scott Marlow:
On Thu, Jun 6, 2024, 9:48 AM Scott Marlow <smarlow@redhat.com> wrote:
Hi Wolfgang,
I thought more about this and the Jakarta EE Platform Specification class loading requirements have no impact on whether persistence units are deployed in the app client container or not. I also just read the https://jakarta.ee/specifications/persistence/3.1/jakarta-persistence-spec-3.1#a11432 section which only requires that persistence units are deployed in the app client container but doesn't require that contained managed persistence contexts be available. So, there is nothing in the Jakarta EE specification that points out a further bug that I see.
More inline below...
On 5/18/24 4:12 AM, Wolfgang Knauf wrote:
Hi Scott,
thanks for the detailed analysis. I gave it a try and removed "manifest.mf" from the app client jar, but the tables are still created.
Attached is a reworked ear file without the ClassPath entry. Rename it to "KuchenZutatInheritance_Simplied.ear" before deploying or testing the client.
Launch it with this call:
/appclient.sh /tmp/KuchenZutatInheritance_Simplied.ear#KuchenZutatInheritanceClient.jar"
If it would work as you wrote, would the initial "ClassNotFoundException: org.hibernate.collection.spi.PersistentBag" from WFLY-19020 be thrown again?
No, I was wrong about the class loading requirements having an impact. Since there is no (Jakarta EE) requirement that helps your application, it would probably be best for you to work around the failure by either removing the persistence.xml from KuchenZutatInheritanceEJB.jar or ensure that the persistence.xml is ignored by adding a persistence unit hint "jboss.as.jpa.managed" set to true. Either way, you need a change.
Actually, I meant that you could add a Persistence unit hint"jboss.as.jpa.managed" set to false which will prevent it from deploying.
Scott
Hope this helps.
Scott
JYI: The class path entry is created by Eclipse if an old style EAR project is used. If you don't add it, the app client project cannot resolve e.g. the ejb remote interface. But this is rather old knowledge - I should test whether it is still necessary.
Best regards
Wolfgang
Am 17.05.24 um 16:59 schrieb Scott Marlow:
On 5/17/24 10:27 AM, Scott Marlow wrote:
On Fri, May 17, 2024 at 12:57 AM Wolfgang Knauf via wildfly-dev <wildfly-dev@lists.jboss.org> wrote:
Hi all,
this question is about a change in the way that a JakartaEE application
client is launched: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/WFLY-19020
Before the change, an application client might receive a
ClassNotFoundException because of a missing hibernate class. My
workaround for this was to add jboss-deployment-structure.xml and
include the module "org.hibernate".
This behavior was changed in 31.0.1 after my bugreport: it seems the
application client deploys "persistence.xml" from the EJB jar somehow,
and my sample now works.
But this change also causes the application client to create/drop the
tables each time it is launched if persistence.xml defines
"hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto=create-drop". This did not happen with WildFly
31.0.0 and before.
It can be avoided if the data source in "appclient.xml" points to a H2
memory database instead of the real database defined in "standalone.xml".
I did not verify whether old WildFly versions required the datasource to
be defined in "appclient.xml", but I have the feeling that it was necessary.
Currently, this is only an unnecessary step. But if the datasource
defined in "appclient.xml" would point to the "real" datasource defined
in "standalone.xml", the tables would be created each time the client
starts. Fortunately, I could not make it work to define a MariaDB
connection in "appclient.xml" because it could not resolve the driver,
but with some effort this could be possible.
What do you think about this change? To me, it sounds unnecessary to
create/drop tables from EJB "persistence.xml" when an app client is
started. Is it required if the app client itself would use client side JPA?
Thanks for starting this discussion! I appreciate that you are questioning whether the EJB persistence.xml should be visible to the app client deployment. We should consider the rules in https://jakarta.ee/specifications/platform/10/jakarta-platform-spec-10.0#application-client-container-class-loading-requirements and whether any of those are not being followed correctly for your deployment. The question that we need to answer is whether the (EJB) persistence unit should have been ignored.
Pasting from the referencing rules for easy reference:
"
8.3.3. Application Client Container Class Loading Requirements
Components in the application client container must have access to the following classes and resources.
The content of the application client jar file.
The transitive closure of any libraries referenced by the above jar file (as specified in Library Support).
The transitive closure of any libraries specified by or referenced by the containing ear file (as specified in Library Support).
The Jakarta EE API classes specified in Jakarta EE Technologies for the application client container.
All required Java SE API classes.
Components in the application client container may have access to the following classes and resources. Portable applications must not depend on having or not having access to these classes or resources.
The Jakarta EE API classes specified in Jakarta EE Technologies for the containers other than the application client container.
Any installed libraries available in the application server.
Other classes or resources contained in the application package, and specified by an explicit use of an extension not defined by this specification.
Other classes and resources that are part of the implementation of the application server.
Components in the application client container must not have access to the following classes and resources, unless such classes or resources are covered by one of the rules above.
"
Other classes or resources in the application package. For example, the application client should not have access to the classes in other application client jar files in the same ear file, nor should it have access to the classes in web applications or Jakarta Enterprise Beans jar files in the same ear file.
The attached https://issues.redhat.com/secure/attachment/13134094/KuchenZutatInheritance_Simplied.ear archive contains the KuchenZutatInheritanceClient.jar file that has MANIFEST.MF with:
class-Path: KuchenZutatInheritanceEJB.jar
My read is that the appclient container should have access to the EJB persistence unit since the EJB is on the appclient deployment classpath. Still, I think an interesting experiment would be to try removing the KuchenZutatInheritanceEJB.jar from the appclient classpath to see if the persistence unit still deploys (if it does, I think that is a bug worth creating a new WFLY for.
Scott
Regards,Scott
Best regards
Wolfgang
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