On 05/28/2015 10:29 AM, Steve Ebersole wrote:
I am just not sure a lot of this is true. What
EntityManagerFactoryBuilder (the proprietary Hibernate 2-Phase JPA
bootstrap SPI) contracts changed in 5.0?
Minor changes so far:
Some org.hibernate.jpa.boot.scan.spi package changes to
org.hibernate.boot.archive.scan.spi.
Configuration.USE_NEW_ID_GENERATOR_MAPPINGS is now
AvailableSettings.USE_NEW_ID_GENERATOR_MAPPINGS.
As for Jandex version, 5.0 is not using Jandex. We accept a IndexView,
but we currently do not use it. So that actually should also not cause
any issues in regards to Hibernate 4.x or 5.0
We are not passing the IndexView in currently (we could if that becomes
important in the future, as long as we don't keep a reference to the
JandexView after the EMF is created). I don't think that would be
helpful though as you need changes for XML file handling I think.
As far as using the standard JPA bootstrap SPIs, I agree this is up to
Scott. But it simply will not work for the way WildFly does stuff as I
understand it.
This is really the first time that I have heard a complaint. I think
its a timing issue, that people (like Sanne) have work to do but cannot
get to it until WildFly switches to Hibernate 5.0.
Second-level cache, yes, is a whole other ball of wax :)
Yep, sometimes the second-level cache breaks in ways that we don't
detect, when we upgrade WildFly to a newer Infinispan version.
On Thu, May 28, 2015 at 9:18 AM, Jason Greene <jason.greene(a)redhat.com
<mailto:jason.greene@redhat.com>> wrote:
We implement the standard JPA integration SPI, but it is absolutely
awful.
It forces:
- The construction of duplicate class loaders with duplicate class
definitions of every class in the deployment
- Repeated runs of the deployment process
- Double loading of any class related to JPA (and its dependencies)
- The JPA provider to use reflection for all annotation discovery
- Double use of reflection in the deployment process
- Bugs from chicken and egg problems
- Increased memory usage
So for this reason WildFly and Hibernate have their own integration
SPIs, and those SPIs are changing in hibernate 5. So WildFly (well
currently JIPPAJAPPA) needs an update to be compatible with them.
Additionally we have the Jandex 2 change which is pending that both
projects are attempting to align on.
Now what I am not sure about, Scott will have to answer this. Is if
you can use the standard JPA integration SPI with newer versions of
Hibernate and just live with the nastiness it brings.
However, there is still a secondary issue, which I am sure you
already know about is that the second level cache and hibernate
search have integrations that need to be compatible and in sync and
tested.
> On May 28, 2015, at 5:30 AM, Sanne Grinovero <sanne(a)hibernate.org
<mailto:sanne@hibernate.org>> wrote:
>
> Could someone explain please, why it's hard to have a deployer just
> use a different JPA implementor which the user might want to provide?
>
> I'm pretty sure I know how to start a JPA context in plain
JavaSE, and
> don't need to know which implementor version I'm going to use, other
> than for sake of configuration.
>
> The WildFly documentation mentions this property
> "jboss.as.jpa.providerModule", which sounds great on paper and it
> would be a nice usability improvement if it would also actually work
> as it suggests.
>
> There's plenty of evidence on StackOverflow that the current
> limitations are unexpected. For example, Spring moved to Hibernate 5
> and people won't be able to use your stable line of the application
> server with Spring; I'd hope we could implement a plan to prevent
this
> from happening at the next upgrade cycles.
>
> Thanks,
> Sanne
>
> On 21 May 2015 at 20:10, Scott Marlow <smarlow(a)redhat.com
<mailto:smarlow@redhat.com>> wrote:
>>
>>
>> On 05/21/2015 03:05 PM, Tomaž Cerar wrote:
>>> Scott,
>>>
>>> if you do one last jipijapa release that adds "support" for
hibernate5
>>> hibernate guys could take that version and override it in
wildfly 9 same
>>> way as they add new h5 modules.
>>
>> I assume this will be an iterative process but sure, we could
also push
>> a release of the JIPI-31 branch. Lets keep talking about what
is needed...
>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> tomaz
>>>
>>> On Thu, May 21, 2015 at 9:01 PM, Scott Marlow
<smarlow(a)redhat.com <mailto:smarlow@redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:smarlow@redhat.com <mailto:smarlow@redhat.com>>>
wrote:
>>>
>>> On 05/21/2015 02:11 PM, Emmanuel Bernard wrote:
>>>> Scott, No way to make ORM 5 work in 9 at all? With the user
setting the additional slotted modules of course.
>>>
>>>
https://github.com/scottmarlow/jipijapa/tree/JIPI-31 contains the
>>> integration code that we will look at merging into WildFly
10. Are you
>>> looking for a custom WildFly 9.x branch or actual changes in
WildFly 9
>>> (doesn't seem as likely to me but I don't control the
schedule)?
>>>
>>>>
>>>> It would help speed up the Hibernate 5 stream adoption and avoid
>>> a lot of duplicated work for 6+ months.
>>>>
>>>>> On 21 mai 2015, at 16:36, Scott Marlow <smarlow(a)redhat.com
<mailto:smarlow@redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:smarlow@redhat.com
<mailto:smarlow@redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> Hibernate ORM 5.0 doesn't work yet on WildFly. Will push
on
>>> this soon
>>>>> for WildFly 10.
>>>>>
>>>>>> On 05/21/2015 07:30 AM, Sanne Grinovero wrote:
>>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>> I'm attempting to deploy some integration tests on
WildFly
>>> 9.0.0.CR1
>>>>>> to use a preview of Hibernate ORM version 5.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> It seems the JPA deployer isn't allowing me to run
such
>>> experiments:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # First experiment - providerModule set to custom module
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In my first attempt, I create a custom set of jboss
modules
which
>>>>>> include the snapshot builds of ORM 5, add them to my
standalone WF9
>>>>>> instance and set the persistence.xml property:
>>>>>> jboss.as.jpa.providerModule = my-custom-module-name
>>>>>>
>>>>>> and then get:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Caused by: java.util.ServiceConfigurationError:
>>>>>> org.hibernate.integrator.spi.Integrator: Provider
>>>>>> org.hibernate.envers.boot.internal.EnversIntegrator not a
subtype
>>>>>> at java.util.ServiceLoader.fail(ServiceLoader.java:231)
>>> [rt.jar:1.7.0_51]
>>>>>> at
java.util.ServiceLoader.access$300(ServiceLoader.java:181)
>>> [rt.jar:1.7.0_51]
>>>>>> at
>>>
java.util.ServiceLoader$LazyIterator.next(ServiceLoader.java:369)
>>>>>> [rt.jar:1.7.0_51]
>>>>>> at java.util.ServiceLoader$1.next(ServiceLoader.java:445)
>>> [rt.jar:1.7.0_51]
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.boot.registry.classloading.internal.ClassLoaderServiceImpl.loadJavaServices(ClassLoaderServiceImpl.java:341)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.integrator.internal.IntegratorServiceImpl.<init>(IntegratorServiceImpl.java:57)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.boot.registry.BootstrapServiceRegistryBuilder.build(BootstrapServiceRegistryBuilder.java:247)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.jpa.boot.internal.EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.buildBootstrapServiceRegistry(EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.java:520)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.jpa.boot.internal.EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.<init>(EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.java:208)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.jpa.boot.internal.EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.<init>(EntityManagerFactoryBuilderImpl.java:188)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.jpa.boot.spi.Bootstrap.getEntityManagerFactoryBuilder(Bootstrap.java:45)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.hibernate.jpa.boot.spi.Bootstrap.getEntityManagerFactoryBuilder(Bootstrap.java:57)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.hibernate4.TwoPhaseBootstrapImpl.<init>(TwoPhaseBootstrapImpl.java:38)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.hibernate4.HibernatePersistenceProviderAdaptor.getBootstrap(HibernatePersistenceProviderAdaptor.java:173)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.service.PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl.createContainerEntityManagerFactoryBuilder(PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl.java:243)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.service.PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl.access$800(PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl.java:60)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.service.PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl$1$1.run(PhaseOnePersistenceUnitServiceImpl.java:118)
>>>>>> ... 7 more
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Clearly it looks like I'm being served classes from the
bundled
>>>>>> Hibernate 4.x implementation - on top of those from the
module I'm
>>>>>> requesting. This isn't what the deployer should be
doing, right?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> # Second experiment - use the "application
provided"
>>>>>>
>>>>>> In this case I hope to hint the JPA deployer to not add
the
>>> default
>>>>>> implementor but look for a JPA implementation within my
deployment,
>>>>>> but still package my custom Hibernate build as a module.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - use the same custom module containing Hibernate ORM 5
(a
>>> preview snapshot)
>>>>>> - Add a "Dependency:" section to the manifest to
import (and
>>> export)
>>>>>> my custom module
>>>>>> - set the "jboss.as.jpa.providerModule" property
to value
>>> "application"
>>>>>>
>>>>>> This gets me:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Caused by:
>>>
org.jboss.as.server.deployment.DeploymentUnitProcessingException:
>>>>>> WFLYJPA0027: Persistence provider module load error
application
>>> (class
>>>>>> org.hibernate.jpa.HibernatePersistenceProvider)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.lookupProvider(PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.java:985)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.addPuService(PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.java:267)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.handleWarDeployment(PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.java:200)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.deploy(PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.java:131)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceBeginInstallProcessor.deploy(PersistenceBeginInstallProcessor.java:52)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.server.deployment.DeploymentUnitPhaseService.start(DeploymentUnitPhaseService.java:156)
>>>>>> [wildfly-server-1.0.0.CR1.jar:1.0.0.CR1]
>>>>>> ... 5 more
>>>>>> Caused by: org.jboss.modules.ModuleNotFoundException:
>>> application:main
>>>>>> at
org.jboss.modules.ModuleLoader.loadModule(ModuleLoader.java:236)
>>>>>> [jboss-modules.jar:1.4.3.Final]
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.persistenceprovider.PersistenceProviderLoader.loadProviderModuleByName(PersistenceProviderLoader.java:65)
>>>>>> at
>>>
org.jboss.as.jpa.processor.PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.lookupProvider(PersistenceUnitServiceHandler.java:978)
>>>>>> ... 10 more
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Remarks:
>>>>>> - it's attempting to load the
"application:main" module?!
>>> that's not
>>>>>> what I'd expect from reading [1]
>>>>>
>>>>> This seems to be a bug. I hit it a few days ago when I
packaged
>>>>> Hibernate ORM 4.1.x with an application (in a unit test) and
>>> forgot to
>>>>> set the persistence provider in persistence.xml.
>>>>>
>>>>>> - the provider should be available to the deployment
>>> classpath, so
>>>>>> I'm not sure why it's not finding the Provider?
(I'm even
exporting
>>>>>> it, although I'm not sure if that was required).
>>>>>
>>>>> Providers are always found through the
>>>>> javax.persistence.spi.PersistenceProviderResolver, not
directly
>>> from the
>>>>> deployment classpath.
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Any suggestions to get this running please?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Also I wonder if some of these should warrant opening a
JIRA,
>>> but I'm
>>>>>> not sure how far I misunderstood the intentions of these
JPA
>>> deployer
>>>>>> properties.
>>>>>
>>>>> Lets talk in a few days again on IRC.
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>>> Sanne
>>>>>>
>>>>>> [1] -
>>>
https://docs.jboss.org/author/display/WFLY9/JPA+Reference+Guide#JPARefere...
>>>>> _______________________________________________
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--
Jason T. Greene
WildFly Lead / JBoss EAP Platform Architect
JBoss, a division of Red Hat
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