Hibernate EntityManager, is it supposed to be used as a singleton?

user712850 picture user712850 · Feb 21, 2012 · Viewed 12.8k times · Source

I am not using Spring so I am creating an instance of EntityManager within a class.

I used Hibernate-Eclipse reverse engineering to auto-generate the classes. These classes all has an instance of EntityManager.

I am not 100% sure how Hibernate works with the EntityManager so I am wondering if it is okay that so many instances of this class (EntityManager) are made, for example, will there be problems with transactions?

Should I just make a separate class that distributes a static instance of an EntityManager for all my other classes? or does it not matter?

EDIT: I see there's something called @PersistenceContext, it doesn't seem to load my persistence.xml as a bean in to the instance variable, does this feature require spring? (I get null pointer exception, because it was never injected)

snip of code from where I attempt to use @persistencecontext

@PersistenceContext(unitName = "manager1")
private EntityManager entityManager;

my persistence.xml

    <persistence xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence"
             xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
             xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_2_0.xsd"
             version="2.0">
   <persistence-unit name="manager1" transaction-type="RESOURCE_LOCAL">
         <provider>org.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence</provider>

      <properties>

         <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.driver" value="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"/>
         <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.user" value="root"/>
         <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.password" value="mypassword"/>
         <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.url" value="jdbc:mysql://localhost/ptbrowserdb"/>
         <property name="hibernate.dialect" value="org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect"/>
      </properties>
   </persistence-unit>
</persistence>

Answer

Ralph picture Ralph · Feb 21, 2012

See this Article: JPA Architecture it explain it very well.

In General you need a single Entity Manager per transaction. And this Entity Manager must not be used in two transactions at the same time.

Clairification: I mean, do not use a single Entity Manager for different unit of works. Typical one transaction in one unit of work, if you have different transactions of one unit of work, then you can use the same Entity Manager

If you use Spring then Spring do this handling for you if you use the @PersistenceContext annotation to inject the EntityManager. Per default Spring "bind" the the injected EntityManager (via a proxy) to the current transaction. (And the transaction is "bound" to the thread.)

@See Spring Reference 13.5.2 Implementing DAOs based on plain JPA - it contains a interesting paragagraph after the code examples.