We are using Toplink implementation of JPA + Spring + EJB. In one of our EJBs we have something like this:
public void updateUser(long userId, String newName){
User u = em.get(User.class, userId);
u.setName(newName);
// no persist is invoked here
}
So, basically this updateUser()
method is supposed to update the name of a user with the given userId
.
But the author of this method forgot to invoke em.persist(u)
.
And the strangest thing is that it works fine. How can it be? I was 100% sure that
without invoking em.persist()
or em.merge()
there is no way that changes could have been saved into database. Could they? Is there any scenario when this could happen?
You're working with a managed entity. If the entity does not become detached because its entity manager is closed, all changes done to the entity are reflected to the database when the session is flushed/closed and the transaction commited.
From the Java EE tutorial:
The state of persistent entities is synchronized to the database when the transaction with which the entity is associated commits.
Edit for clarity and explanation: So there are three distinct modes that an entity could be in during its lifecycle:
persist()
has not been called yet.persist()
, or loaded from the database, and is associated with an entity manager session. All changes to the entity are reflected to the database when the entity manager session is flushed.merge()
command.