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Sun Java System Application Server Enterprise Edition 8.1 2005Q1 Developer's Guide 

Chapter 12  
Using the Transaction Service

The J2EE platform provides several abstractions that simplify development of dependable transaction processing for applications. This chapter discusses J2EE transactions and transaction support in the Sun Java System Application Server.

This chapter contains the following sections:

For more information about the Java™ Transaction API (JTA) and Java™ Transaction Service (JTS), see the Sun Java System Application Server Administration Guide and the following sites:

http://java.sun.com/products/jta/

http://java.sun.com/products/jts/

You might also want to read the chapter on transactions in the J2EE tutorial:

http://java.sun.com/j2ee/1.4/docs/tutorial/doc/index.html


Transaction Resource Managers

There are three types of transaction resource managers:

For details about how transaction resource managers, the transaction service, and applications interact, see the Sun Java System Application Server Administration Guide.


Note

In the Sun Java System Application Server, the transaction manager is a privileged interface. However, applications can access UserTransaction. For more information, see “Naming Environment for J2EE Application Components” on page 264.



Transaction Scope

A local transaction involves only one non-XA resource and requires that all participating application components execute within one process. Local transaction optimization is specific to the resource manager and is transparent to the J2EE application.

In Sun Java System Application Server, a JDBC resource is non-XA if it meets any of the following criteria:

A transaction remains local if the following conditions remain true:

Transactions that involve multiple resources or multiple participant processes are distributed or global transactions. A global transaction can involve one non-XA resource if last agent optimization is enabled. Otherwise, all resourced must be XA. The use-last-agent-optimization property is set to true by default. For details about how to set this property, see Configuring the Transaction Service.

If only one XA resource is used in a transaction, one-phase commit occurs, otherwise the transaction is coordinated with a two-phase commit protocol.

A two-phase commit protocol between the transaction manager and all the resources enlisted for a transaction ensures that either all the resource managers commit the transaction or they all abort. When the application requests the commitment of a transaction, the transaction manager issues a PREPARE_TO_COMMIT request to all the resource managers involved. Each of these resources can in turn send a reply indicating whether it is ready for commit (PREPARED) or not (NO). Only when all the resource managers are ready for a commit does the transaction manager issue a commit request (COMMIT) to all the resource managers. Otherwise, the transaction manager issues a rollback request (ABORT) and the transaction is rolled back.

Sun Java System Application Server provides workarounds for some known issues with the recovery implementations of the following JDBC drivers. These workarounds are used unless explicitly disabled.


Configuring the Transaction Service

You can configure the transaction service in Sun Java System Application Server in the following ways:


Transaction Logging

The transaction service writes transactional activity into transaction logs so that transactions can be recovered. You can control transaction logging in these ways:



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