public boolean isClosed (); public void close ();
When a PersistenceManager is no longer
needed, call its close method.
In an unmanaged environment, closing a
PersistenceManager releases any resources it is
using. The persistent objects managed by the
PersistenceManager become invalid, as do
any Query, Extent, and
Sequence instances it created. Calling any
method other than isClosed on a closed
PersistenceManager results in a
JDOUserException. You cannot close a
PersistenceManager that is in the middle of a
transaction in an unmanaged environment.
In a managed environment where transactions are controlled by an
external TransactionManager, closing a
PersistenceManager returns it to a pool, where it
remains associated with the current global transaction. The
PersistenceManager does not free its resources
until the global transaction ends. In this environment, it is good
practice to obtain the PersistenceManager from
the PersistenceManagerFactory at
the beginning of each business method, and to close it at the end of
each method. The JDO implementation will ensure that you always
receive the same PersistenceManager within the
same transactional context.