EclipseLink Solutions Guide for EclipseLink
Release 3.0
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Introduction to the Solution

EclipseLink provides a shared (L2) object cache that can reduce database access for objects and their relationships. This cache is enabled by default which is normally not a problem, unless the contents of the database are modified directly by other applications, or by the same application on other servers in a clustered environment. This may result in stale data in the cache.

If the contents of the database are modified, then a mechanism is needed to ensure that the contents of the cache are synchronized with the database. That mechanism is provided by EclipseLink Database Change Notification. DCN allows shared caching to be used in the JPA environment.


NoteNote:

Database Change Notification extends the functionality provided by the Oracle Database Continuous Query Notification feature. For more information, see "Continuous Query Notification" in Oracle Database JDBC Developer's Guide.


EclipseLink Database Change Notification extends the functionality provided by the Oracle Database Continuous Query Notification. One of the features of Continuous Query Notification is that it allows database events to be raised when rows in a table are modified.

To detect modifications, EclipseLink DCN uses the ROWID to inform of row level changes in the primary table. EclipseLink includes the ROWID in all queries for a DCN-enabled class. EclipseLink also selects the object's ROWID after an insert operation. EclipseLink maintains a cache index on the ROWID, in addition to the object's Id. EclipseLink also selects the database transaction ID once for each transaction to avoid invalidating the cache on the server that is processing the transaction.

EclipseLink DCN is enabled through the OracleChangeNotificationListener (org.eclipse.persistence.platform.database.oracle.dcn.OracleChangeNotificationListener) listener class. This listener integrates with Oracle JDBC to receive database change events. To enable the listener, specify the full path to the OracleChangeNotificationListener class as the value of the eclipselink.cache.database-event-listener property in the persistence.xml file.

By default, all entities in the domain are registered for change notification. However, you can selectively disable change notification for certain classes by tagging them in the Java files with the databaseChangeNotificationType (org.eclipse.persistence.annotations.DatabaseChangeNotificationType) attribute of the Cache annotation. The value of this attribute determines the type of database change notification an entity should use. The default value of the databaseChangeNotificationType attribute is Invalidate. To disable change notification for a class, set the value of the attribute to None.

The databaseChangeNotificationType attribute is relevant only if the persistence unit has been configured with a database event listener, such as the OracleChangeNotificationListener class, that receives database change events. This allows the EclipseLink cache to be invalidated or updated from database changes.

Oracle strongly suggests that you use optimistic locking (writes on stale data will fail and automatically invalidate the cache) in your transactions. If you include an @Version annotation in your entity, then the version column in the primary table will always be updated, and the object will always be invalidated.