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Re: [eclipselink-users] EntityManager.remove does not remove entity	from cache
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I am not sure I follow.   Can you provide a code sample?
Mike Traum wrote:
Tom,
I see where you're coming from. The spec references that you gave do 
seem to support this behavior (unfortunate, but that's an issue for a 
different list). But, I think you then run into other conflicts with the 
spec. For example, contains on that the removed entity will return true 
after retrieving it with the query.
Section 3.2.5
The contains method returns true:
• If the entity has been retrieved from the database, and has not been 
removed or detached.
• If the entity instance is new, and the persist method has been called 
on the entity or the persist
operation has been cascaded to it.
The contains method returns false:
• If the instance is detached.
• If the remove method has been called on the entity, or the remove 
operation has been cascaded
to it.
• If the instance is new, and the persist method
mike
mike
Tom Ware wrote:
The spec references I have found are in section 3.2.3 of the JPA 1.0 
specification:
Reference 1:
---
Bidirectional relationships between managed entities will be persisted 
based on references held by the
owning side of the relationship. It is the developer’s responsibility 
to keep the in-memory references
held on the owning side and those held on the inverse side consistent 
with each other when they change.
---
Reference 2: (for flushing)
----
The semantics of the flush operation, applied to an entity X are as 
follows:
<snip>
- If X is a removed entity, it is removed from the database. No 
cascade options are relevant.
----
Is there something I am missing in the spec that you can point me to?
-Tom
Mike Traum wrote:
Maybe I've been defining my entities strangely, but if you define a 
@OneToMany on A and then a @ManyToOne on B (pointing to A), the 
schema generated by eclipselink will have the foreign key in B 
pointing to A. So, this will not be enforced by the database. I can 
drop in some code to illustrate if desired.
If the above is not funky, I think, by the JPA spec, the DB delete 
should not occur. Otherwise, the relationship 'magic' will occur 
between app restarts but not within app queries.
mike
Tom Ware wrote:
EclipseLink relies on your DB foreign-key-contstraints to enforce this.
i.e. You should get a SQL exception on the remove if a 
foreign-key-constraint exists for this relationship.
Mike Traum wrote:
Yes, I thought that might be the answer. But, the implementation 
seems odd. JPA doesn't provide magic for this, but it is deleted 
from the database, however the cache is maintained in a stale 
state. It seems to me that either it should not be deleted from the 
database or it should be removed from the cache.
mike
Tom Ware wrote:
Hi Mike,
  You need to sever the relationship between an A and a B before 
you remove B.  JPA does not provide any magic for this.
-Tom
Mike Traum wrote:
I have the following enitiy map:
A->B->C (where -> represents a OneToMany relationship)
If I do a EntityManager.remove on a B, a following Query (select 
all) will still return that entity, even though it has been 
removed from the database.
Any ideas on the proper way to handle this?
Here's some code illustrating the issue:
   EntityManager em = emf.createEntityManager();
   Query q = em.createQuery("select a FROM A a");
   List<A> as = q.getResultList();
   em.clear();
   em.close();
   System.out.println(as.get(0).getChildren().size()); // output 
is 2
     B b = as.get(0).getChildren().get(0);
     em = emf.createEntityManager();
   em.getTransaction().begin();
   B bm = em.merge(b);
   em.remove(bm);
   em.getTransaction().commit(); // successfully removes B and 
children from database
   em.clear();
   em.close();
   em = emf.createEntityManager();
   q = em.createQuery("select a FROM A a");
   as = q.getResultList();
   em.clear();
   em.close();
   System.out.println(as.get(0).getChildren().size()); // output 
is 2
     em = emf.createEntityManager();
   q = em.createQuery("select a FROM A a");
   
((ReadAllQuery)((EJBQueryImpl)q).getDatabaseQuery()).refreshIdentityMapResult(); 
   as = q.getResultList();
   em.clear();
   em.close();
   System.out.println(as.get(0).getChildren().size()); // output 
is 1
Thanks,
Mike
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