Book Image

Learning Spring 5.0

By : Tejaswini Mandar Jog
Book Image

Learning Spring 5.0

By: Tejaswini Mandar Jog

Overview of this book

<p>Spring is the most widely used framework for Java programming and with its latest update to 5.0, the framework is undergoing massive changes. Built to work with both Java 8 and Java 9, Spring 5.0 promises to simplify the way developers write code, while still being able to create robust, enterprise applications.</p> <p>If you want to learn how to get around the Spring framework and use it to build your own amazing applications, then this book is for you.</p> <p>Beginning with an introduction to Spring and setting up the environment, the book will teach you in detail about the Bean life cycle and help you discover the power of wiring for dependency injection. Gradually, you will learn the core elements of Aspect-Oriented Programming and how to work with Spring MVC and then understand how to link to the database and persist data configuring ORM, using Hibernate.</p> <p>You will then learn how to secure and test your applications using the Spring-test and Spring-Security modules. At the end, you will enhance your development skills by getting to grips with the integration of RESTful APIs, building microservices, and doing reactive programming using Spring, as well as messaging with WebSocket and STOMP.</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
9
Explore the Power of RESTful Web Services

Life cycle of transaction management


The following diagram shows the stages in the progress of each transaction:

The newly started transaction will progress through the following stages:

  • Active: The transaction has just started and is progressing ahead.
  • Partially committed: Once the operation is performed successfully, the generated values during it will be stored in the volatile storage.
  • Failed: The values generated before the failure are no longer required and will be removed from the volatile storage area. The process of removing them is generally called rollback.
  • Aborted: The operation is failed and is no longer continued further; it will be stopped or aborted.
  • Committed: All the operations are successfully performed, and all the temporary values generated during the operation will be stored permanently once the transaction is committed.
  • Terminated: When the transaction is committed or aborted, it reaches to its final stage: the termination.

To handle transaction along with life cycle steps...