Does spring boot automatically add @Transactional annotation at controller layer? I tried putting @Transactional at service layer but it seems that the controller layer is overriding the annotation.
I have this config
<tx:advice id="txAdvice" transaction-manager="transactionManager">
<tx:attributes>
<tx:method name="find*" read-only="true" isolation="READ_COMMITTED"
propagation="NOT_SUPPORTED" />
<tx:method name="load*" read-only="true" isolation="READ_COMMITTED"
propagation="NOT_SUPPORTED" />
<tx:method name="get*" read-only="true" isolation="READ_COMMITTED"
propagation="NOT_SUPPORTED" />
<tx:method name="*" timeout="30" propagation="REQUIRED" />
</tx:attributes>
</tx:advice>
<aop:config proxy-target-class="true">
<aop:advisor advice-ref="txAdvice"
pointcut="execution(* *..service.*Service*.*(..))" order="1" />
</aop:config>
and even If I remove that config the transaction still works.
EDIT:
here's my datasource config
<bean id="msDataSource" class="org.apache.tomcat.jdbc.pool.DataSource"
destroy-method="close">
<property name="driverClassName" value="${jdbc.main.driverClass}" />
<property name="url" value="${jdbc.main.url}" />
<property name="username" value="${jdbc.main.username}" />
<property name="password" value="${jdbc.main.password}" />
</bean>
<bean id="msPUM"
class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.persistenceunit.DefaultPersistenceUnitManager">
<property name="defaultDataSource" ref="msDataSource" />
</bean>
<bean id="entityManagerFactory"
class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean">
<property name="persistenceUnitManager" ref="msPUM" />
<!--<property name="jpaVendorAdapter"> <bean class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaVendorAdapter">
<property name="database" value="ORACLE"/> <property name="generateDdl" value="false"/>
<property name="showSql" value="true" /> </bean> </property> -->
</bean>
<bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.JpaTransactionManager">
<property name="entityManagerFactory" ref="entityManagerFactory" />
</bean>
I'm just guessing but I assume what you're trying to ask here is why you're able to load lazy collections on your entities inside your controller?
Spring Boot configures the following application property spring.jpa.open-in-view with a default value of "true". Basically this opens a session for the entire request allowing you to do things like the above outside of a @Transactional.
Adding this to your application.properties will turn it off:
spring.jpa.open-in-view=false