The JPA standard defines how to access JDBC connections from enterprise beans.
OpenJPA also provides APIs to access an EntityManager
's
connection, or to retrieve a connection directly from the
EntityManagerFactory
's DataSource
.
The
OpenJPAEntityManager.getConnection
method
returns an EntityManager
's connection. If the
EntityManager
does not already have a connection, it will obtain
one. The returned connection is only guaranteed to be transactionally consistent
with other EntityManager
operations if the
EntityManager
is in a managed or non-optimistic transaction, if the
EntityManager
has flushed in the current transaction, or
if you have used the OpenJPAEntityManager.beginStore
method to ensure that a datastore transaction is in progress. Always close the
returned connection before attempting any other EntityManager
operations. OpenJPA will ensure that the underlying native
connection is not released if a datastore transaction is in progress.
Example 4.5. Using the EntityManager's Connection
import java.sql.*; import org.apache.openjpa.persistence.*; ... OpenJPAEntityManager kem = OpenJPAPersistence.cast(em); Connection conn = (Connection) kem.getConnection(); // do JDBC stuff conn.close();
The example below shows how to use a connection directly from the
DataSource
, rather than using an EntityManager
's connection.
Example 4.6. Using the EntityManagerFactory's DataSource
import java.sql.*; import javax.sql.*; import org.apache.openjpa.conf.*; import org.apache.openjpa.persistence.*; ... OpenJPAEntityManagerFactory kemf = OpenJPAPersistence.cast(emf); OpenJPAConfiguration conf = kemf.getConfiguration(); DataSource dataSource = (DataSource) conf.getConnectionFactory(); Connection conn = dataSource.getConnection(); // do JDBC stuff conn.close();