You can specify which tx manager to use with @Transactional
using the value
attribute:
A qualifier value for the specified
transaction.
May be used to determine the target
transaction manager, matching the
qualifier value (or the bean name) of
a specific PlatformTransactionManager
bean definition.
For example:
@Transactional("txManager1");
Alternatively, you can use the more explicit TransactionProxyFactoryBean
, which gives you finer-grained control over what objects gets proxied by what tx managers. This still uses the annotations, but it doesn't auto-detect beans, it's configured explicitly on a bean-by-bean basis.
This normally isn't an issue, but it's not wise to have multiple transaction managers unless you have a very good reason to do so. If you find yourself needing two tx managers, it's usually better to see if you can make do with one. For example, if you have two data sources configured in your app server, you can incorporate both in a single JtaTransactionManager, rather than two seperate JpaTransactionManager
or DataSourceTransactionmanagers
.
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