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in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

java - Inject PersistenceContext with CDI

Currently, I'm using PersistenceContext to inject an EntityManager. The EM is injected perfectly.

@Stateless
public StatelessSessionBean implements StatelessSessionBeanLocal {

    @PersistenceContext(unitName = "MyPersistenceUnit")
    private EntityManager em;

    @Override
    public Collection<MyObject> getAllObjects(){
        CriteriaBuilder cb = em.getCriteriaBuilder();
        CriteriqQuery<MyObject> query = cb.createQuery(MyObject.class);
        query.from(MyObject);
        return em.createQuery(query).getResultList();
    }
}

Now I try to decorate the bean, and suddenly the em doesn't get injected. I get a NullPointerException.

@Decorator
public StatelessSessionBeanDecorator implements StatelessSessionBeanLocal {

    @Inject
    @Delegate
    @Any
    StatelessSessionBeanLocal sb

    @Override
    public Collection<MyObject> getAllObjects(){
        System.out.println("Decorated method!");
        return sb.getAllObjects();
    }
}

I know EJB and CDI are 2 completely different managers, so the one doesn't know about the other. I'm expecting that @PersistenceContext is an EJB injection point, while @Inject is a CDI one. What should I do to solve this and get the EntityManager to be injected like it should?

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The best practice for persistence context and CDI is to make them CDI bean to avoid these kind of issue.

public class MyProducers {
    @Produces
    @PersistenceContext(unitName = "MyPersistenceUnit")
    private EntityManager em;
}

After that you'll be able to inject the EntityManager in CDI way. Taking your EJB it'll be :

@Stateless
public StatelessSessionBean implements StatelessSessionBeanLocal {

    @Inject
    private EntityManager em;

    @Override
    public Collection<MyObject> getAllObjects(){
        CriteriaBuilder cb = em.getCriteriaBuilder();
        CriteriqQuery<MyObject> query = cb.createQuery(MyObject.class);
        query.from(MyObject);
        return em.createQuery(query).getResultList();
    }
}

This way, you'll be able to decorate your CDI bean with no issue.

If you have multiple EntityManagers you can use CDI qualifiers to distinguish them


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