Transaction Boundaries in Spring
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Understanding Transaction Boundaries in Spring
Transaction boundaries define where a transaction starts, commits, or rolls back. In Spring, you manage these boundaries declaratively using the @Transactional annotation. When you apply @Transactional to a method or class, Spring automatically creates and manages transaction boundaries for you at runtime.
Spring uses Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) to intercept method calls marked with @Transactional. At runtime, Spring generates a proxy object for each bean with transactional methods. When you call a transactional method, the proxy wraps the method execution with transaction management logic:
- Start a new transaction before the method runs;
- Monitor the method execution for exceptions;
- Commit the transaction if the method completes successfully;
- Roll back the transaction if a runtime exception occurs.
This proxy-based approach means you do not need to write manual transaction code. Spring ensures that each method marked with @Transactional has a consistent, reliable transaction boundary, even when called from other beans. This runtime behavior simplifies transactional programming and helps you maintain data integrity throughout your application.
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