Getting started with JPA and Mule
Working with JPA managed entities in Mule applications can be difficult. Since the JPA session is not propagated between message processors, transformers are typically needed to produce an entity from a message’s payload, pass it to a component for processing, then serialize it back to an un-proxied representation for further processing.
Transactions have been complicated too. Its difficult to coordinate a transaction between multiple components that are operating with JPA entity payloads. Finally the lack of support for JPA queries makes it difficult to load objects without working with raw SQL and the JDBC transport.
Mule Support for JPA Entities
The JPA module aims to simplify working with JPA managed entities with Mule. It provides message processors that map to an EntityManager’s methods. The message processors participate in Mule transactions, making it easy to structure JPA transactions within Mule flows. The JPA module also provides a @PersistenceContext implementation. This allows Mule components to participate in JPA transactions.
Installing the JPA Module
To install the JPA Module you need to click on “Help” followed by “Install New Software…” from Mule Studio. Select the “MuleStudio Cloud Connectors Update Site” from the “Work With” drop-down list then find the “Mule Java Persistence API Module Mule Extension.” This is illustrated below:
Fetching JPA Entities
JPA query language or criteria queries can be executed using the “query” MP. Supplying a statement to the query will execute the given query and return the results to the next message processor, as illustrated in the following Gist:
<flow name="testQueryWithListParameters"> <jpa:query statement="from Dog dog where dog.name = ?" queryParameters-ref="#[payload:]"/> <vm:outbound-endpoint path="foo"/> </flow>
<flow name="testQueryWithMapParameters"> <jpa:query statement="from Dog dog where dog.name = :name and dog.breed = :breed" queryParameters-ref="#[payload:]"/> </flow>
CriteriaBuilder criteriaBuilder = entityManager.getCriteriaBuilder(); CriteriaQuery<Dog> criteriaQuery = criteriaBuilder.createQuery(Dog.class); Root<Dog> from = criteriaQuery.from(Dog.class); Predicate condition = criteriaBuilder.equal(from.get("name"), "Cujo"); criteriaQuery.where(condition); runFlowWithPayloadAndExpect("testQuery", expectedResults, criteriaQuery);
<flow name="testFind"> <jpa:find entityClass="domain.Dog" id-ref="#[payload:]"/> </flow>
Transactions and Entity Operations
The default behavior of most JPA providers, like Hibernate, is to provide proxies on entity relationships to avoid loading full object graphs into memory. When these objects are detached from the JPA session, however, attempts to access relations in the object will often fail because the proxied session is no longer available. This complicates using JPA is Mule applications as JPA objects pass between message processors and inbetween flows and the session subsequently becomes unavailable.
The JPA module allows you to avoid this by wrapping your operations in a transactional block. Let’s first look at how to persist an object then query it within a transaction. The below assumes the message’s payload is an instance of the Dog domain class.
<flow name="testTransactionalInsertAndQuery"> <transactional> <jpa:persist/> <jpa:query statement="from Dog dog where dog.name = 'Cujo'"/> </transactional> </flow>
<flow name="testMerge"> <vm:inbound-endpoint path="in"/> <transactional> <jpa:merge/> ....other processing here.... </transactional> <vm:outbound-endpoint path="foo"/> </flow>
<flow name="testDetach"> <transactional> <jpa:detach/> </transactional> </flow>
Component Operations with JPA
The real power of using JPA with Mule is allowing your business services to participate in Mule managed JPA transactions. A @PersistenceContext EntityManager reference in your component class will cause Mule to inject a reference to a transactional flow’s current EntityManager for that method, as illustrated in the following class:
public class DogServiceImpl { @PersistenceContext EntityManager entityManager; public Dog groom(Dog dog) { return entityManager.merge(dog); } }
<flow name="dogGroomingFlow"> <vm:inbound-endpoint path="dog.groom.in"/> <transactional> <jpa:merge/> <component class="service.DogServiceImpl"/> </transactional> <vm:outbound-endpoint path="dog.groom.out"/> </flow>
Conclusion
JPA is an important part of the JEE ecosystem and hopefully this module will simplify your use of JPA managed entities in Mule applications.