public interface TransactionRunner
TransactionContext
for a description of transaction
semantics. TransactionRunner
instances are obtained by calling Session#readWriteTransaction()
.
A TransactionRunner
instance can only be used for a single invocation of run(TransactionCallable)
.
Modifier and Type | Interface and Description |
---|---|
static interface |
TransactionRunner.TransactionCallable<T>
A unit of work to be performed in the context of a transaction.
|
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
TransactionRunner |
allowNestedTransaction()
Allows overriding the default behaviour of blocking nested transactions.
|
CommitResponse |
getCommitResponse()
Returns the
CommitResponse of this transaction. |
com.google.cloud.Timestamp |
getCommitTimestamp()
Returns the timestamp at which the transaction committed.
|
<T> T |
run(TransactionRunner.TransactionCallable<T> callable)
Executes a read-write transaction, with retries as necessary.
|
@Nullable <T> T run(TransactionRunner.TransactionCallable<T> callable)
callable
, which may return an object as the result of
the work. callable
will be retried if a transaction attempt aborts; implementations
must be prepared to be called more than once. Any writes buffered by callable
will only
be applied if the transaction commits successfully. Similarly, the value produced by callable
will only be returned by this method if the transaction commits successfully.
callable
is allowed to raise an unchecked exception. Typically this prevents further
attempts to execute callable
, and the exception will propagate from this method call.
However, if a read or query in callable
detected that the transaction aborted, callable
will be retried even if it raised an exception.
com.google.cloud.Timestamp getCommitTimestamp()
run(TransactionCallable)
has returned normally.CommitResponse getCommitResponse()
CommitResponse
of this transaction.TransactionRunner allowNestedTransaction()
Note that the client library does not maintain any information regarding the nesting structure. If an outer transaction fails and an inner transaction succeeds, upon retry of the outer transaction, the inner transaction will be re-executed.
Use with care when certain that the inner transaction is idempotent. Avoid doing this when accessing the same db. There might be legitimate uses where access need to be made across DBs for instance.
E.g. of nesting that is discouraged, see nestedReadWriteTxnThrows
nestedReadOnlyTxnThrows
, nestedBatchTxnThrows
, nestedSingleUseReadTxnThrows
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