Where should I put @Transactional annotation: at an interface definition or at an implementing class?

Solution 1:

From http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/2.0.x/reference/transaction.html

The Spring team's recommendation is that you only annotate concrete classes with the @Transactional annotation, as opposed to annotating interfaces. You certainly can place the @Transactional annotation on an interface (or an interface method), but this will only work as you would expect it to if you are using interface-based proxies. The fact that annotations are not inherited means that if you are using class-based proxies then the transaction settings will not be recognised by the class-based proxying infrastructure and the object will not be wrapped in a transactional proxy (which would be decidedly bad). So please do take the Spring team's advice and only annotate concrete classes (and the methods of concrete classes) with the @Transactional annotation.

Note: Since this mechanism is based on proxies, only 'external' method calls coming in through the proxy will be intercepted. This means that 'self-invocation', i.e. a method within the target object calling some other method of the target object, won't lead to an actual transaction at runtime even if the invoked method is marked with @Transactional!

(Emphasis added to the first sentence, other emphasis from the original.)

Solution 2:

Spring's recommendation is that you annotate the concrete implementations instead of an interface. It's not incorrect to use the annotation on an interface, it's just possible to misuse that feature and inadvertently bypass your @Transaction declaration.

If you've marked something transactional in an interface and then refer to one of its implementing classes elsewhere in spring, it's not quite obvious that the object that spring creates will not respect the @Transactional annotation.

In practice it looks something like this:

public class MyClass implements MyInterface { 

    private int x;

    public void doSomethingNonTx() {}

    @Transactional
    public void toSomethingTx() {}

}

Solution 3:

You can put them on the interface but be warn that transactions may not end up happening in some cases. See the second tip in Secion 10.5.6 of the Spring docs:

Spring recommends that you only annotate concrete classes (and methods of concrete classes) with the @Transactional annotation, as opposed to annotating interfaces. You certainly can place the @Transactional annotation on an interface (or an interface method), but this works only as you would expect it to if you are using interface-based proxies. The fact that Java annotations are not inherited from interfaces means that if you are using class-based proxies (proxy-target-class="true") or the weaving-based aspect (mode="aspectj"), then the transaction settings are not recognized by the proxying and weaving infrastructure, and the object will not be wrapped in a transactional proxy, which would be decidedly bad.

I would recommend putting them on the implementation for this reason.

Also, to me, transactions seem like an implementation detail so they should be in the implementation class. Imagine having wrapper implementations for logging or test implementations (mocks) that don't need to be transactional.

Solution 4:

Supporting @Transactional on the concrete classes:

I prefer to architect a solution in 3 sections generally: an API, an Implementation and a Web (if needed). I try my best to keep the API as light/simple/POJO as possible by minimizing dependencies. It's especially important if you play it in a distributed/integrated environment where you have to share the APIs a lot.

Putting @Transactional requires Spring libraries in the API section, which IMHO is not effective. So I prefer to add it in the Implementation where the transaction is running.