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WildFly Configuration, Deployment, and Administration - Second Edition

You're reading from   WildFly Configuration, Deployment, and Administration - Second Edition Build a functional and efficient WildFly server with this step-by-step, practical guide

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783286232
Length 402 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installing WildFly FREE CHAPTER 2. Configuring the Core WildFly Subsystems 3. Configuring Enterprise Services 4. The Undertow Web Server 5. Configuring a WildFly Domain 6. Application Structure and Deployment 7. Using the Management Interfaces 8. Clustering 9. Load-balancing Web Applications 10. Securing WildFly 11. WildFly, OpenShift, and Cloud Computing A. CLI References Index

Caching entities


Unless you have set shared-cache-mode to ALL, Hibernate will not automatically cache your entities. You have to select which entities or queries need to be cached. This is definitely the safest option since indiscriminate caching can hurt performance. The following example shows how to do this for JPA entities using annotations:

import javax.persistence.*;
import org.hibernate.annotations.Cache;
import org.hibernate.annotations.CacheConcurrencyStrategy;

@Entity
@Cacheable
@Cache(usage = CacheConcurrencyStrategy.TRANSACTIONAL, region ="properties") 

public class Property {

@Id
@Column(name="key")
private String key;

@Column(name="value")
private String value;

// Getter & setters omitted for brevity
}

Using JPA annotations

The @javax.persistence.Cacheable annotation dictates whether this entity class should be cached in the second-level cache. This is only applicable when the shared-cache-mode is not set to ALL.

Using Hibernate annotations

The @org.hibernate.annotations...

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