Issues gh-25038 and gh-25618 collectively introduced a regression for
thread-scoped and transaction-scoped beans.
For example, given a thread-scoped bean X that depends on another
thread-scoped bean Y, if the names of the beans (when used as map keys)
end up in the same bucket within a ConcurrentHashMap AND an attempt is
made to retrieve bean X from the ApplicationContext prior to retrieving
bean Y, then the use of Map::computeIfAbsent in SimpleThreadScope
results in recursive access to the same internal bucket in the map.
On Java 8, that scenario simply hangs. On Java 9 and higher,
ConcurrentHashMap throws an IllegalStateException pointing out that a
"Recursive update" was attempted.
In light of these findings, we are reverting the changes made to
SimpleThreadScope and SimpleTransactionScope in commits 50a4fdac6e and
148dc95eb1.
Closes gh-25801
PR gh-25038 introduced regressions in SimpleThreadScope and
SimpleTransactionScope in Spring Framework 5.2.7. Specifically, if a
thread-scoped or transaction-scoped bean has a dependency on another
thread-scoped or transaction-scoped bean, respectively, a
ConcurrentModificationException will be thrown on Java 11 or higher.
The reason is that Java 11 introduced a check for concurrent
modification in java.util.HashMap's computeIfAbsent() implementation,
and such a modification can occur when a thread-scoped bean is being
created in order to satisfy a dependency of another thread-scoped bean
that is currently being created.
This commit fixes these regressions by switching from HashMap to
ConcurrentHashMap for the instance maps in SimpleThreadScope and
SimpleTransactionScope.
Closes gh-25618
This commit introduces a change in reactive transaction semantics for
cancel signals. Canceling a subscription now rolls back a reactive transaction
to achieve a deterministic transaction outcome.
Previously, cancel signals committed a transaction which could
cause partially committed transactions depending on when the cancel happened.
- The compiler is configured to retain compatibility with Kotlin 1.3.
- Explicit API mode is not yet enabled but could be in the future.
- A workaround for Gradle build is required for now, see
https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-39610 for more details.
- Some exceptions thrown by Kotlin have changed to NullPointerException,
see https://youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/KT-22275 for more details.
Closes gh-24171
This commit picks up where 613bd3be1d
left off by ensuring that a transaction manager configured via the
TransactionManagementConfigurer API takes precedence over any
transaction manager configured as a bean in the ApplicationContext
unless @Transactional is configured with a qualifier for the explicit
transaction manager to use in tests.
Closes gh-24869
Prior to this commit, the TransactionAttributeSourceClassFilter
filtered out PlatformTransactionManager but not
ReactiveTransactionManager implementations.
TransactionAttributeSourceClassFilter now filters out any
TransactionManager implementation, covering both imperative and
reactive transaction managers.