package org.springframework.transaction.support;
import static org.easymock.EasyMock.createMock;
import javax.transaction.TransactionManager;
import javax.transaction.UserTransaction;
import junit.framework.TestCase;
import org.springframework.mock.jndi.SimpleNamingContextBuilder;
import org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager;
import org.springframework.util.SerializationTestUtils;
/**
* @author Rod Johnson
*/
public class JtaTransactionManagerSerializationTests extends TestCase {
public void testSerializable() throws Exception {
UserTransaction ut1 = createMock(UserTransaction.class);
UserTransaction ut2 = createMock(UserTransaction.class);
TransactionManager tm = createMock(TransactionManager.class);
JtaTransactionManager jtam = new JtaTransactionManager();
jtam.setUserTransaction(ut1);
jtam.setTransactionManager(tm);
jtam.setRollbackOnCommitFailure(true);
jtam.afterPropertiesSet();
SimpleNamingContextBuilder jndiEnv = SimpleNamingContextBuilder
.emptyActivatedContextBuilder();
jndiEnv.bind(JtaTransactionManager.DEFAULT_USER_TRANSACTION_NAME, ut2);
JtaTransactionManager serializedJtatm = (JtaTransactionManager) SerializationTestUtils
.serializeAndDeserialize(jtam);
// should do client-side lookup
assertNotNull("Logger must survive serialization",
serializedJtatm.logger);
assertTrue("UserTransaction looked up on client", serializedJtatm
.getUserTransaction() == ut2);
assertNull("TransactionManager didn't survive", serializedJtatm
.getTransactionManager());
assertEquals(true, serializedJtatm.isRollbackOnCommitFailure());
}
}
org.springframework.mock.jndi.SimpleNamingContextBuilder;