Question

We have an application that uses Hibernate's 2nd level caching to avoid database hits.

I was wondering if there is some easy way to invalidate the Java application's Hibernate 2nd level cache when an outside process such as a MySQL administrator directly connected to modify the database (update/insert/delete).

We are using EHCache as our 2nd level cache implementation.

We use a mix of @Cache(usage = CacheConcurrencyStrategy.READ_WRITE) and @Cache(usage = CacheConcurrencyStrategy.NONSTRICT_READ_WRITE), and we don't have Optimistic concurrency control enabled using timestamps on each entity.

The SessionFactory contains methods to manage the 2nd level cache: - Managing the Caches

sessionFactory.evict(Cat.class, catId); //evict a particular Cat
sessionFactory.evict(Cat.class);  //evict all Cats
sessionFactory.evictCollection("Cat.kittens", catId); //evict a particular collection of kittens
sessionFactory.evictCollection("Cat.kittens"); //evict all kitten collections

But because we annotate individual entity classes with @Cache, there's no central place for us to "reliably" (e.g. no manual steps) add that to the list.

// Easy to forget to update this to properly evict the class
public static final Class[] cachedEntityClasses = {Cat.class, Dog.class, Monkey.class}

public void clear2ndLevelCache() {
  SessionFactory sessionFactory = ...   //Retrieve SessionFactory

   for (Class entityClass : cachedEntityClasses) {
       sessionFactory.evict(entityClass);
   }
}

There's no real way for Hibernate's 2nd level cache to know that an entity changed in the DB unless it queries that entity (which is what the cache is protecting you from). So maybe as a solution we could simply call some method to force the second level cache to evict everything (again because of lack of locking and concurrency control you risk in progress transactions from "reading" or updating stale data).

Was it helpful?

Solution

Based on ChssPly76's comments here's a method that evicts all entities from 2nd level cache (we can expose this method to admins through JMX or other admin tools):

/**
 * Evicts all second level cache hibernate entites. This is generally only
 * needed when an external application modifies the game databaase.
 */
public void evict2ndLevelCache() {
    try {
        Map<String, ClassMetadata> classesMetadata = sessionFactory.getAllClassMetadata();
        for (String entityName : classesMetadata.keySet()) {
            logger.info("Evicting Entity from 2nd level cache: " + entityName);
            sessionFactory.evictEntity(entityName);
        }
    } catch (Exception e) {
        logger.logp(Level.SEVERE, "SessionController", "evict2ndLevelCache", "Error evicting 2nd level hibernate cache entities: ", e);
    }
}

OTHER TIPS

SessionFactory has plenty of evict() methods precisely for that purpose:

sessionFactory.evict(MyEntity.class); // remove all MyEntity instances
sessionFactory.evict(MyEntity.class, new Long(1)); // remove a particular MyEntity instances

Both hibernate and JPA now provide direct access to the underlying 2nd level cache:

sessionFactory.getCache().evict(..);
entityManager.getCache().evict(..)

I was searching how to invalidate all Hibernate caches and I found this useful snippet:

sessionFactory.getCache().evictQueryRegions();
sessionFactory.getCache().evictDefaultQueryRegion();
sessionFactory.getCache().evictCollectionRegions();
sessionFactory.getCache().evictEntityRegions();

Hope it helps to someone else.

You may try doing this:

private EntityManager em;

public void clear2ndLevelHibernateCache() {
    Session s = (Session) em.getDelegate();
    SessionFactory sf = s.getSessionFactory();

    sf.getCache().evictQueryRegions();
    sf.getCache().evictDefaultQueryRegion();
    sf.getCache().evictCollectionRegions();
    sf.getCache().evictEntityRegions();

    return;
}

I hope It helps.

One thing to take into account when using distributed cache is that QueryCache is local, and evicting it on one node, does not evicts it from other. Another issue is - evicting Entity region without evicting Query region will cause N+1 selects,when trying to retrieve date from Query cache. Good readings on this topic here.

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