An instance of a persistent class can be in one of three different states. These states are defined in relation to a persistence context. The Hibernate Session
object is the persistence context. The three different states are as follows:
- Transient
- An object is transient if it has just been instantiated using the
new
operator, and it is not associated with a HibernateSession
. It has no persistent representation in the database and no identifier value has been assigned. Transient instances will be destroyed by the garbage collector if the application does not hold a reference anymore. Use the HibernateSession
to make an object persistent (and let Hibernate take care of the SQL statements that need to be executed for this transition). - Persistent
-
A persistent instance has a representation in the database and an identifier value. It might just have been saved or loaded; however, it is by definition in the scope of a
Session
. Hibernate will detect any changes made to an object in persistent state and synchronize the state with the database when the unit of work completes. Developers do not execute manualUPDATE
statements, orDELETE
statements when an object should be made transient. - Detached
A detached instance is an object that has been persistent, but its Session
has been closed. The reference to the object is still valid, of course, and the detached instance might even be modified in this state. A detached instance can be reattached to a new Session
at a later point in time, making it (and all the modifications) persistent again. This feature enables a programming model for long running units of work that require user think-time. We call them application transactions, i.e., a unit of work from the point of view of the user.
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