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I found some instructions how to configure pure hibernate to use EHCache. But I can't find any instructions how to configure JPA2.0 EntityManager to use cache. Hibernate 3.5.2 is my JPA2.0 provider.

edit// Is @Cacheable(true) enough for entity? Or should I use @org.hibernate.annotations.Cache to configure the entity?

A: 

in persistence.xml you can specify this property:

<property name="hibernate.cache.region.factory_class" 
    value="net.sf.ehcache.hibernate.EhCacheRegionFactory" />

and to make it active:

<property name="hibernate.cache.use_second_level_cache" value="true" />
Bozho
What happened with <property name="hibernate.cache.provider_class" value="org.hibernate.cache.EhCacheProvider" />class org.hibernate.cache.EhCacheProvider doesn't exist in hibernate 3.5.2
peperg
download EhCache separately and put it on your classpath. the Value in my answer is not "org.hibernate.."
Bozho
+1  A: 

I found some instructions how to configure pure hibernate to use EHCache. But I can't find any instructions how to configure JPA2.0 EntityManager to use cache. Hibernate 3.5.2 is my JPA2.0 provider.

The way you configure the L2 cache provider with JPA is similar is similar to raw Hibernate.

By default, Hibernate 3.5 ships with EhCache 1.5 (see Configure Ehcache as a Second Level Cache) and if you want to use the official cache provider provided by Hibernate (in hibernate-ehcache if you are using Maven), declare:

<!-- This is the provider for Ehcache provided by Hibernate, using the "old" SPI -->
<property name="hibernate.cache.provider_class" value="org.hibernate.cache.EhCacheProvider"/>

If you want to use EhCache 2.x, you'll need to use the provider provided by EhCache which supports the new Hibernate 3.3/3.5 SPI with its CacheRegionFactory). Use:

<!-- The region factory property is the "new" property (for Hibernate 3.3 and above) -->
<property name="hibernate.cache.region.factory_class" value="net.sf.ehcache.hibernate.EhCacheRegionFactory">

for instance creation, or

<property name="hibernate.cache.region.factory_class" value="net.sf.ehcache.hibernate.SingletonEhCacheRegionFactory"/>

to force Hibernate to use a singleton of Ehcache CacheManager.

And then activate L2 caching and query caching:

<property name="hibernate.cache.use_second_level_cache" value="true"/>
<property name="hibernate.cache.use_query_cache" value="true"/>

That's for the Hibernate L2 cache setup.

Is @Cacheable(true) enough for entity? Or should I use @org.hibernate.annotations.Cache to configure the entity?

In theory, the @Cacheable is supposed to be a replacement for the Hibernate proprietary annotation and should be used in conjunction with the shared-cache-mode element:

<persistence xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_2_0.xsd" version="2.0">
  <persistence-unit name="FooPu" transaction-type="RESOURCE_LOCAL">
    <provider>org.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence</provider>
    ...
    <shared-cache-mode>ENABLE_SELECTIVE</shared-cache-mode>
    <properties>
      ...
    </properties>
  </persistence-unit>
</persistence>

But as mentioned in this previous question, initial experimentation has not been successful (it might be related to HHH-5303, I can't say, I didn't investigate that much). So I suggest sticking with the proprietary annotations.

References

  • Hibernate EntityManager reference guide
  • JPA 2.0 Specification
    • Section 3.7.1 "The shared-cache-mode Element"
    • Section 11.1.7 "Cacheable Annotation"

Resources

Related question

Pascal Thivent
Surely, you want:<property name="hibernate.cache.use_query_cache" value="true"/>
GaryF
@GaryF Thanks, that's a typo. Fixing it.
Pascal Thivent