The HibernateAssembler uses the "fetchObjectProperties" method to walk
down the object graph of data that will be serialized to the client.  It
calls this while the session is open so that it can be sure to fetch
everything that will be serialized.  There must be a bug in this method
which is preventing it from fetching all of the state in one of your
objects.    It stops if it is a lazy="true" association property.  For
non-association properties, it goes recursively down the property tree
(keeping track of objects it has visited to avoid cycles).   The
algorithm is trying to mimic the path taken by our serialization code
but when the session is open but without the memory overhead of
serializing the data.

 

I thought the code was handling the types of collections and stuff that
hibernate can handle but maybe I'm missing something?   I'll look at the
serialization code to try and figure out what is different.  In the
meantime, your domain model has some state which is just not being
fetched.  You can override the HibernateAssember's fetchObjectProperties
method (you'll unfortunately need to copy the source and change the
package name since this is currently private) to "touch" the objects
needed (just call the getX method or whatever).  In this case it is
trying to fetch an object of type: "config.test.Adult.children" but that
is not telling us which path it is taking to hit that type
unfortunately.  If you can figure out the path, just put the calls e.g.
getChildren into your fetchObjectProperties method.  

 

Jeff

 

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Carlos Rovira
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 3:19 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [flexcoders] Re: FDS/Hibernate -
LazyInitializationException when writing AMF output

 

I found that error when some complex object graph return to FDS and FDS
can't deal with that complex object, so throws that huge error stack. I
solve it returning a more simple object or String.

Hope that helps... 



On 2/17/07, parkerwhirlow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > wrote:

This is happening from FDS... flex.data.assemblers.HibernateAssembler
uses a function called fetchObjectProperties() that's supposed to load
them all while the session is open right?

I've seen in other posts that FDS eager fetches the properties in the
Assembler, so that they are available during serialization... 

am I missing something here?

thanks,
PW



--- In [email protected] <mailto:flexcoders%40yahoogroups.com>
, Dima Gutzeit <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
> 
> You have to initialize the collections before AMF serializes them. The

> problem occurs since you closing Hibernate session without first 
> initializing the arrays, and since you are using lazy initialization
the 
> problem arise.
> 
> You have two options :
> 
> 1. Use lazy=false
> 2. Better one, is calling
/Hibernate.initialize(your_array_reference);/ 
> before you close the Hibernate session.
> 
> Regards,
> Dima Gutzeit.
> 
> parkerwhirlow wrote:
> >
> > Hi again =)
> >
> > I've just started getting this exception inconsistently... sometimes
> > it happens 3 times in a row, other times I can go all afternoon
> > without getting it. Once the exception occurs, it will occur every
> > time the client loads until FDS is restarted.
> >
> > Note this occurs on multiple collections. I tried setting the
> > "offending" collection to lazy=false (in Hibernate), and the
exception
> > occurred on a different collection. I can't set every one of my
> > collections to lazy=false. Especially since at this point, they HAVE
> > to be lazy for the updateItem via hierarchical values to almost
work.
> >
> > I also noticed that the collection does not necessarily need to have
> > any items in it. (And possibly is caused specifically by NOT having
> > any items in it, I can't tell for sure). The collection referenced
in
> > the exception below has no values, and there's another collection in
> > that same class with values that doesn't seem to cause the
exception.
> >
> > See below the hibernate mapping, and exception output when this
> > occurs. (Note there are no FDS managed associations for this
collection)
> >
> > Thanks for any insight you have as to what is causing this.
> >
> > PW
> > _________________________
> >
> > <joined-subclass name="Adult" table="T_ADULT" extends="Person">
> > <key>
> > <column name="ID" length="22" />
> > </key>
> > <set name="children"
> > inverse="false"
> > cascade="all-delete-orphan" >
> > <key>
> > <column name="PARENTID" length="22" not-null="false" />
> > </key>
> > <one-to-many class="Person" />
> > </set>
> > ...
> > </joined-subclass>
> >
> > 10:19:42,093 WARN ProxyWarnLog - Narrowing proxy to class
> > config.test.Adult - this operation breaks ==
> > 10:19:44,687 ERROR LazyInitializationException - failed to lazily
> > initialize a collection of role: config.test.Adult.children, no
> > session or session was closed
> > org.hibernate.LazyInitializationException: failed to lazily
initialize
> > a collection of role: config.test.Adult.children, no session or
> > session was closed
> > at
> >
org.hibernate.collection.AbstractPersistentCollection.throwLazyInitializ
ationException(AbstractPersistentCollection.java:358)
> > at
> >
org.hibernate.collection.AbstractPersistentCollection.throwLazyInitializ
ationExceptionIfNotConnected(AbstractPersistentCollection.j
> > ava:350)
> > at
> >
org.hibernate.collection.AbstractPersistentCollection.readSize(AbstractP
ersistentCollection.java:97)
> > at
> > org.hibernate.collection.PersistentSet.size(PersistentSet.java:139)
> > at java.util.ArrayList.<init>(ArrayList.java:133)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.ArrayCollection.<init>(ArrayCollection.java:44)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeArrayCollection(Amf3Output.java:40
7)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:147)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectProperty(Amf3Output.java:215
)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:495)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeCustomObject(Amf3Output.java:467)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:165)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectArray(Amf3Output.java:730)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeAMFArray(Amf3Output.java:386)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:151)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.ArrayCollection.writeExternal(ArrayCollection.java:97)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:485)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeArrayCollection(Amf3Output.java:41
4)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:147)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectProperty(Amf3Output.java:215
)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:495)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeCustomObject(Amf3Output.java:467)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:165)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectArray(Amf3Output.java:730)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeAMFArray(Amf3Output.java:386)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:151)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.ArrayCollection.writeExternal(ArrayCollection.java:97)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:485)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeArrayCollection(Amf3Output.java:41
4)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:147)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectProperty(Amf3Output.java:215
)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:495)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeCustomObject(Amf3Output.java:467)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:165)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectArray(Amf3Output.java:730)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeAMFArray(Amf3Output.java:386)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:151)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObjectProperty(Amf3Output.java:215
)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writePropertyProxy(Amf3Output.java:495)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeCustomObject(Amf3Output.java:467)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf3Output.writeObject(Amf3Output.java:165)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.io.amf.Amf0Output.writeObject(Amf0Output.java:157)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.AmfMessageSerializer.writeBody(AmfMessageSerialize
r.java:185)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.io.amf.AmfMessageSerializer.writeMessage(AmfMessageSerial
izer.java:139)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.endpoints.amf.SerializationFilter.invoke(SerializationFil
ter.java:164)
> > at
> > flex.messaging.endpoints.AMFEndpoint.service(AMFEndpoint.java:164)
> > at
> >
flex.messaging.MessageBrokerServlet.service(MessageBrokerServlet.java:34
0)
> > at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:853)
> > at jrun.servlet.FilterChain.doFilter(FilterChain.java:86)
> > at
> >
jrun.servlet.security.StandardSecurityFilter.doFilter(StandardSecurityFi
lter.java:103)
> > at jrun.servlet.FilterChain.doFilter(FilterChain.java:94)
> > at jrun.servlet.FilterChain.service(FilterChain.java:101)
> > at jrun.servlet.ServletInvoker.invoke(ServletInvoker.java:91)
> > at
> > jrun.servlet.JRunInvokerChain.invokeNext(JRunInvokerChain.java:42)
> > at
> >
jrun.servlet.JRunRequestDispatcher.invoke(JRunRequestDispatcher.java:259
)
> > at
> >
jrun.servlet.ServletEngineService.dispatch(ServletEngineService.java:541
)
> > at
> > jrun.servlet.http.WebService.invokeRunnable(WebService.java:172)
> > at
> >
jrunx.scheduler.ThreadPool$ThreadThrottle.invokeRunnable(ThreadPool.java
:428)
> > at jrunx.scheduler.WorkerThread.run(WorkerThread.java:66)
> >
> >
>







-- 
::| Carlos Rovira
::| http://www.carlosrovira.com <http://www.carlosrovira.com> 
::| http://www.madeinflex.com <http://www.madeinflex.com>  

 

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