Highly likely.

Consider 2 different Hibernate Sessions performing the same load concurrently:

session.load( MyEntity.class, new Long(1) );

And assume that MyEntity#1 is not currently in the cache.  So what happens?

Well, in response to the load from the first session Hibernate will load the 
data from the database and then perform the put into the cache, acquiring: (1) 
a read lock in the database and (2) a write lock in the cache.  

Now, the second load request gets processed.  So Hibernate checks the cache to 
see if the data exists there.  However, we have previously acquired a write 
lock in the other session so this process is blocked until that write lock is 
released when the first session ends its transaction.


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