Version 5 will work for you, you just have to define the tables using the innodb engine.
http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/using-innodb-tables.html Larry On 3/13/07, Mark Volkmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Mar 13, 2007, at 3:04 PM, Larry Meadors wrote: > Are you using MySQL w/o innodb, or some other database that is not > transaction aware? Ahh ... that may be the issue. I'm using MySQL version 5.0.27- standard. I assumed that all newer versions of MySQL were transaction aware. Is that wrong? Perhaps I need to download a different version. > Larry > > > On 3/13/07, Mark Volkmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> I seem to be getting automatic transactions when I use Spring DAOs >> generated by Abator even though my SqlMapConfig.xml contains the >> following. >> >> <transactionManager type="JDBC"> >> <dataSource type="SIMPLE"> >> ... >> >> Here's the simple bit of code I'm using to test this. The change to >> addressId is persisted even though a RunTime exception is thrown >> inside the try and commitTransaction is not called. Any idea what I >> might be doing wrong? >> >> boolean problem = true; >> Person person = personDAO.selectByPrimaryKey(markId); >> SqlMapClient smc = ((SqlMapClientDaoSupport) >> personDAO).getSqlMapClient(); >> try { >> smc.startTransaction(); >> >> person.setAddressId(addressId); >> personDAO.updateByPrimaryKey(person); >> System.out.println("updated address"); // This is output. >> >> // What happens if an exception occurs here? >> if (problem) throw new RuntimeException("something bad >> happened"); >> >> person.setHomePhoneId(homePhoneId); >> personDAO.updateByPrimaryKey(person); >> System.out.println("updated home phone"); // This isn't >> output. >> >> smc.commitTransaction(); >> } finally { >> smc.endTransaction(); >> } >>