It should. No objects registered with the context are returned from your function, and context itself is registered in event mechanizms using weak references
2009/3/10 Borut Bolčina <[email protected]> > Hi, just a sanity check: > > I have a this method in my PersistenceManager class: > > public Principal findPrincipalByUsername(String username) { > DataContext context = DataContext.createDataContext(); > Expression e = > ExpressionFactory.matchExp(User.USERNAME_PROPERTY, username); > SelectQuery query = new SelectQuery(User.class, e); > List users = context.performQuery(query); > > User user = null; > Principal principal = null; > if (users.size() > 0) { > user = (User) users.get(0); > principal = new Principal(); > principal.setUsername(user.getUsername()); > Profile profile = user.getProfiles().get(0); > principal.setFirstName(profile.getFirstName()); > principal.setLastName(profile.getLastName()); > } > > return principal; > } > > Is DataContext (context) garbage collected? > > -Borut > > > 2007/4/10 Andrus Adamchik <[email protected]>: > > The context is garbage collected once the context itself and all its > objects > > go out of scope. So make sure you don't retain references to the objects > > registered in the context and you should be fine. > > > > Andrus > > > > > > On Apr 10, 2007, at 11:18 AM, Marc Gabriel-Willem wrote: > >> > >> Hi, > >> > >> > >> > >> In some situation, I'm creating a child data context. > >> > >> Is there a good way to clean-up that child data context properly (in > >> order to facilitate the JVM GC process) when I finished with it ? > >> > >> > >> > >> Thank you. > >> > >> Marc > >> > > > > >
