I had also been trying hard to find solution for the Transactional support in Reactive style of Mongo DB & Spring Boot
But luckily I figured it myself. Though few of the things from google were also helpful but those were non reactive.
Important Note - For Spring boot 2.2.x it works well, but with spring boot 2.3.x it has some other issues, it has internal re-write & changes all together
You need to use ReactiveMongoTransactionManager along with ReactiveMongoDatabaseFactory, most of the details at the end, also sharing the code repo for the same
For getting the mongo db to support the Transactions we need to make sure that the DB should be running in replica mode.
Why we need that? Because you will get some error like this otherwise:-
Sessions are not supported by the MongoDB cluster to which this client is connected
The instructions for the same are below:-
- run the docker-compose based mongo db server using docker-compose.yml as shared below:-
version: "3"
services:
mongo:
hostname: mongo
container_name: localmongo_docker
image: mongo
expose:
- 27017
ports:
- 27017:27017
restart: always
entrypoint: [ "/usr/bin/mongod", "--bind_ip_all", "--replSet", "rs0" ]
volumes:
- ./mongodata:/data/db # need to create a docker volume named as mongodata first
- After the image comes up, execute the command(here localmongo_docker is the name of the container):-
docker exec -it localmongo_docker mongo
- Copy and paste the command below and execute that
rs.initiate(
{
_id : 'rs0',
members: [
{ _id : 0, host : "mongo:27017" }
]
}
)
- And then exit the execution by entering exit
Important - The code repo can be found here on my github - https://github.com/krnbr/mongo-spring-boot-template
Important notes for the code are as below:-
MongoConfiguration class in the config package is the important part to make the transactions working, link to the configuration class is here
Main part is the Bean
@Bean
ReactiveMongoTransactionManager transactionManager(ReactiveMongoDatabaseFactory dbFactory) {
return new ReactiveMongoTransactionManager(dbFactory);
}
For checking the working of the code's Transactional requirement you may go through the class UserService in service package here
Code shared in case the links do not work for someone:-
The Configuration and inside the Beans
@Configuration
public class MongoConfiguration extends AbstractMongoClientConfiguration {
@Autowired
private MongoProperties mongoProperties;
@Bean
ReactiveMongoTransactionManager transactionManager(ReactiveMongoDatabaseFactory dbFactory) {
return new ReactiveMongoTransactionManager(dbFactory);
}
@Override
protected String getDatabaseName() {
return mongoProperties.getDatabase();
}
@Override
public MongoClient mongoClient() {
return MongoClients.create(mongoProperties.getUri());
}
}
application.properties (related to mongo db)
spring.data.mongodb.database=mongo
spring.data.mongodb.uri=mongodb://localhost:27017/mongo?replicaSet=rs0
Document Classes
Role Class
@Getter
@Setter
@Accessors(chain = true)
@Document(collection = "roles")
@TypeAlias("role")
public class Role implements Persistable<String> {
@Id
private String id;
@Field("role_name")
@Indexed(unique = true)
private String role;
@CreatedDate
private ZonedDateTime created;
@LastModifiedDate
private ZonedDateTime updated;
private Boolean deleted;
private Boolean enabled;
@Override
@JsonIgnore
public boolean isNew() {
if(getCreated() == null)
return true;
else
return false;
}
}
User Class
@Getter
@Setter
@Accessors(chain = true)
@Document(collection = "users")
@JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
@TypeAlias("user")
public class User implements Persistable<String> {
@Id()
private String id;
@Field("username")
@Indexed(unique = true)
@JsonProperty("username")
private String userName;
@JsonProperty(access = JsonProperty.Access.WRITE_ONLY)
private String password;
@CreatedDate
private ZonedDateTime created;
@LastModifiedDate
private ZonedDateTime updated;
private Boolean deleted;
private Boolean enabled;
@DBRef(lazy = true)
@JsonProperty("roles")
private List<Role> roles = new ArrayList();
@Override
@JsonIgnore
public boolean isNew() {
if(getCreated() == null)
return true;
else
return false;
}
}
UserProfile Class
@Getter
@Setter
@Accessors(chain = true)
@Document(collection = "user_profiles")
@JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
@TypeAlias("user_profile")
public class UserProfile implements Persistable<String> {
@Id
private String id;
@Indexed(unique = true)
private String mobile;
@Indexed(unique = true)
private String email;
private String address;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
@DBRef
private User user;
@CreatedDate
private ZonedDateTime created;
@LastModifiedDate
private ZonedDateTime updated;
private Boolean deleted;
private Boolean enabled;
@Override
@JsonIgnore
public boolean isNew() {
if(getCreated() == null)
return true;
else
return false;
}
}
ReactiveMongoRepository Interface(s)
RoleRepository
public interface RoleRepository extends ReactiveMongoRepository<Role, String> {
Mono<Role> findByRole(String role);
Flux<Role> findAllByRoleIn(List<String> roles);
}
UserRepository
public interface UserRepository extends ReactiveMongoRepository<User, String> {
Mono<User> findByUserName(String userName);
}
UserProfileRepository
public interface UserProfileRepository extends ReactiveMongoRepository<UserProfile, String> {
}
The User Service Class Need to create your own RuntimeException Class here, here it is AppRuntimeException Class, I had been using
@Slf4j
@Service
public class UserService {
@Autowired
private RoleRepository roleRepository;
@Autowired
private UserRepository userRepository;
@Autowired
private UserProfileRepository userProfileRepository;
@Transactional
public Mono<UserProfile> saveUserAndItsProfile(final UserRequest userRequest) {
Mono<Role> roleMono = roleRepository.findByRole("USER");
Mono<User> userMono = roleMono.flatMap(r -> {
User user = new User()
.setUserName(userRequest.getUsername())
.setPassword(userRequest.getPassword());
user.setRoles(Arrays.asList(r));
return userRepository.save(user);
}).onErrorResume(ex -> {
log.error(ex.getMessage());
if(ex instanceof DuplicateKeyException) {
String errorMessage = "The user with the username '"+userRequest.getUsername()+"' already exists";
log.error(errorMessage);
return Mono.error(new AppRuntimeException(errorMessage, ErrorCodes.CONFLICT, ex));
}
return Mono.error(new AppRuntimeException(ex.getMessage(), ErrorCodes.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR, ex));
});
Mono<UserProfile> userProfileMono = userMono.flatMap(u -> {
UserProfile userProfile = new UserProfile()
.setAddress(userRequest.getAddress())
.setEmail(userRequest.getEmail())
.setMobile(userRequest.getMobile())
.setUser(u);
return userProfileRepository.save(userProfile);
}).onErrorResume(ex -> {
log.error(ex.getMessage());
if(ex instanceof DuplicateKeyException) {
String errorMessage = "The user with the profile mobile'"+userRequest.getMobile()+"' and/or - email '"+userRequest.getEmail()+"' already exists";
log.error(errorMessage);
return Mono.error(new AppRuntimeException(errorMessage, ErrorCodes.CONFLICT, ex));
}
return Mono.error(new AppRuntimeException(ex.getMessage(), ErrorCodes.INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR, ex));
});
return userProfileMono;
}
}
Controller and the Model Class
UserRequest Model Class
@Getter
@Setter
@Accessors(chain = true)
@Slf4j
@JsonInclude(JsonInclude.Include.NON_NULL)
public class UserRequest {
private String username;
private String password;
private String mobile;
private String email;
private String address;
private String firstName;
private String lastName;
}
UserProfileApisController class
@Slf4j
@RestController
@RequestMapping("/apis/user/profile")
public class UserProfileApisController {
@Autowired
private UserService userService;
@PostMapping
public Mono<UserProfile> saveUserProfile(final @RequestBody UserRequest userRequest) {
return userService.saveUserAndItsProfile(userRequest);
}
}