JTA/XA is a kind of system insurance against data corruption (and the resulting business losses). The most common use cases are: Processing JMS messages from a queue and inserting the results in a database: you don't want a crash to lose messages whose results are not yet stored in the database. Updating two or more legacy back-end systems in the same transaction In general, whenever you access more than one back-end system in the same transaction the use of JTA/XA is highly recommended. Otherwise, the risk of data loss or corruption is too high (and not necessarily visible!). Many programmers try to avoid the "overhead" of JTA/XA by programming application-specific recovery code (such as trying to handle duplicate requests, storing extra state in the database, etc). However, all these approaches are brittle (not reusable, application-specific, and hard to test). In the end, the perceived overhead of JTA/XA is often replaced by equivalent but buggy overhead at the application level.
A sample calculation shows the expected benefit of JTA/XA: suppose you are a bank and you have to handle 1 million transactions per day, and with an average value per transaction of 100 USD. This makes a total turnover of 100 million USD per day. If a system crash would cause as little as 1% data loss, then you would have a total cost of 1 million USD for a crash! In this scenario, JTA/XA clearly saves you a lot of money.
The table below shows some cases where you can consider not using JTA/XA, and some trade-offs. In all other cases, JTA/XA offers significant benefits in terms of reliability and simplicity.
Scenario | Feasibility without JTA/XA | JTA/XA benefits |
---|---|---|
At most one resource access | Safe, although system locks may keep the transaction pending | Infinite locks are impossible because XA propagates transaction timeouts to the resource |
Multiple resource accesses, but in same back-end system | Safe if you use the same connection for each access - sharing data between different accesses may require thread-local manipulation of the shared connection handle, and commit handling is complex | Data sharing is handled by XA |
Multiple queries in different back-end systems | Possible, though global correctness is not guaranteed because there is no global transaction concept: your transaction may be reading values that never existed in that combination | Correct reads in all cases because locks will be kept for the global transaction - avoiding interleaving effects with other, concurrent transactions |
Many back-ends | Not safe: only do this if you are willing to face data loss in case of a crash | No data loss or corruption |
All credits to Atomikos and the writer of this article, Guy Pardon. This is just a personal backup. For original article, please refer to:
https://www.atomikos.com/Documentation/WhenToUseJtaXa https://www.atomikos.com/Documentation/WhenNotToUseJtaXa