Two answers:
a) don't do it. Use @Transactional
in the service layer or the dao layer, but not both (the service layer is the usual choice, as you probably want one transaction per service method)
b) if you do it, what happens depends on the propagation
attribute of the @Transactional
annotation and is described in this section: 10.5.7 Transaction propagation. Basically: PROPAGATION_REQUIRED
means the same transaction will be used for both methods, while PROPAGATION_REQUIRES_NEW
starts a new transaction.
About your comments:
Of course I kept reading and realized that, as I'm using proxies, this second method won't be managed by the transactional proxy, thus it's like any other method call.
That's not true in your situation (only if both methods were within the same class).
If a bean has methods a
and b
, and a
calls b
, then b
is called on the actual method, not the proxy, because it is called from within the proxy (a bean doesn't know that it is proxied to the outside world).
proxy bean
a() --> a()
|
V
b() --> b()
In your situation, however, a service would have an injected dao object, which would be a proxy itself, so you'd have a situation like this:
proxy bean
service a() --> a()
|
/---------/
|
V
dao b() --> b()
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…