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Can anyone tell me whats the advantage of persist() vs save() in Hibernate?

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2 Answers

up vote 11 down vote accepted

From this forum post

persist() is well defined. It makes a transient instance persistent. However, it doesn't guarantee that the identifier value will be assigned to the persistent instance immediately, the assignment might happen at flush time. The spec doesn't say that, which is the problem I have with persist().

persist() also guarantees that it will not execute an INSERT statement if it is called outside of transaction boundaries. This is useful in long-running conversations with an extended Session/persistence context.

A method like persist() is required.

save() does not guarantee the same, it returns an identifier, and if an INSERT has to be executed to get the identifier (e.g. "identity" generator, not "sequence"), this INSERT happens immediately, no matter if you are inside or outside of a transaction. This is not good in a long-running conversation with an extended Session/persistence context.

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to add more from the same post , to whine :"Sadly, 5 years later, this thread still remains the only clear source of information about this subject. The Hibernate documentation, while verbose, is void of all but the most trivial usage information. Why christian's last post is not in the Session javadoc is just another Hibernate documentation mystery." – kommradHomer Mar 28 '12 at 11:35

This question has some good answers about different persistence methods in Hibernate. To answer your question directly, with save() the insert statement is executed immediately regardless of transaction state. It returns the inserted key so you can do something like this:

long newKey = session.save(myObj);

So use save() if you need an identifier assigned to the persistent instance immediately.

With persist(), the insert statement is executed in a transaction, not necessarily immediately. This is preferable in most cases.

Use persist() if you don't need the insert to happen out-of-sequence with the transaction and you don't need the inserted key returned.

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