anonymous wrote : You only need RC1 or snapshot if you wish to use spring 
managed local transactions that are automatically created and committed by seam 
in a faces request. Of if you want to use Seam's @Transactional annotation. 

Is there a configuration example for using spring managed local tx? By talking  
"automatically created and committed by seam in a faces request", do you mean 
the code started by the seam filter (listener)? Is it correct, that Seam will 
start 2 txs (using spring tx manager) for each jsf request and all methods 
marked with spring @Transactional will just take part in the tx silently?

anonymous wrote : Yes you can use JpaTransactionManager and do transaction 
management in spring and not have to use the embedded-jboss and jta.    

In tomcat6 the method getUserTransaction always exists with a 
NamingException(can not create resource) , if I haven't installed the 
embedded-jboss. Only NameNotFoundException is caught, no general 
NamingException. It results in a endless redirect loop. With Beta1 I only 
manage to get a running version with JTA and embedded-jboss.


anonymous wrote : <bean 
id="org.springframework.context.annotation.internalPersistenceAnnotationProcessor"
 
class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.support.PersistenceAnnotationBeanPostProcessor">
  |   |                 <property name="defaultPersistenceUnitName" 
value="seamEntityManagerFactory"/>
  |   |         </bean>
  |   |         

Are you sure the vlaue of defaultPersistenceUnitName should be 
seamEntityManagerFactory instead of something like customer-persistence-unit?

anonymous wrote : 
  | Configured the way I told you the PersistenceContext will be managed by 
Seam. If you want to take advantage of Seam's Conversation scoped 
PersistenceContexts then that is the way it will need to be. This in no way 
limits your ability to execute code asynchronously or outside of a Seam request 
though. Take a look at the spring-seam example. In there I was actually 
executing a spring configured timer task on a bean that used a Seam managed 
persistenceContext.
  | 
  | There is nothing that says you cannot use a Spring managed Entitymanager it 
just means you won't be able to take advantage of a Conversation scoped 
EntityManager.
  | 
  | Is there a particular reason why you would want to use a Spring managed 
EntityManager? 

That was exact my question. I was not sure, whether the seam entity manager is 
available, if the request is not a JSF one, which runs through the seam filter 
(listener), but e.g. a WS-call, which is directed directly to Spring. If I 
understand you right, the entity manager is still available.

Anyway, your advice has been very valuable. Thanks a lot.

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