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Tomáš Trávníček
doctrine-dbal
Commits
17cd8d71
Commit
17cd8d71
authored
Jul 05, 2017
by
Tobias Schultze
Committed by
GitHub
Jul 05, 2017
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Fix exception reference in documentation
Fixes #2760
parent
8906f736
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transactions.rst
docs/en/reference/transactions.rst
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docs/en/reference/transactions.rst
View file @
17cd8d71
...
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ Error handling
...
@@ -242,7 +242,7 @@ Error handling
In order to handle errors related to deadlocks or lock wait timeouts,
In order to handle errors related to deadlocks or lock wait timeouts,
you can use Doctrine built-in transaction exceptions.
you can use Doctrine built-in transaction exceptions.
All transaction exceptions
have a marker interface: ``Doctrine/DBAL/Exception/
RetryableException``.
All transaction exceptions
where retrying makes sense have a marker interface: ``Doctrine\DBAL\Exception\
RetryableException``.
A practical example is as follows:
A practical example is as follows:
::
::
...
@@ -251,16 +251,16 @@ A practical example is as follows:
...
@@ -251,16 +251,16 @@ A practical example is as follows:
try {
try {
// process stuff
// process stuff
} catch (\Doctrine
/DBAL/Exception/
RetryableException $e) {
} catch (\Doctrine
\DBAL\Exception\
RetryableException $e) {
// retry the processing
// retry the processing
}
}
If you need stricter control, you can catch the concrete exceptions directly:
If you need stricter control, you can catch the concrete exceptions directly:
- ``Doctrine
/DBAL/Exception/
DeadlockException``: this can happen when each member
- ``Doctrine
\DBAL\Exception\
DeadlockException``: this can happen when each member
of a group of actions is waiting for some other member to release a shared lock.
of a group of actions is waiting for some other member to release a shared lock.
- ``Doctrine
/DBAL/Exception/
LockWaitTimeoutException``: this exception happens when
- ``Doctrine
\DBAL\Exception\
LockWaitTimeoutException``: this exception happens when
a transaction ha
ve
to wait a considerable amount of time to obtain a lock, even if
a transaction ha
s
to wait a considerable amount of time to obtain a lock, even if
a deadlock is not involved.
a deadlock is not involved.
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