| 
         For the latest stable version, please use Spring Data Commons 3.5.5!  | 
    
Publishing Events from Aggregate Roots
Entities managed by repositories are aggregate roots.
In a Domain-Driven Design application, these aggregate roots usually publish domain events.
Spring Data provides an annotation called @DomainEvents that you can use on a method of your aggregate root to make that publication as easy as possible, as shown in the following example:
class AnAggregateRoot {
    @DomainEvents (1)
    Collection<Object> domainEvents() {
        // … return events you want to get published here
    }
    @AfterDomainEventPublication (2)
    void callbackMethod() {
       // … potentially clean up domain events list
    }
}
| 1 | The method that uses @DomainEvents can return either a single event instance or a collection of events.
It must not take any arguments. | 
| 2 | After all events have been published, we have a method annotated with @AfterDomainEventPublication.
You can use it to potentially clean the list of events to be published (among other uses). | 
The methods are called every time one of the following a Spring Data repository methods are called:
- 
save(…),saveAll(…) - 
delete(…),deleteAll(…),deleteAllInBatch(…),deleteInBatch(…) 
Note, that these methods take the aggregate root instances as arguments.
This is why deleteById(…) is notably absent, as the implementations might choose to issue a query deleting the instance and thus we would never have access to the aggregate instance in the first place.