4.3.24.RELEASE
Copyright © 2004-2016
Table of Contents
The Spring Framework is a lightweight solution and a potential one-stop-shop for building your enterprise-ready applications. However, Spring is modular, allowing you to use only those parts that you need, without having to bring in the rest. You can use the IoC container, with any web framework on top, but you can also use only the Hibernate integration code or the JDBC abstraction layer. The Spring Framework supports declarative transaction management, remote access to your logic through RMI or web services, and various options for persisting your data. It offers a full-featured MVC framework, and enables you to integrate AOP transparently into your software.
Spring is designed to be non-intrusive, meaning that your domain logic code generally has no dependencies on the framework itself. In your integration layer (such as the data access layer), some dependencies on the data access technology and the Spring libraries will exist. However, it should be easy to isolate these dependencies from the rest of your code base.
This document is a reference guide to Spring Framework features. If you have any requests, comments, or questions on this document, please post them on the user mailing list. Questions on the Framework itself should be asked on StackOverflow (see https://spring.io/questions).
This reference guide provides detailed information about the Spring Framework. It provides comprehensive documentation for all features, as well as some background about the underlying concepts (such as "Dependency Injection") that Spring has embraced.
If you are just getting started with Spring, you may want to begin using the Spring Framework by creating a Spring Boot based application. Spring Boot provides a quick (and opinionated) way to create a production-ready Spring based application. It is based on the Spring Framework, favors convention over configuration, and is designed to get you up and running as quickly as possible.
You can use start.spring.io to generate a basic project or follow one of the "Getting Started" guides like the Getting Started Building a RESTful Web Service one. As well as being easier to digest, these guides are very task focused, and most of them are based on Spring Boot. They also cover other projects from the Spring portfolio that you might want to consider when solving a particular problem.
The Spring Framework is a Java platform that provides comprehensive infrastructure support for developing Java applications. Spring handles the infrastructure so you can focus on your application.
Spring enables you to build applications from "plain old Java objects" (POJOs) and to apply enterprise services non-invasively to POJOs. This capability applies to the Java SE programming model and to full and partial Java EE.
Examples of how you, as an application developer, can benefit from the Spring platform:
A Java application — a loose term that runs the gamut from constrained, embedded applications to n-tier, server-side enterprise applications — typically consists of objects that collaborate to form the application proper. Thus the objects in an application have dependencies on each other.
Although the Java platform provides a wealth of application development functionality, it lacks the means to organize the basic building blocks into a coherent whole, leaving that task to architects and developers. Although you can use design patterns such as Factory, Abstract Factory, Builder, Decorator, and Service Locator to compose the various classes and object instances that make up an application, these patterns are simply that: best practices given a name, with a description of what the pattern does, where to apply it, the problems it addresses, and so forth. Patterns are formalized best practices that you must implement yourself in your application.
The Spring Framework Inversion of Control (IoC) component addresses this concern by providing a formalized means of composing disparate components into a fully working application ready for use. The Spring Framework codifies formalized design patterns as first-class objects that you can integrate into your own application(s). Numerous organizations and institutions use the Spring Framework in this manner to engineer robust, maintainable applications.
The Spring Framework consists of features organized into about 20 modules. These modules are grouped into Core Container, Data Access/Integration, Web, AOP (Aspect Oriented Programming), Instrumentation, Messaging, and Test, as shown in the following diagram.
The following sections list the available modules for each feature along with their artifact names and the topics they cover. Artifact names correlate to artifact IDs used in Dependency Management tools.
The Core Container consists of the spring-core,
spring-beans, spring-context, spring-context-support, and spring-expression
(Spring Expression Language) modules.
The spring-core and spring-beans modules provide the fundamental
parts of the framework, including the IoC and Dependency Injection features. The
BeanFactory is a sophisticated implementation of the factory pattern. It removes the
need for programmatic singletons and allows you to decouple the configuration and
specification of dependencies from your actual program logic.
The Context (spring-context) module builds on the solid
base provided by the Core and Beans modules: it is a means to
access objects in a framework-style manner that is similar to a JNDI registry. The
Context module inherits its features from the Beans module and adds support for
internationalization (using, for example, resource bundles), event propagation, resource
loading, and the transparent creation of contexts by, for example, a Servlet container.
The Context module also supports Java EE features such as EJB, JMX, and basic remoting.
The ApplicationContext interface is the focal point of the Context module.
spring-context-support provides support for integrating common third-party libraries
into a Spring application context for caching (EhCache, Guava, JCache), mailing
(JavaMail), scheduling (CommonJ, Quartz) and template engines (FreeMarker, JasperReports,
Velocity).
The spring-expression module provides a powerful Expression
Language for querying and manipulating an object graph at runtime. It is an extension
of the unified expression language (unified EL) as specified in the JSP 2.1
specification. The language supports setting and getting property values, property
assignment, method invocation, accessing the content of arrays, collections and indexers,
logical and arithmetic operators, named variables, and retrieval of objects by name from
Spring’s IoC container. It also supports list projection and selection as well as common
list aggregations.
The spring-aop module provides an AOP Alliance-compliant
aspect-oriented programming implementation allowing you to define, for example,
method interceptors and pointcuts to cleanly decouple code that implements functionality
that should be separated. Using source-level metadata functionality, you can also
incorporate behavioral information into your code, in a manner similar to that of .NET
attributes.
The separate spring-aspects module provides integration with AspectJ.
The spring-instrument module provides class instrumentation support and classloader
implementations to be used in certain application servers. The spring-instrument-tomcat
module contains Spring’s instrumentation agent for Tomcat.
Spring Framework 4 includes a spring-messaging module with key abstractions from the
Spring Integration project such as Message, MessageChannel, MessageHandler, and
others to serve as a foundation for messaging-based applications. The module also
includes a set of annotations for mapping messages to methods, similar to the Spring MVC
annotation based programming model.
The Data Access/Integration layer consists of the JDBC, ORM, OXM, JMS, and Transaction modules.
The spring-jdbc module provides a JDBC-abstraction layer that
removes the need to do tedious JDBC coding and parsing of database-vendor specific error
codes.
The spring-tx module supports programmatic and declarative transaction
management for classes that implement special interfaces and for all your POJOs (Plain
Old Java Objects).
The spring-orm module provides integration layers for popular
object-relational mapping APIs, including JPA,
JDO, and Hibernate. Using the spring-orm module you can
use all of these O/R-mapping frameworks in combination with all of the other features
Spring offers, such as the simple declarative transaction management feature mentioned
previously.
The spring-oxm module provides an abstraction layer that supports Object/XML
mapping implementations such as JAXB, Castor, XMLBeans, JiBX and XStream.
The spring-jms module (Java Messaging Service) contains features for producing and
consuming messages. Since Spring Framework 4.1, it provides integration with the
spring-messaging module.
The Web layer consists of the spring-web, spring-webmvc, spring-websocket, and
spring-webmvc-portlet modules.
The spring-web module provides basic web-oriented integration features such as
multipart file upload functionality and the initialization of the IoC container using
Servlet listeners and a web-oriented application context. It also contains an HTTP client
and the web-related parts of Spring’s remoting support.
The spring-webmvc module (also known as the Web-Servlet module) contains Spring’s
model-view-controller (MVC) and REST Web Services implementation
for web applications. Spring’s MVC framework provides a clean separation between domain
model code and web forms and integrates with all of the other features of the Spring
Framework.
The spring-webmvc-portlet module (also known as the Web-Portlet module) provides
the MVC implementation to be used in a Portlet environment and mirrors the functionality
of the Servlet-based spring-webmvc module.
The spring-test module supports the unit testing and
integration testing of Spring components with JUnit or TestNG. It
provides consistent loading of Spring
ApplicationContexts and caching of those
contexts. It also provides mock objects that you can use to test your
code in isolation.
The building blocks described previously make Spring a logical choice in many scenarios, from embedded applications that run on resource-constrained devices to full-fledged enterprise applications that use Spring’s transaction management functionality and web framework integration.
Spring’s declarative transaction management features make
the web application fully transactional, just as it would be if you used EJB
container-managed transactions. All your custom business logic can be implemented with
simple POJOs and managed by Spring’s IoC container. Additional services include support
for sending email and validation that is independent of the web layer, which lets you
choose where to execute validation rules. Spring’s ORM support is integrated with JPA,
Hibernate and JDO; for example, when using Hibernate, you can continue to use
your existing mapping files and standard Hibernate SessionFactory configuration. Form
controllers seamlessly integrate the web-layer with the domain model, removing the need
for ActionForms or other classes that transform HTTP parameters to values for your
domain model.
Sometimes circumstances do not allow you to completely switch to a different framework.
The Spring Framework does not force you to use everything within it; it is not an
all-or-nothing solution. Existing front-ends built with Struts, Tapestry, JSF
or other UI frameworks can be integrated with a Spring-based middle-tier, which allows
you to use Spring transaction features. You simply need to wire up your business logic
using an ApplicationContext and use a WebApplicationContext to integrate your web
layer.
When you need to access existing code through web services, you can use Spring’s
Hessian-, Burlap-, Rmi- or JaxRpcProxyFactory classes. Enabling remote access to
existing applications is not difficult.
The Spring Framework also provides an access and abstraction layer for Enterprise JavaBeans, enabling you to reuse your existing POJOs and wrap them in stateless session beans for use in scalable, fail-safe web applications that might need declarative security.
Dependency management and dependency injection are different things. To get those nice
features of Spring into your application (like dependency injection) you need to
assemble all the libraries needed (jar files) and get them onto your classpath at
runtime, and possibly at compile time. These dependencies are not virtual components
that are injected, but physical resources in a file system (typically). The process of
dependency management involves locating those resources, storing them and adding them to
classpaths. Dependencies can be direct (e.g. my application depends on Spring at
runtime), or indirect (e.g. my application depends on commons-dbcp which depends on
commons-pool). The indirect dependencies are also known as "transitive" and it is
those dependencies that are hardest to identify and manage.
If you are going to use Spring you need to get a copy of the jar libraries that comprise
the pieces of Spring that you need. To make this easier Spring is packaged as a set of
modules that separate the dependencies as much as possible, so for example if you don’t
want to write a web application you don’t need the spring-web modules. To refer to
Spring library modules in this guide we use a shorthand naming convention spring-* or
spring-*.jar, where * represents the short name for the module
(e.g. spring-core, spring-webmvc, spring-jms, etc.). The actual jar file name that
you use is normally the module name concatenated with the version number
(e.g. spring-core-4.3.24.RELEASE.jar).
Each release of the Spring Framework will publish artifacts to the following places:
spring-*-<version>.jar and the Maven groupId
is org.springframework.
So the first thing you need to decide is how to manage your dependencies: we generally recommend the use of an automated system like Maven, Gradle or Ivy, but you can also do it manually by downloading all the jars yourself.
Below you will find the list of Spring artifacts. For a more complete description of each module, see Section 2.2, “Framework Modules”.
Table 2.1. Spring Framework Artifacts
| GroupId | ArtifactId | Description |
|---|---|---|
org.springframework | spring-aop | Proxy-based AOP support |
org.springframework | spring-aspects | AspectJ based aspects |
org.springframework | spring-beans | Beans support, including Groovy |
org.springframework | spring-context | Application context runtime, including scheduling and remoting abstractions |
org.springframework | spring-context-support | Support classes for integrating common third-party libraries into a Spring application context |
org.springframework | spring-core | Core utilities, used by many other Spring modules |
org.springframework | spring-expression | Spring Expression Language (SpEL) |
org.springframework | spring-instrument | Instrumentation agent for JVM bootstrapping |
org.springframework | spring-instrument-tomcat | Instrumentation agent for Tomcat |
org.springframework | spring-jdbc | JDBC support package, including DataSource setup and JDBC access support |
org.springframework | spring-jms | JMS support package, including helper classes to send/receive JMS messages |
org.springframework | spring-messaging | Support for messaging architectures and protocols |
org.springframework | spring-orm | Object/Relational Mapping, including JPA and Hibernate support |
org.springframework | spring-oxm | Object/XML Mapping |
org.springframework | spring-test | Support for unit testing and integration testing Spring components |
org.springframework | spring-tx | Transaction infrastructure, including DAO support and JCA integration |
org.springframework | spring-web | Foundational web support, including web client and web-based remoting |
org.springframework | spring-webmvc | HTTP-based Model-View-Controller and REST endpoints for Servlet stacks |
org.springframework | spring-webmvc-portlet | MVC implementation to be used in a Portlet environment |
org.springframework | spring-websocket | WebSocket and SockJS infrastructure, including STOMP messaging support |
Although Spring provides integration and support for a huge range of enterprise and other external tools, it intentionally keeps its mandatory dependencies to an absolute minimum: you shouldn’t have to locate and download (even automatically) a large number of jar libraries in order to use Spring for simple use cases. For basic dependency injection there is only one mandatory external dependency, and that is for logging (see below for a more detailed description of logging options).
Next we outline the basic steps needed to configure an application that depends on Spring, first with Maven and then with Gradle and finally using Ivy. In all cases, if anything is unclear, refer to the documentation of your dependency management system, or look at some sample code - Spring itself uses Gradle to manage dependencies when it is building, and our samples mostly use Gradle or Maven.
If you are using Maven for dependency management you don’t even need to supply the logging dependency explicitly. For example, to create an application context and use dependency injection to configure an application, your Maven dependencies will look like this:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-context</artifactId> <version>4.3.24.RELEASE</version> <scope>runtime</scope> </dependency> </dependencies>
That’s it. Note the scope can be declared as runtime if you don’t need to compile against Spring APIs, which is typically the case for basic dependency injection use cases.
The example above works with the Maven Central repository. To use the Spring Maven repository (e.g. for milestones or developer snapshots), you need to specify the repository location in your Maven configuration. For full releases:
<repositories> <repository> <id>io.spring.repo.maven.release</id> <url>https://repo.spring.io/release/</url> <snapshots><enabled>false</enabled></snapshots> </repository> </repositories>
For milestones:
<repositories> <repository> <id>io.spring.repo.maven.milestone</id> <url>https://repo.spring.io/milestone/</url> <snapshots><enabled>false</enabled></snapshots> </repository> </repositories>
And for snapshots:
<repositories> <repository> <id>io.spring.repo.maven.snapshot</id> <url>https://repo.spring.io/snapshot/</url> <snapshots><enabled>true</enabled></snapshots> </repository> </repositories>
It is possible to accidentally mix different versions of Spring JARs when using Maven. For example, you may find that a third-party library, or another Spring project, pulls in a transitive dependency to an older release. If you forget to explicitly declare a direct dependency yourself, all sorts of unexpected issues can arise.
To overcome such problems Maven supports the concept of a "bill of materials" (BOM)
dependency. You can import the spring-framework-bom in your dependencyManagement
section to ensure that all spring dependencies (both direct and transitive) are at
the same version.
<dependencyManagement> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-framework-bom</artifactId> <version>4.3.24.RELEASE</version> <type>pom</type> <scope>import</scope> </dependency> </dependencies> </dependencyManagement>
An added benefit of using the BOM is that you no longer need to specify the <version>
attribute when depending on Spring Framework artifacts:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-context</artifactId> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-web</artifactId> </dependency> <dependencies>
To use the Spring repository with the Gradle build system,
include the appropriate URL in the repositories section:
repositories {
mavenCentral()
// and optionally...
maven { url "https://repo.spring.io/release" }
}
You can change the repositories URL from /release to /milestone or /snapshot as
appropriate. Once a repository has been configured, you can declare dependencies in the
usual Gradle way:
dependencies {
compile("org.springframework:spring-context:4.3.24.RELEASE")
testCompile("org.springframework:spring-test:4.3.24.RELEASE")
}
If you prefer to use Ivy to manage dependencies then there are similar configuration options.
To configure Ivy to point to the Spring repository add the following resolver to your
ivysettings.xml:
<resolvers> <ibiblio name="io.spring.repo.maven.release" m2compatible="true" root="https://repo.spring.io/release/"/> </resolvers>
You can change the root URL from /release/ to /milestone/ or /snapshot/ as
appropriate.
Once configured, you can add dependencies in the usual way. For example (in ivy.xml):
<dependency org="org.springframework" name="spring-core" rev="4.3.24.RELEASE" conf="compile->runtime"/>
Although using a build system that supports dependency management is the recommended way to obtain the Spring Framework, it is still possible to download a distribution zip file.
Distribution zips are published to the Spring Maven Repository (this is just for our convenience, you don’t need Maven or any other build system in order to download them).
To download a distribution zip open a web browser to
https://repo.spring.io/release/org/springframework/spring and select the appropriate
subfolder for the version that you want. Distribution files end -dist.zip, for example
spring-framework-{spring-version}-RELEASE-dist.zip. Distributions are also published
for milestones and
snapshots.
Logging is a very important dependency for Spring because a) it is the only mandatory external dependency, b) everyone likes to see some output from the tools they are using, and c) Spring integrates with lots of other tools all of which have also made a choice of logging dependency. One of the goals of an application developer is often to have unified logging configured in a central place for the whole application, including all external components. This is more difficult than it might have been since there are so many choices of logging framework.
The mandatory logging dependency in Spring is the Jakarta Commons Logging API (JCL). We
compile against JCL and we also make JCL Log objects visible for classes that extend
the Spring Framework. It’s important to users that all versions of Spring use the same
logging library: migration is easy because backwards compatibility is preserved even
with applications that extend Spring. The way we do this is to make one of the modules
in Spring depend explicitly on commons-logging (the canonical implementation of JCL),
and then make all the other modules depend on that at compile time. If you are using
Maven for example, and wondering where you picked up the dependency on commons-logging,
then it is from Spring and specifically from the central module called spring-core.
The nice thing about commons-logging is that you don’t need anything else to make your
application work. It has a runtime discovery algorithm that looks for other logging
frameworks in well known places on the classpath and uses one that it thinks is
appropriate (or you can tell it which one if you need to). If nothing else is available
you get pretty nice looking logs just from the JDK (java.util.logging or JUL for short).
You should find that your Spring application works and logs happily to the console out
of the box in most situations, and that’s important.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Log4j 1.2 is EOL in the meantime. Also, Log4j 2.3 is the last Java 6 compatible release, with newer Log4j 2.x releases requiring Java 7+. |
Many people use Log4j as a logging framework for configuration and management purposes. It is efficient and well-established, and in fact it is what we use at runtime when we build Spring. Spring also provides some utilities for configuring and initializing Log4j, so it has an optional compile-time dependency on Log4j in some modules.
To make Log4j 1.2 work with the default JCL dependency (commons-logging) all you
need to do is put Log4j on the classpath, and provide it with a configuration file
(log4j.properties or log4j.xml in the root of the classpath). So for Maven users
this is your dependency declaration:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-core</artifactId> <version>4.3.24.RELEASE</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>log4j</groupId> <artifactId>log4j</artifactId> <version>1.2.17</version> </dependency> </dependencies>
And here’s a sample log4j.properties for logging to the console:
log4j.rootCategory=INFO, stdout
log4j.appender.stdout=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.stdout.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.stdout.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ABSOLUTE} %5p %t %c{2}:%L - %m%n
log4j.category.org.springframework.beans.factory=DEBUG
To use Log4j 2.x with JCL, all you need to do is put Log4j on the classpath and
provide it with a configuration file (log4j2.xml, log4j2.properties, or other
supported configuration
formats). For Maven users, the minimal dependencies needed are:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.apache.logging.log4j</groupId> <artifactId>log4j-core</artifactId> <version>2.6.2</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.apache.logging.log4j</groupId> <artifactId>log4j-jcl</artifactId> <version>2.6.2</version> </dependency> </dependencies>
If you also wish to enable SLF4J to delegate to Log4j, e.g. for other libraries which use SLF4J by default, the following dependency is also needed:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.apache.logging.log4j</groupId> <artifactId>log4j-slf4j-impl</artifactId> <version>2.6.2</version> </dependency> </dependencies>
Here is an example log4j2.xml for logging to the console:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <Configuration status="WARN"> <Appenders> <Console name="Console" target="SYSTEM_OUT"> <PatternLayout pattern="%d{HH:mm:ss.SSS} [%t] %-5level %logger{36} - %msg%n"/> </Console> </Appenders> <Loggers> <Logger name="org.springframework.beans.factory" level="DEBUG"/> <Root level="error"> <AppenderRef ref="Console"/> </Root> </Loggers> </Configuration>
Unfortunately, the runtime discovery algorithm in the standard commons-logging API,
while convenient for the end-user, can be problematic. If you’d like to avoid JCL’s
standard lookup, there are basically two ways to switch it off:
spring-core module (as it is the only module that
explicitly depends on commons-logging)
commons-logging dependency that replaces the library with
an empty jar (more details can be found in the
SLF4J FAQ)
To exclude commons-logging, add the following to your dependencyManagement section:
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-core</artifactId> <version>4.3.24.RELEASE</version> <exclusions> <exclusion> <groupId>commons-logging</groupId> <artifactId>commons-logging</artifactId> </exclusion> </exclusions> </dependency> </dependencies>
Now this application is currently broken because there is no implementation of the JCL API on the classpath, so to fix it a new one has to be provided. In the next section we show you how to provide an alternative implementation of JCL using SLF4J.
The Simple Logging Facade for Java (SLF4J) is a popular API used by other libraries commonly used with Spring. It is typically used with Logback which is a native implementation of the SLF4J API.
SLF4J provides bindings to many common logging frameworks, including Log4j, and it also
does the reverse: bridges between other logging frameworks and itself. So to use SLF4J
with Spring you need to replace the commons-logging dependency with the SLF4J-JCL
bridge. Once you have done that then logging calls from within Spring will be translated
into logging calls to the SLF4J API, so if other libraries in your application use that
API, then you have a single place to configure and manage logging.
A common choice might be to bridge Spring to SLF4J, and then provide explicit binding
from SLF4J to Log4j. You need to supply several dependencies (and exclude the existing
commons-logging): the JCL bridge, the SLF4j binding to Log4j, and the Log4j provider
itself. In Maven you would do that like this
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.springframework</groupId> <artifactId>spring-core</artifactId> <version>4.3.24.RELEASE</version> <exclusions> <exclusion> <groupId>commons-logging</groupId> <artifactId>commons-logging</artifactId> </exclusion> </exclusions> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId> <artifactId>jcl-over-slf4j</artifactId> <version>1.7.21</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId> <artifactId>slf4j-log4j12</artifactId> <version>1.7.21</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>log4j</groupId> <artifactId>log4j</artifactId> <version>1.2.17</version> </dependency> </dependencies>
A more common choice amongst SLF4J users, which uses fewer steps and generates fewer
dependencies, is to bind directly to Logback. This removes the
extra binding step because Logback implements SLF4J directly, so you only need to depend
on just two libraries, namely jcl-over-slf4j and logback):
<dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.slf4j</groupId> <artifactId>jcl-over-slf4j</artifactId> <version>1.7.21</version> </dependency> <dependency> <groupId>ch.qos.logback</groupId> <artifactId>logback-classic</artifactId> <version>1.1.7</version> </dependency> </dependencies>
Commons Logging will delegate to java.util.logging by default, provided that no
Log4j is detected on the classpath. So there is no special dependency to set up:
just use Spring with no external dependency for log output to java.util.logging,
either in a standalone application (with a custom or default JUL setup at the JDK
level) or with an application server’s log system (and its system-wide JUL setup).
Spring applications may run on a container that itself provides an implementation of JCL, e.g. IBM’s WebSphere Application Server (WAS). This does not cause issues per se but leads to two different scenarios that need to be understood:
In a "parent first" ClassLoader delegation model (the default on WAS), applications will always pick up the server-provided version of Commons Logging, delegating to the WAS logging subsystem (which is actually based on JUL). An application-provided variant of JCL, whether standard Commons Logging or the JCL-over-SLF4J bridge, will effectively be ignored, along with any locally included log provider.
With a "parent last" delegation model (the default in a regular Servlet container but an explicit configuration option on WAS), an application-provided Commons Logging variant will be picked up, enabling you to set up a locally included log provider, e.g. Log4j or Logback, within your application. In case of no local log provider, regular Commons Logging will delegate to JUL by default, effectively logging to WebSphere’s logging subsystem like in the "parent first" scenario.
All in all, we recommend deploying Spring applications in the "parent last" model since it naturally allows for local providers as well as the server’s log subsystem.
This chapter provides an overview of the new features and improvements that have been introduced with Spring Framework 4.3. If you are interested in more details, please see the link: Issue Tracker tickets that were resolved as part of the 4.3 development process.
The Spring Framework was first released in 2004; since then there have been significant
major revisions: Spring 2.0 provided XML namespaces and AspectJ support; Spring 2.5
embraced annotation-driven configuration; Spring 3.0 introduced a strong Java 5+ foundation
across the framework codebase, and features such as the Java-based @Configuration model.
Version 4.0 is the latest major release of the Spring Framework and the first to fully support Java 8 features. You can still use Spring with older versions of Java, however, the minimum requirement has now been raised to Java SE 6. We have also taken the opportunity of a major release to remove many deprecated classes and methods.
A migration guide for upgrading to Spring 4.0 is available on the Spring Framework GitHub Wiki.
The new spring.io website provides a whole series of "Getting Started" guides to help you learn Spring. You can read more about the guides in the Chapter 1, Getting Started with Spring section in this document. The new website also provides a comprehensive overview of the many additional projects that are released under the Spring umbrella.
If you are a Maven user you may also be interested in the helpful bill of materials POM file that is now published with each Spring Framework release.
All deprecated packages, and many deprecated classes and methods have been removed with version 4.0. If you are upgrading from a previous release of Spring, you should ensure that you have fixed any deprecated calls that you were making to outdated APIs.
For a complete set of changes, check out the API Differences Report.
Note that optional third-party dependencies have been raised to a 2010/2011 minimum (i.e. Spring 4 generally only supports versions released in late 2010 or later now): notably, Hibernate 3.6+, EhCache 2.1+, Quartz 1.8+, Groovy 1.8+, and Joda-Time 2.0+. As an exception to the rule, Spring 4 requires the recent Hibernate Validator 4.3+, and support for Jackson has been focused on 2.0+ now (with Jackson 1.8/1.9 support retained for the time being where Spring 3.2 had it; now just in deprecated form).
Spring Framework 4.0 provides support for several Java 8 features. You can make use of
lambda expressions and method references with Spring’s callback interfaces. There
is first-class support for java.time (JSR-310),
and several existing annotations have been retrofitted as @Repeatable. You can also
use Java 8’s parameter name discovery (based on the -parameters compiler flag) as an
alternative to compiling your code with debug information enabled.
Spring remains compatible with older versions of Java and the JDK: concretely, Java SE 6 (specifically, a minimum level equivalent to JDK 6 update 18, as released in January 2010) and above are still fully supported. However, for newly started development projects based on Spring 4, we recommend the use of Java 7 or 8.
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As of late 2017, JDK 6 is being phased out and therefore also Spring’s JDK 6 support. Oracle as well as IBM will terminate all commercial support efforts for JDK 6 in 2018. While Spring will retain its JDK 6 runtime compatibility for the entire 4.3.x line, we require an upgrade to JDK 7 or higher for any further support beyond this point: in particular for JDK 6 specific bug fixes or other issues where an upgrade to JDK 7 addresses the problem. |
Java EE version 6 or above is now considered the baseline for Spring Framework 4, with the JPA 2.0 and Servlet 3.0 specifications being of particular relevance. In order to remain compatible with Google App Engine and older application servers, it is possible to deploy a Spring 4 application into a Servlet 2.5 environment. However, Servlet 3.0+ is strongly recommended and a prerequisite in Spring’s test and mock packages for test setups in development environments.
![]() | Note |
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If you are a WebSphere 7 user, be sure to install the JPA 2.0 feature pack. On WebLogic 10.3.4 or higher, install the JPA 2.0 patch that comes with it. This turns both of those server generations into Spring 4 compatible deployment environments. |
On a more forward-looking note, Spring Framework 4.0 supports the Java EE 7 level of applicable specifications now: in particular, JMS 2.0, JTA 1.2, JPA 2.1, Bean Validation 1.1, and JSR-236 Concurrency Utilities. As usual, this support focuses on individual use of those specifications, e.g. on Tomcat or in standalone environments. However, it works equally well when a Spring application is deployed to a Java EE 7 server.
Note that Hibernate 4.3 is a JPA 2.1 provider and therefore only supported as of Spring Framework 4.0. The same applies to Hibernate Validator 5.0 as a Bean Validation 1.1 provider. Neither of the two are officially supported with Spring Framework 3.2.
Beginning with Spring Framework 4.0, it is possible to define external bean configuration using a Groovy DSL. This is similar in concept to using XML bean definitions but allows for a more concise syntax. Using Groovy also allows you to easily embed bean definitions directly in your bootstrap code. For example:
def reader = new GroovyBeanDefinitionReader(myApplicationContext) reader.beans { dataSource(BasicDataSource) { driverClassName = "org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver" url = "jdbc:hsqldb:mem:grailsDB" username = "sa" password = "" settings = [mynew:"setting"] } sessionFactory(SessionFactory) { dataSource = dataSource } myService(MyService) { nestedBean = { AnotherBean bean -> dataSource = dataSource } } }
For more information consult the GroovyBeanDefinitionReader
javadocs.
There have been several general improvements to the core container:
Repository you can now easily inject a specific implementation:
@Autowired Repository<Customer> customerRepository.
@Order annotation and Ordered interface are
supported.
@Lazy annotation can now be used on injection points, as well as on @Bean
definitions.
@Description annotation has been introduced for
developers using Java-based configuration.
@Conditional annotation. This is similar to @Profile support but
allows for user-defined strategies to be developed programmatically.
LocaleContext.
Deployment to Servlet 2.5 servers remains an option, but Spring Framework 4.0 is now focused primarily on Servlet 3.0+ environments. If you are using the Spring MVC Test Framework you will need to ensure that a Servlet 3.0 compatible JAR is in your test classpath.
In addition to the WebSocket support mentioned later, the following general improvements have been made to Spring’s Web modules:
@RestController annotation with Spring
MVC applications, removing the need to add @ResponseBody to each of your
@RequestMapping methods.
AsyncRestTemplate class has been added, allowing
non-blocking asynchronous support when developing REST clients.
A new spring-websocket module provides comprehensive support for WebSocket-based,
two-way communication between client and server in web applications. It is compatible with
JSR-356, the Java WebSocket API, and in addition
provides SockJS-based fallback options (i.e. WebSocket emulation) for use in browsers
that don’t yet support the WebSocket protocol (e.g. Internet Explorer < 10).
A new spring-messaging module adds support for STOMP as the WebSocket sub-protocol
to use in applications along with an annotation programming model for routing and
processing STOMP messages from WebSocket clients. As a result an @Controller
can now contain both @RequestMapping and @MessageMapping methods for handling
HTTP requests and messages from WebSocket-connected clients. The new spring-messaging
module also contains key abstractions formerly from the
Spring Integration project such as
Message, MessageChannel, MessageHandler, and others to serve as a foundation
for messaging-based applications.
For further details, including a more thorough introduction, see the Chapter 26, WebSocket Support section.
In addition to pruning of deprecated code within the spring-test module, Spring
Framework 4.0 introduces several new features for use in unit and integration testing.
spring-test module (e.g., @ContextConfiguration,
@WebAppConfiguration, @ContextHierarchy, @ActiveProfiles, etc.) can now be used
as meta-annotations to create custom
composed annotations and reduce configuration duplication across a test suite.
ActiveProfilesResolver
and registering it via the resolver attribute of @ActiveProfiles.
SocketUtils class has been introduced in the spring-core module
which enables you to scan for free TCP and UDP server ports on localhost. This
functionality is not specific to testing but can prove very useful when writing
integration tests that require the use of sockets, for example tests that start
an in-memory SMTP server, FTP server, Servlet container, etc.
org.springframework.mock.web package is
now based on the Servlet 3.0 API. Furthermore, several of the Servlet API mocks
(e.g., MockHttpServletRequest, MockServletContext, etc.) have been updated with
minor enhancements and improved configurability.
Version 4.1 included a number of improvements, as described in the following sections:
Spring 4.1 introduces a much simpler infrastructure to register JMS
listener endpoints by annotating bean methods with
@JmsListener.
The XML namespace has been enhanced to support this new style (jms:annotation-driven),
and it is also possible to fully configure the infrastructure using Java config
(@EnableJms,
JmsListenerContainerFactory). It is also possible to register listener endpoints
programmatically using
JmsListenerConfigurer.
Spring 4.1 also aligns its JMS support to allow you to benefit from the spring-messaging
abstraction introduced in 4.0, that is:
@Payload, @Header, @Headers, and @SendTo. It
is also possible to use a standard Message in lieu of javax.jms.Message as method
argument.
JmsMessageOperations
interface is available and permits JmsTemplate like operations using the Message
abstraction.
Finally, Spring 4.1 provides additional miscellaneous improvements:
JmsTemplate
<jms:listener/> element
BackOff implementation
Spring 4.1 supports JCache (JSR-107) annotations using Spring’s existing cache configuration and infrastructure abstraction; no changes are required to use the standard annotations.
Spring 4.1 also improves its own caching abstraction significantly:
CacheResolver. As a result the
value argument defining the cache name(s) to use is no longer mandatory.
@CacheConfig class-level annotation allows
common settings to be shared at the class level without enabling any cache operation.
CacheErrorHandler
Spring 4.1 also has a breaking change in the Cache interface as a new putIfAbsent
method has been added.
ResourceHttpRequestHandler
has been expanded with new abstractions ResourceResolver, ResourceTransformer,
and ResourceUrlProvider. A number of built-in implementations provide support
for versioned resource URLs (for effective HTTP caching), locating gzipped resources,
generating an HTML 5 AppCache manifests, and more. See Section 22.16.9, “Serving of Resources”.
java.util.Optional is now supported for @RequestParam, @RequestHeader,
and @MatrixVariable controller method arguments.
ListenableFuture is supported as a return value alternative to DeferredResult
where an underlying service (or perhaps a call to AsyncRestTemplate) already
returns ListenableFuture.
@ModelAttribute methods are now invoked in an order that respects inter-dependencies.
See SPR-6299.
@JsonView is supported directly on @ResponseBody and ResponseEntity
controller methods for serializing different amounts of detail for the same POJO (e.g.
summary vs. detail page). This is also supported with View-based rendering by
adding the serialization view type as a model attribute under a special key.
See the section called “Jackson Serialization View Support” for details.
@ResponseBody and ResponseEntity
methods just after the controller method returns and before the response is written.
To take advantage declare an @ControllerAdvice bean that implements ResponseBodyAdvice.
The built-in support for @JsonView and JSONP take advantage of this.
See Section 22.4.1, “Intercepting requests with a HandlerInterceptor”.
There are three new HttpMessageConverter options:
@EnableWebMvc or <mvc:annotation-driven/>, this is used by default
instead of JAXB2 if jackson-dataformat-xml is in the classpath.
@RequestMapping. For example FooController
with method handleFoo is named "FC#handleFoo". The naming strategy is pluggable.
It is also possible to name an @RequestMapping explicitly through its name attribute.
A new mvcUrl function in the Spring JSP tag library makes this easy to use in JSP pages.
See Section 22.7.3, “Building URIs to Controllers and methods from views”.
ResponseEntity provides a builder-style API to guide controller methods
towards the preparation of server-side responses, e.g. ResponseEntity.ok().
RequestEntity is a new type that provides a builder-style API to guide client-side REST
code towards the preparation of HTTP requests.
MVC Java config and XML namespace:
GroovyMarkupConfigurer and respecitve
ViewResolver and `View' implementations.
SockJsClient and classes in same package.
SessionSubscribeEvent and SessionUnsubscribeEvent published
when STOMP clients subscribe and unsubscribe.
@SendToUser can target only a single session and does not require an authenticated user.
@MessageMapping methods can use dot "." instead of slash "/" as path separator.
See SPR-11660.
MessageHeaderAccessor.
Groovy scripts can now be used to configure the ApplicationContext loaded for
integration tests in the TestContext framework.
Test-managed transactions can now be programmatically started and ended within
transactional test methods via the new TestTransaction API.
SQL script execution can now be configured declaratively via the new @Sql and
@SqlConfig annotations on a per-class or per-method basis.
Test property sources which automatically override system and application property
sources can be configured via the new @TestPropertySource annotation.
Default TestExecutionListeners can now be automatically discovered.
Custom TestExecutionListeners can now be automatically merged with the default
listeners.
The documentation for transactional testing support in the TestContext framework has been improved with more thorough explanations and additional examples.
MockServletContext, MockHttpServletRequest, and other
Servlet API mocks.
AssertThrows has been refactored to support Throwable instead of Exception.
MockMvcBuilder recipes can now be created with the help of MockMvcConfigurer. This
was added to make it easy to apply Spring Security setup but can be used to encapsulate
common setup for any 3rd party framework or within a project.
MockRestServiceServer now supports the AsyncRestTemplate for client-side testing.
Version 4.2 included a number of improvements, as described in the following sections:
@Bean get detected and processed on Java 8 default methods as well,
allowing for composing a configuration class from interfaces with default @Bean methods.
@Import with regular component classes now, allowing
for a mix of imported configuration classes and component classes.
@Order value, getting processed in a corresponding
order (e.g. for overriding beans by name) even when detected through classpath scanning.
@Resource injection points support an @Lazy declaration, analogous to @Autowired,
receiving a lazy-initializing proxy for the requested target bean.
The application event infrastructure now offers an annotation-based model as well as the ability to publish any arbitrary event.
@EventListener to consume events.
@TransactionalEventListener provides transaction-bound event support.
Spring Framework 4.2 introduces first-class support for declaring and
looking up aliases for annotation attributes. The new @AliasFor
annotation can be used to declare a pair of aliased attributes within
a single annotation or to declare an alias from one attribute in a
custom composed annotation to an attribute in a meta-annotation.
@AliasFor support
in order to provide meaningful aliases for their value attributes:
@Cacheable, @CacheEvict, @CachePut, @ComponentScan,
@ComponentScan.Filter, @ImportResource, @Scope, @ManagedResource,
@Header, @Payload, @SendToUser, @ActiveProfiles,
@ContextConfiguration, @Sql, @TestExecutionListeners,
@TestPropertySource, @Transactional, @ControllerAdvice,
@CookieValue, @CrossOrigin, @MatrixVariable, @RequestHeader,
@RequestMapping, @RequestParam, @RequestPart, @ResponseStatus,
@SessionAttributes, @ActionMapping, @RenderMapping,
@EventListener, @TransactionalEventListener.
For example, @ContextConfiguration from the spring-test module
is now declared as follows:
public @interface ContextConfiguration { @AliasFor("locations") String[] value() default {}; @AliasFor("value") String[] locations() default {}; // ... }
@AliasFor for fine-grained control
over exactly which attributes are overridden within an annotation
hierarchy. In fact, it is now possible to declare an alias for the
value attribute of a meta-annotation.
For example, one can now develop a composed annotation with a custom attribute override as follows.
@ContextConfiguration public @interface MyTestConfig { @AliasFor(annotation = ContextConfiguration.class, attribute = "value") String[] xmlFiles(); // ... }
AnnotationAttributes instances)
can be synthesized (i.e., converted) into an annotation.
DirectFieldAccessor) have been aligned with the current
property-based data binding (BeanWrapper). In particular, field-based binding now supports
navigation for Collections, Arrays, and Maps.
DefaultConversionService now provides out-of-the-box converters for Stream, Charset,
Currency, and TimeZone. Such converters can be added individually to any arbitrary
ConversionService as well.
DefaultFormattingConversionService comes with out-of-the-box support for the value types
in JSR-354 Money & Currency (if the 'javax.money' API is present on the classpath): namely,
MonetaryAmount and CurrencyUnit. This includes support for applying @NumberFormat.
@NumberFormat can now be used as a meta-annotation.
JavaMailSenderImpl has a new testConnection() method for checking connectivity to the server.
ScheduledTaskRegistrar exposes scheduled tasks.
commons-pool2 is now supported for a pooling AOP CommonsPool2TargetSource.
StandardScriptFactory as a JSR-223 based mechanism for scripted beans,
exposed through the lang:std element in XML. Supports e.g. JavaScript and JRuby.
(Note: JRubyScriptFactory and lang:jruby are deprecated now, in favor of using JSR-223.)
javax.transaction.Transactional is now supported via AspectJ.
SimpleJdbcCallOperations now supports named binding.
org.springframework.orm.hibernate5 package).
<jdbc:embedded-database> supports a new database-name attribute.
See "Testing Improvements" below for further details.
autoStartup attribute can be controlled via JmsListenerContainerFactory.
Destination can now be configured per listener container.
@SendTo annotation can now use a SpEL expression.
JmsResponse
@JmsListener is now a repeatable annotation to declare several JMS containers on the same
method (use the newly introduced @JmsListeners if you’re not using Java8 yet).
@CrossOrigin) configuration. See Chapter 27, CORS Support for details.
HTTP caching updates:
CacheControl builder; plugged into ResponseEntity, WebContentGenerator,
ResourceHttpRequestHandler.
WebRequest.
@RequestMapping as a meta-annotation.
AbstractHandlerMethodMapping to register and unregister request
mappings at runtime.
createDispatcherServlet method in AbstractDispatcherServletInitializer to
further customize the DispatcherServlet instance to use.
HandlerMethod as a method argument on @ExceptionHandler methods, especially
handy in @ControllerAdvice components.
java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture as an @Controller method return value type.
HttpHeaders and for serving static resources.
@ResponseStatus detected on nested exceptions.
UriTemplateHandler extension point in the RestTemplate.
DefaultUriTemplateHandler exposes baseUrl property and path segment encoding options.
RestTemplate.
baseUrl alternative for methods in MvcUriComponentsBuilder.
RequestBodyAdvice extension point and built-in implementation to support Jackson’s
@JsonView on @RequestBody method arguments.
List<Foo>.
ScriptTemplateView as a JSR-223 based mechanism for scripted web views,
with a focus on JavaScript view templating on Nashorn (JDK 8).
Expose presence information about connected users and subscriptions:
SimpUserRegistry exposed as a bean named "userRegistry".
StompSubProtocolErrorHandler extension point to customize and control STOMP ERROR frames to clients.
@MessageExceptionHandler methods via @ControllerAdvice components.
SimpleBrokerMessageHandler.
@SendTo and @SendToUser can contain destination variable placeholders.
@JsonView supported for return values on @MessageMapping and @SubscribeMapping methods.
ListenableFuture and CompletableFuture as return value types from
@MessageMapping and @SubscribeMapping methods.
MarshallingMessageConverter for XML payloads.
JUnit-based integration tests can now be executed with JUnit rules instead of the
SpringJUnit4ClassRunner. This allows Spring-based integration tests to be run with
alternative runners like JUnit’s Parameterized or third-party runners such as the
MockitoJUnitRunner.
The Spring MVC Test framework now provides first-class support for HtmlUnit, including integration with Selenium’s WebDriver, allowing for page-based web application testing without the need to deploy to a Servlet container.
AopTestUtils is a new testing utility that allows developers to
obtain a reference to the underlying target object hidden behind one
or more Spring proxies.
ReflectionTestUtils now supports setting and getting static fields,
including constants.
@ActiveProfiles is now retained in order to support use cases such
as Spring Boot’s ConfigFileApplicationListener which loads
configuration files based on the names of active profiles.
@DirtiesContext supports new BEFORE_METHOD, BEFORE_CLASS, and
BEFORE_EACH_TEST_METHOD modes for closing the ApplicationContext
before a test — for example, if some rogue (i.e., yet to be
determined) test within a large test suite has corrupted the original
configuration for the ApplicationContext.
@Commit is a new annotation that may be used as a direct replacement for
@Rollback(false).
@Rollback may now be used to configure class-level default rollback semantics.
@TransactionConfiguration is now deprecated and will be removed in a
subsequent release.
@Sql now supports execution of inlined SQL statements via a new
statements attribute.
ContextCache that is used for caching ApplicationContexts
between tests is now a public API with a default implementation that
can be replaced for custom caching needs.
DefaultTestContext, DefaultBootstrapContext, and
DefaultCacheAwareContextLoaderDelegate are now public classes in the
support subpackage, allowing for custom extensions.
TestContextBootstrappers are now responsible for building the
TestContext.
MvcResult details can now be logged
at DEBUG level or written to a custom OutputStream or Writer. See
the new log(), print(OutputStream), and print(Writer) methods in
MockMvcResultHandlers for details.
database-name attribute in
<jdbc:embedded-database>, allowing developers to set unique names
for embedded databases –- for example, via a SpEL expression or a
property placeholder that is influenced by the current active bean
definition profiles.
Embedded databases can now be automatically assigned a unique name,
allowing common test database configuration to be reused in different
ApplicationContexts within a test suite.
MockHttpServletRequest and MockHttpServletResponse now provide better
support for date header formatting via the getDateHeader and setDateHeader
methods.
Version 4.3 included a number of improvements, as described in the following sections:
@Autowired annotation if the target
bean only defines one constructor.
@Configuration classes support constructor injection.
condition of an @EventListener can
now refer to beans (e.g. @beanName.method()).
String[] path attribute of @RequestMapping can be overridden with
String path in a composed annotation.
@PersistenceContext/@PersistenceUnit selects a primary EntityManagerFactory
bean if declared as such.
@Scheduled and @Schedules may now be used as meta-annotations to create
custom composed annotations with attribute overrides.
@Scheduled is properly supported on beans of any scope.
jdbc:initialize-database and jdbc:embedded-database support a configurable
separator to be applied to each script.
Spring 4.3 allows concurrent calls on a given key to be synchronized so that the
value is only computed once. This is an opt-in feature that should be enabled via
the new sync attribute on @Cacheable. This features introduces a breaking
change in the Cache interface as a get(Object key, Callable<T> valueLoader)
method has been added.
Spring 4.3 also improves the caching abstraction as follows:
@beanName.method()).
ConcurrentMapCacheManager and ConcurrentMapCache now support the serialization
of cache entries via a new storeByValue attribute.
@Cacheable, @CacheEvict, @CachePut, and @Caching may now be used as
meta-annotations to create custom composed annotations with attribute overrides.
@SendTo can now be specified at the class level to share a common reply destination.
@JmsListener and @JmsListeners may now be used as meta-annotations to create
custom composed annotations with attribute overrides.
New @GetMapping, @PostMapping, @PutMapping, @DeleteMapping, and @PatchMapping
composed annotations for @RequestMapping.
New @RequestScope, @SessionScope, and @ApplicationScope composed annotations
for web scopes.
@RestControllerAdvice annotation with combined @ControllerAdvice with @ResponseBody semantics.
@ResponseStatus is now supported at the class level and inherited by all methods.
@SessionAttribute annotation for access to session attributes (see example).
@RequestAttribute annotation for access to request attributes (see example).
@ModelAttribute allows preventing data binding via binding=false attribute (see reference).
@PathVariable may be declared as optional (for use on @ModelAttribute methods).
ContentNegotiationManager for media type determination.
RestTemplate and AsyncRestTemplate support strict URI variable encoding via DefaultUriTemplateHandler.
AsyncRestTemplate supports request interception.
@SendTo and @SendToUser can now be specified at class-level to share a common destination.
SpringRunner alias for the SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.
@ContextConfiguration can now be completely omitted if default
XML files, Groovy scripts, or @Configuration classes are detected.
@Transactional test methods are no longer required to be public (e.g., in TestNG and JUnit 5).
@BeforeTransaction and @AfterTransaction methods are no longer required to be public
and may now be declared on Java 8 based interface default methods.
ApplicationContext cache in the Spring TestContext Framework is now bounded with a
default maximum size of 32 and a least recently used eviction policy. The maximum size
can be configured by setting a JVM system property or Spring property called
spring.test.context.cache.maxSize.
ContextCustomizer API for customizing a test ApplicationContext after bean
definitions have been loaded into the context but before the context has been refreshed.
Customizers can be registered globally by third parties, foregoing the need to implement a
custom ContextLoader.
@Sql and @SqlGroup may now be used as meta-annotations to create custom composed
annotations with attribute overrides.
ReflectionTestUtils now automatically unwraps proxies when setting or getting a field.
Furthermore, Spring Framework 4.3 embeds the updated ASM 5.1, CGLIB 3.2.4, and Objenesis 2.4
in spring-core.jar.
This part of the reference documentation covers all of those technologies that are absolutely integral to the Spring Framework.
Foremost amongst these is the Spring Framework’s Inversion of Control (IoC) container. A thorough treatment of the Spring Framework’s IoC container is closely followed by comprehensive coverage of Spring’s Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP) technologies. The Spring Framework has its own AOP framework, which is conceptually easy to understand, and which successfully addresses the 80% sweet spot of AOP requirements in Java enterprise programming.
Coverage of Spring’s integration with AspectJ (currently the richest - in terms of features - and certainly most mature AOP implementation in the Java enterprise space) is also provided.
This chapter covers the Spring Framework implementation of the Inversion of Control (IoC) [1] principle. IoC is also known as dependency injection (DI). It is a process whereby objects define their dependencies, that is, the other objects they work with, only through constructor arguments, arguments to a factory method, or properties that are set on the object instance after it is constructed or returned from a factory method. The container then injects those dependencies when it creates the bean. This process is fundamentally the inverse, hence the name Inversion of Control (IoC), of the bean itself controlling the instantiation or location of its dependencies by using direct construction of classes, or a mechanism such as the Service Locator pattern.
The org.springframework.beans and org.springframework.context packages are the basis
for Spring Framework’s IoC container. The
BeanFactory
interface provides an advanced configuration mechanism capable of managing any type of
object.
ApplicationContext
is a sub-interface of BeanFactory. It adds easier integration with Spring’s AOP
features; message resource handling (for use in internationalization), event
publication; and application-layer specific contexts such as the WebApplicationContext
for use in web applications.
In short, the BeanFactory provides the configuration framework and basic
functionality, and the ApplicationContext adds more enterprise-specific functionality.
The ApplicationContext is a complete superset of the BeanFactory, and is used
exclusively in this chapter in descriptions of Spring’s IoC container. For more
information on using the BeanFactory instead of the ApplicationContext, refer to
Section 7.16, “The BeanFactory”.
In Spring, the objects that form the backbone of your application and that are managed by the Spring IoC container are called beans. A bean is an object that is instantiated, assembled, and otherwise managed by a Spring IoC container. Otherwise, a bean is simply one of many objects in your application. Beans, and the dependencies among them, are reflected in the configuration metadata used by a container.
The interface org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext represents the Spring IoC
container and is responsible for instantiating, configuring, and assembling the
aforementioned beans. The container gets its instructions on what objects to
instantiate, configure, and assemble by reading configuration metadata. The
configuration metadata is represented in XML, Java annotations, or Java code. It allows
you to express the objects that compose your application and the rich interdependencies
between such objects.
Several implementations of the ApplicationContext interface are supplied
out-of-the-box with Spring. In standalone applications it is common to create an
instance of
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext
or FileSystemXmlApplicationContext.
While XML has been the traditional format for defining configuration metadata you can
instruct the container to use Java annotations or code as the metadata format by
providing a small amount of XML configuration to declaratively enable support for these
additional metadata formats.
In most application scenarios, explicit user code is not required to instantiate one or
more instances of a Spring IoC container. For example, in a web application scenario, a
simple eight (or so) lines of boilerplate web descriptor XML in the web.xml file
of the application will typically suffice (see Section 7.15.4, “Convenient ApplicationContext instantiation for web applications”). If you are using the
Spring Tool Suite Eclipse-powered development
environment this boilerplate configuration can be easily created with few mouse clicks or
keystrokes.
The following diagram is a high-level view of how Spring works. Your application classes
are combined with configuration metadata so that after the ApplicationContext is
created and initialized, you have a fully configured and executable system or
application.
As the preceding diagram shows, the Spring IoC container consumes a form of configuration metadata; this configuration metadata represents how you as an application developer tell the Spring container to instantiate, configure, and assemble the objects in your application.
Configuration metadata is traditionally supplied in a simple and intuitive XML format, which is what most of this chapter uses to convey key concepts and features of the Spring IoC container.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
XML-based metadata is not the only allowed form of configuration metadata. The Spring IoC container itself is totally decoupled from the format in which this configuration metadata is actually written. These days many developers choose Java-based configuration for their Spring applications. |
For information about using other forms of metadata with the Spring container, see:
@Configuration, @Bean, @Import
and @DependsOn annotations.
Spring configuration consists of at least one and typically more than one bean
definition that the container must manage. XML-based configuration metadata shows these
beans configured as <bean/> elements inside a top-level <beans/> element. Java
configuration typically uses @Bean annotated methods within a @Configuration class.
These bean definitions correspond to the actual objects that make up your application.
Typically you define service layer objects, data access objects (DAOs), presentation
objects such as Struts Action instances, infrastructure objects such as Hibernate
SessionFactories, JMS Queues, and so forth. Typically one does not configure
fine-grained domain objects in the container, because it is usually the responsibility
of DAOs and business logic to create and load domain objects. However, you can use
Spring’s integration with AspectJ to configure objects that have been created outside
the control of an IoC container. See Using AspectJ to
dependency-inject domain objects with Spring.
The following example shows the basic structure of XML-based configuration metadata:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean id="..." class="..."> <!-- collaborators and configuration for this bean go here --> </bean> <bean id="..." class="..."> <!-- collaborators and configuration for this bean go here --> </bean> <!-- more bean definitions go here --> </beans>
The id attribute is a string that you use to identify the individual bean definition.
The class attribute defines the type of the bean and uses the fully qualified
classname. The value of the id attribute refers to collaborating objects. The XML for
referring to collaborating objects is not shown in this example; see
Dependencies for more information.
Instantiating a Spring IoC container is straightforward. The location path or paths
supplied to an ApplicationContext constructor are actually resource strings that allow
the container to load configuration metadata from a variety of external resources such
as the local file system, from the Java CLASSPATH, and so on.
ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("services.xml", "daos.xml");
![]() | Note |
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After you learn about Spring’s IoC container, you may want to know more about Spring’s
|
The following example shows the service layer objects (services.xml) configuration file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <!-- services --> <bean id="petStore" class="org.springframework.samples.jpetstore.services.PetStoreServiceImpl"> <property name="accountDao" ref="accountDao"/> <property name="itemDao" ref="itemDao"/> <!-- additional collaborators and configuration for this bean go here --> </bean> <!-- more bean definitions for services go here --> </beans>
The following example shows the data access objects daos.xml file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean id="accountDao" class="org.springframework.samples.jpetstore.dao.jpa.JpaAccountDao"> <!-- additional collaborators and configuration for this bean go here --> </bean> <bean id="itemDao" class="org.springframework.samples.jpetstore.dao.jpa.JpaItemDao"> <!-- additional collaborators and configuration for this bean go here --> </bean> <!-- more bean definitions for data access objects go here --> </beans>
In the preceding example, the service layer consists of the class PetStoreServiceImpl,
and two data access objects of the type JpaAccountDao and JpaItemDao (based
on the JPA Object/Relational mapping standard). The property name element refers to the
name of the JavaBean property, and the ref element refers to the name of another bean
definition. This linkage between id and ref elements expresses the dependency between
collaborating objects. For details of configuring an object’s dependencies, see
Dependencies.
It can be useful to have bean definitions span multiple XML files. Often each individual XML configuration file represents a logical layer or module in your architecture.
You can use the application context constructor to load bean definitions from all these
XML fragments. This constructor takes multiple Resource locations, as was shown in the
previous section. Alternatively, use one or more occurrences of the <import/> element
to load bean definitions from another file or files. For example:
<beans> <import resource="services.xml"/> <import resource="resources/messageSource.xml"/> <import resource="/resources/themeSource.xml"/> <bean id="bean1" class="..."/> <bean id="bean2" class="..."/> </beans>
In the preceding example, external bean definitions are loaded from three files:
services.xml, messageSource.xml, and themeSource.xml. All location paths are
relative to the definition file doing the importing, so services.xml must be in the
same directory or classpath location as the file doing the importing, while
messageSource.xml and themeSource.xml must be in a resources location below the
location of the importing file. As you can see, a leading slash is ignored, but given
that these paths are relative, it is better form not to use the slash at all. The
contents of the files being imported, including the top level <beans/> element, must
be valid XML bean definitions according to the Spring Schema.
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It is possible, but not recommended, to reference files in parent directories using a relative "../" path. Doing so creates a dependency on a file that is outside the current application. In particular, this reference is not recommended for "classpath:" URLs (for example, "classpath:../services.xml"), where the runtime resolution process chooses the "nearest" classpath root and then looks into its parent directory. Classpath configuration changes may lead to the choice of a different, incorrect directory. You can always use fully qualified resource locations instead of relative paths: for example, "file:C:/config/services.xml" or "classpath:/config/services.xml". However, be aware that you are coupling your application’s configuration to specific absolute locations. It is generally preferable to keep an indirection for such absolute locations, for example, through "${…}" placeholders that are resolved against JVM system properties at runtime. |
The import directive is a feature provided by the beans namespace itself. Further configuration features beyond plain bean definitions are available in a selection of XML namespaces provided by Spring, e.g. the "context" and the "util" namespace.
As a further example for externalized configuration metadata, bean definitions can also be expressed in Spring’s Groovy Bean Definition DSL, as known from the Grails framework. Typically, such configuration will live in a ".groovy" file with a structure as follows:
beans {
dataSource(BasicDataSource) {
driverClassName = "org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver"
url = "jdbc:hsqldb:mem:grailsDB"
username = "sa"
password = ""
settings = [mynew:"setting"]
}
sessionFactory(SessionFactory) {
dataSource = dataSource
}
myService(MyService) {
nestedBean = { AnotherBean bean ->
dataSource = dataSource
}
}
}
This configuration style is largely equivalent to XML bean definitions and even supports Spring’s XML configuration namespaces. It also allows for importing XML bean definition files through an "importBeans" directive.
The ApplicationContext is the interface for an advanced factory capable of maintaining
a registry of different beans and their dependencies. Using the method T getBean(String
name, Class<T> requiredType) you can retrieve instances of your beans.
The ApplicationContext enables you to read bean definitions and access them as follows:
// create and configure beans ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("services.xml", "daos.xml"); // retrieve configured instance PetStoreService service = context.getBean("petStore", PetStoreService.class); // use configured instance List<String> userList = service.getUsernameList();
With Groovy configuration, bootstrapping looks very similar, just a different context implementation class which is Groovy-aware (but also understands XML bean definitions):
ApplicationContext context = new GenericGroovyApplicationContext("services.groovy", "daos.groovy");
The most flexible variant is GenericApplicationContext in combination with reader
delegates, e.g. with XmlBeanDefinitionReader for XML files:
GenericApplicationContext context = new GenericApplicationContext(); new XmlBeanDefinitionReader(context).loadBeanDefinitions("services.xml", "daos.xml"); context.refresh();
Or with GroovyBeanDefinitionReader for Groovy files:
GenericApplicationContext context = new GenericApplicationContext(); new GroovyBeanDefinitionReader(context).loadBeanDefinitions("services.groovy", "daos.groovy"); context.refresh();
Such reader delegates can be mixed and matched on the same ApplicationContext,
reading bean definitions from diverse configuration sources, if desired.
You can then use getBean to retrieve instances of your beans. The ApplicationContext
interface has a few other methods for retrieving beans, but ideally your application
code should never use them. Indeed, your application code should have no calls to the
getBean() method at all, and thus no dependency on Spring APIs at all. For example,
Spring’s integration with web frameworks provides dependency injection for various web
framework components such as controllers and JSF-managed beans, allowing you to declare
a dependency on a specific bean through metadata (e.g. an autowiring annotation).
A Spring IoC container manages one or more beans. These beans are created with the
configuration metadata that you supply to the container, for example, in the form of XML
<bean/> definitions.
Within the container itself, these bean definitions are represented as BeanDefinition
objects, which contain (among other information) the following metadata:
This metadata translates to a set of properties that make up each bean definition.
Table 7.1. The bean definition
| Property | Explained in… |
|---|---|
class | |
name | |
scope | |
constructor arguments | |
properties | |
autowiring mode | |
lazy-initialization mode | |
initialization method | |
destruction method |
In addition to bean definitions that contain information on how to create a specific
bean, the ApplicationContext implementations also permit the registration of existing
objects that are created outside the container, by users. This is done by accessing the
ApplicationContext’s BeanFactory via the method getBeanFactory() which returns the
BeanFactory implementation DefaultListableBeanFactory. DefaultListableBeanFactory
supports this registration through the methods registerSingleton(..) and
registerBeanDefinition(..). However, typical applications work solely with beans
defined through metadata bean definitions.
![]() | Note |
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Bean metadata and manually supplied singleton instances need to be registered as early as possible, in order for the container to properly reason about them during autowiring and other introspection steps. While overriding of existing metadata and existing singleton instances is supported to some degree, the registration of new beans at runtime (concurrently with live access to factory) is not officially supported and may lead to concurrent access exceptions and/or inconsistent state in the bean container. |
Every bean has one or more identifiers. These identifiers must be unique within the container that hosts the bean. A bean usually has only one identifier, but if it requires more than one, the extra ones can be considered aliases.
In XML-based configuration metadata, you use the id and/or name attributes
to specify the bean identifier(s). The id attribute allows you to specify
exactly one id. Conventionally these names are alphanumeric ('myBean',
'fooService', etc.), but may contain special characters as well. If you want to
introduce other aliases to the bean, you can also specify them in the name
attribute, separated by a comma (,), semicolon (;), or white space. As a
historical note, in versions prior to Spring 3.1, the id attribute was
defined as an xsd:ID type, which constrained possible characters. As of 3.1,
it is defined as an xsd:string type. Note that bean id uniqueness is still
enforced by the container, though no longer by XML parsers.
You are not required to supply a name or id for a bean. If no name or id is supplied
explicitly, the container generates a unique name for that bean. However, if you want to
refer to that bean by name, through the use of the ref element or
Service Locator style lookup, you must provide a name.
Motivations for not supplying a name are related to using inner
beans and autowiring collaborators.
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|---|---|
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With component scanning in the classpath, Spring generates bean names for unnamed
components, following the rules above: essentially, taking the simple class name
and turning its initial character to lower-case. However, in the (unusual) special
case when there is more than one character and both the first and second characters
are upper case, the original casing gets preserved. These are the same rules as
defined by |
In a bean definition itself, you can supply more than one name for the bean, by using a
combination of up to one name specified by the id attribute, and any number of other
names in the name attribute. These names can be equivalent aliases to the same bean,
and are useful for some situations, such as allowing each component in an application to
refer to a common dependency by using a bean name that is specific to that component
itself.
Specifying all aliases where the bean is actually defined is not always adequate,
however. It is sometimes desirable to introduce an alias for a bean that is defined
elsewhere. This is commonly the case in large systems where configuration is split
amongst each subsystem, each subsystem having its own set of object definitions. In
XML-based configuration metadata, you can use the <alias/> element to accomplish this.
<alias name="fromName" alias="toName"/>
In this case, a bean (in the same container) named fromName may also,
after the use of this alias definition, be referred to as toName.
For example, the configuration metadata for subsystem A may refer to a DataSource by the
name of subsystemA-dataSource. The configuration metadata for subsystem B may refer to
a DataSource by the name of subsystemB-dataSource. When composing the main application
that uses both these subsystems, the main application refers to the DataSource by the
name of myApp-dataSource. To have all three names refer to the same object, you can
add the following alias definitions to the configuration metadata:
<alias name="myApp-dataSource" alias="subsystemA-dataSource"/> <alias name="myApp-dataSource" alias="subsystemB-dataSource"/>
Now each component and the main application can refer to the dataSource through a name that is unique and guaranteed not to clash with any other definition (effectively creating a namespace), yet they refer to the same bean.
A bean definition essentially is a recipe for creating one or more objects. The container looks at the recipe for a named bean when asked, and uses the configuration metadata encapsulated by that bean definition to create (or acquire) an actual object.
If you use XML-based configuration metadata, you specify the type (or class) of object
that is to be instantiated in the class attribute of the <bean/> element. This
class attribute, which internally is a Class property on a BeanDefinition
instance, is usually mandatory. (For exceptions, see
the section called “Instantiation using an instance factory method” and Section 7.7, “Bean definition inheritance”.)
You use the Class property in one of two ways:
new operator.
static factory method that will be
invoked to create the object, in the less common case where the container invokes a
static factory method on a class to create the bean. The object type returned
from the invocation of the static factory method may be the same class or another
class entirely.
When you create a bean by the constructor approach, all normal classes are usable by and compatible with Spring. That is, the class being developed does not need to implement any specific interfaces or to be coded in a specific fashion. Simply specifying the bean class should suffice. However, depending on what type of IoC you use for that specific bean, you may need a default (empty) constructor.
The Spring IoC container can manage virtually any class you want it to manage; it is not limited to managing true JavaBeans. Most Spring users prefer actual JavaBeans with only a default (no-argument) constructor and appropriate setters and getters modeled after the properties in the container. You can also have more exotic non-bean-style classes in your container. If, for example, you need to use a legacy connection pool that absolutely does not adhere to the JavaBean specification, Spring can manage it as well.
With XML-based configuration metadata you can specify your bean class as follows:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"/> <bean name="anotherExample" class="examples.ExampleBeanTwo"/>
For details about the mechanism for supplying arguments to the constructor (if required) and setting object instance properties after the object is constructed, see Injecting Dependencies.
When defining a bean that you create with a static factory method, you use the class
attribute to specify the class containing the static factory method and an attribute
named factory-method to specify the name of the factory method itself. You should be
able to call this method (with optional arguments as described later) and return a live
object, which subsequently is treated as if it had been created through a constructor.
One use for such a bean definition is to call static factories in legacy code.
The following bean definition specifies that the bean will be created by calling a
factory-method. The definition does not specify the type (class) of the returned object,
only the class containing the factory method. In this example, the createInstance()
method must be a static method.
<bean id="clientService" class="examples.ClientService" factory-method="createInstance"/>
public class ClientService { private static ClientService clientService = new ClientService(); private ClientService() {} public static ClientService createInstance() { return clientService; } }
For details about the mechanism for supplying (optional) arguments to the factory method and setting object instance properties after the object is returned from the factory, see Dependencies and configuration in detail.
Similar to instantiation through a static
factory method, instantiation with an instance factory method invokes a non-static
method of an existing bean from the container to create a new bean. To use this
mechanism, leave the class attribute empty, and in the factory-bean attribute,
specify the name of a bean in the current (or parent/ancestor) container that contains
the instance method that is to be invoked to create the object. Set the name of the
factory method itself with the factory-method attribute.
<!-- the factory bean, which contains a method called createInstance() --> <bean id="serviceLocator" class="examples.DefaultServiceLocator"> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this locator bean --> </bean> <!-- the bean to be created via the factory bean --> <bean id="clientService" factory-bean="serviceLocator" factory-method="createClientServiceInstance"/>
public class DefaultServiceLocator { private static ClientService clientService = new ClientServiceImpl(); public ClientService createClientServiceInstance() { return clientService; } }
One factory class can also hold more than one factory method as shown here:
<bean id="serviceLocator" class="examples.DefaultServiceLocator"> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this locator bean --> </bean> <bean id="clientService" factory-bean="serviceLocator" factory-method="createClientServiceInstance"/> <bean id="accountService" factory-bean="serviceLocator" factory-method="createAccountServiceInstance"/>
public class DefaultServiceLocator { private static ClientService clientService = new ClientServiceImpl(); private static AccountService accountService = new AccountServiceImpl(); public ClientService createClientServiceInstance() { return clientService; } public AccountService createAccountServiceInstance() { return accountService; } }
This approach shows that the factory bean itself can be managed and configured through dependency injection (DI). See Dependencies and configuration in detail.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
In Spring documentation, factory bean refers to a bean that is configured in the
Spring container that will create objects through an
instance or
static factory method. By contrast,
|
A typical enterprise application does not consist of a single object (or bean in the Spring parlance). Even the simplest application has a few objects that work together to present what the end-user sees as a coherent application. This next section explains how you go from defining a number of bean definitions that stand alone to a fully realized application where objects collaborate to achieve a goal.
Dependency injection (DI) is a process whereby objects define their dependencies, that is, the other objects they work with, only through constructor arguments, arguments to a factory method, or properties that are set on the object instance after it is constructed or returned from a factory method. The container then injects those dependencies when it creates the bean. This process is fundamentally the inverse, hence the name Inversion of Control (IoC), of the bean itself controlling the instantiation or location of its dependencies on its own by using direct construction of classes, or the Service Locator pattern.
Code is cleaner with the DI principle and decoupling is more effective when objects are provided with their dependencies. The object does not look up its dependencies, and does not know the location or class of the dependencies. As such, your classes become easier to test, in particular when the dependencies are on interfaces or abstract base classes, which allow for stub or mock implementations to be used in unit tests.
DI exists in two major variants, Constructor-based dependency injection and Setter-based dependency injection.
Constructor-based DI is accomplished by the container invoking a constructor with a
number of arguments, each representing a dependency. Calling a static factory method
with specific arguments to construct the bean is nearly equivalent, and this discussion
treats arguments to a constructor and to a static factory method similarly. The
following example shows a class that can only be dependency-injected with constructor
injection. Notice that there is nothing special about this class, it is a POJO that
has no dependencies on container specific interfaces, base classes or annotations.
public class SimpleMovieLister { // the SimpleMovieLister has a dependency on a MovieFinder private MovieFinder movieFinder; // a constructor so that the Spring container can inject a MovieFinder public SimpleMovieLister(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // business logic that actually uses the injected MovieFinder is omitted... }
Constructor argument resolution matching occurs using the argument’s type. If no potential ambiguity exists in the constructor arguments of a bean definition, then the order in which the constructor arguments are defined in a bean definition is the order in which those arguments are supplied to the appropriate constructor when the bean is being instantiated. Consider the following class:
package x.y; public class Foo { public Foo(Bar bar, Baz baz) { // ... } }
No potential ambiguity exists, assuming that Bar and Baz classes are not related by
inheritance. Thus the following configuration works fine, and you do not need to specify
the constructor argument indexes and/or types explicitly in the <constructor-arg/>
element.
<beans> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo"> <constructor-arg ref="bar"/> <constructor-arg ref="baz"/> </bean> <bean id="bar" class="x.y.Bar"/> <bean id="baz" class="x.y.Baz"/> </beans>
When another bean is referenced, the type is known, and matching can occur (as was the
case with the preceding example). When a simple type is used, such as
<value>true</value>, Spring cannot determine the type of the value, and so cannot match
by type without help. Consider the following class:
package examples; public class ExampleBean { // Number of years to calculate the Ultimate Answer private int years; // The Answer to Life, the Universe, and Everything private String ultimateAnswer; public ExampleBean(int years, String ultimateAnswer) { this.years = years; this.ultimateAnswer = ultimateAnswer; } }
In the preceding scenario, the container can use type matching with simple types if
you explicitly specify the type of the constructor argument using the type attribute.
For example:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg type="int" value="7500000"/> <constructor-arg type="java.lang.String" value="42"/> </bean>
Use the index attribute to specify explicitly the index of constructor arguments. For
example:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg index="0" value="7500000"/> <constructor-arg index="1" value="42"/> </bean>
In addition to resolving the ambiguity of multiple simple values, specifying an index resolves ambiguity where a constructor has two arguments of the same type. Note that the index is 0 based.
You can also use the constructor parameter name for value disambiguation:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg name="years" value="7500000"/> <constructor-arg name="ultimateAnswer" value="42"/> </bean>
Keep in mind that to make this work out of the box your code must be compiled with the debug flag enabled so that Spring can look up the parameter name from the constructor. If you can’t compile your code with debug flag (or don’t want to) you can use @ConstructorProperties JDK annotation to explicitly name your constructor arguments. The sample class would then have to look as follows:
package examples; public class ExampleBean { // Fields omitted @ConstructorProperties({"years", "ultimateAnswer"}) public ExampleBean(int years, String ultimateAnswer) { this.years = years; this.ultimateAnswer = ultimateAnswer; } }
Setter-based DI is accomplished by the container calling setter methods on your
beans after invoking a no-argument constructor or no-argument static factory method to
instantiate your bean.
The following example shows a class that can only be dependency-injected using pure setter injection. This class is conventional Java. It is a POJO that has no dependencies on container specific interfaces, base classes or annotations.
public class SimpleMovieLister { // the SimpleMovieLister has a dependency on the MovieFinder private MovieFinder movieFinder; // a setter method so that the Spring container can inject a MovieFinder public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // business logic that actually uses the injected MovieFinder is omitted... }
The ApplicationContext supports constructor-based and setter-based DI for the beans it
manages. It also supports setter-based DI after some dependencies have already been
injected through the constructor approach. You configure the dependencies in the form of
a BeanDefinition, which you use in conjunction with PropertyEditor instances to
convert properties from one format to another. However, most Spring users do not work
with these classes directly (i.e., programmatically) but rather with XML bean
definitions, annotated components (i.e., classes annotated with @Component,
@Controller, etc.), or @Bean methods in Java-based @Configuration classes. These
sources are then converted internally into instances of BeanDefinition and used to
load an entire Spring IoC container instance.
The container performs bean dependency resolution as follows:
ApplicationContext is created and initialized with configuration metadata that
describes all the beans. Configuration metadata can be specified via XML, Java code, or
annotations.
int,
long, String, boolean, etc.
The Spring container validates the configuration of each bean as the container is created. However, the bean properties themselves are not set until the bean is actually created. Beans that are singleton-scoped and set to be pre-instantiated (the default) are created when the container is created. Scopes are defined in Section 7.5, “Bean scopes”. Otherwise, the bean is created only when it is requested. Creation of a bean potentially causes a graph of beans to be created, as the bean’s dependencies and its dependencies' dependencies (and so on) are created and assigned. Note that resolution mismatches among those dependencies may show up late, i.e. on first creation of the affected bean.
You can generally trust Spring to do the right thing. It detects configuration problems,
such as references to non-existent beans and circular dependencies, at container
load-time. Spring sets properties and resolves dependencies as late as possible, when
the bean is actually created. This means that a Spring container which has loaded
correctly can later generate an exception when you request an object if there is a
problem creating that object or one of its dependencies. For example, the bean throws an
exception as a result of a missing or invalid property. This potentially delayed
visibility of some configuration issues is why ApplicationContext implementations by
default pre-instantiate singleton beans. At the cost of some upfront time and memory to
create these beans before they are actually needed, you discover configuration issues
when the ApplicationContext is created, not later. You can still override this default
behavior so that singleton beans will lazy-initialize, rather than be pre-instantiated.
If no circular dependencies exist, when one or more collaborating beans are being injected into a dependent bean, each collaborating bean is totally configured prior to being injected into the dependent bean. This means that if bean A has a dependency on bean B, the Spring IoC container completely configures bean B prior to invoking the setter method on bean A. In other words, the bean is instantiated (if not a pre-instantiated singleton), its dependencies are set, and the relevant lifecycle methods (such as a configured init method or the InitializingBean callback method) are invoked.
The following example uses XML-based configuration metadata for setter-based DI. A small part of a Spring XML configuration file specifies some bean definitions:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <!-- setter injection using the nested ref element --> <property name="beanOne"> <ref bean="anotherExampleBean"/> </property> <!-- setter injection using the neater ref attribute --> <property name="beanTwo" ref="yetAnotherBean"/> <property name="integerProperty" value="1"/> </bean> <bean id="anotherExampleBean" class="examples.AnotherBean"/> <bean id="yetAnotherBean" class="examples.YetAnotherBean"/>
public class ExampleBean { private AnotherBean beanOne; private YetAnotherBean beanTwo; private int i; public void setBeanOne(AnotherBean beanOne) { this.beanOne = beanOne; } public void setBeanTwo(YetAnotherBean beanTwo) { this.beanTwo = beanTwo; } public void setIntegerProperty(int i) { this.i = i; } }
In the preceding example, setters are declared to match against the properties specified in the XML file. The following example uses constructor-based DI:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <!-- constructor injection using the nested ref element --> <constructor-arg> <ref bean="anotherExampleBean"/> </constructor-arg> <!-- constructor injection using the neater ref attribute --> <constructor-arg ref="yetAnotherBean"/> <constructor-arg type="int" value="1"/> </bean> <bean id="anotherExampleBean" class="examples.AnotherBean"/> <bean id="yetAnotherBean" class="examples.YetAnotherBean"/>
public class ExampleBean { private AnotherBean beanOne; private YetAnotherBean beanTwo; private int i; public ExampleBean( AnotherBean anotherBean, YetAnotherBean yetAnotherBean, int i) { this.beanOne = anotherBean; this.beanTwo = yetAnotherBean; this.i = i; } }
The constructor arguments specified in the bean definition will be used as arguments to
the constructor of the ExampleBean.
Now consider a variant of this example, where instead of using a constructor, Spring is
told to call a static factory method to return an instance of the object:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean" factory-method="createInstance"> <constructor-arg ref="anotherExampleBean"/> <constructor-arg ref="yetAnotherBean"/> <constructor-arg value="1"/> </bean> <bean id="anotherExampleBean" class="examples.AnotherBean"/> <bean id="yetAnotherBean" class="examples.YetAnotherBean"/>
public class ExampleBean { // a private constructor private ExampleBean(...) { ... } // a static factory method; the arguments to this method can be // considered the dependencies of the bean that is returned, // regardless of how those arguments are actually used. public static ExampleBean createInstance ( AnotherBean anotherBean, YetAnotherBean yetAnotherBean, int i) { ExampleBean eb = new ExampleBean (...); // some other operations... return eb; } }
Arguments to the static factory method are supplied via <constructor-arg/> elements,
exactly the same as if a constructor had actually been used. The type of the class being
returned by the factory method does not have to be of the same type as the class that
contains the static factory method, although in this example it is. An instance
(non-static) factory method would be used in an essentially identical fashion (aside
from the use of the factory-bean attribute instead of the class attribute), so
details will not be discussed here.
As mentioned in the previous section, you can define bean properties and constructor
arguments as references to other managed beans (collaborators), or as values defined
inline. Spring’s XML-based configuration metadata supports sub-element types within its
<property/> and <constructor-arg/> elements for this purpose.
The value attribute of the <property/> element specifies a property or constructor
argument as a human-readable string representation. Spring’s
conversion service is used to convert these
values from a String to the actual type of the property or argument.
<bean id="myDataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close"> <!-- results in a setDriverClassName(String) call --> <property name="driverClassName" value="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver"/> <property name="url" value="jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydb"/> <property name="username" value="root"/> <property name="password" value="masterkaoli"/> </bean>
The following example uses the p-namespace for even more succinct XML configuration.
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean id="myDataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close" p:driverClassName="com.mysql.jdbc.Driver" p:url="jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydb" p:username="root" p:password="masterkaoli"/> </beans>
The preceding XML is more succinct; however, typos are discovered at runtime rather than design time, unless you use an IDE such as IntelliJ IDEA or the Spring Tool Suite (STS) that support automatic property completion when you create bean definitions. Such IDE assistance is highly recommended.
You can also configure a java.util.Properties instance as:
<bean id="mappings" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer"> <!-- typed as a java.util.Properties --> <property name="properties"> <value> jdbc.driver.className=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver jdbc.url=jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/mydb </value> </property> </bean>
The Spring container converts the text inside the <value/> element into a
java.util.Properties instance by using the JavaBeans PropertyEditor mechanism. This
is a nice shortcut, and is one of a few places where the Spring team do favor the use of
the nested <value/> element over the value attribute style.
The idref element is simply an error-proof way to pass the id (string value - not
a reference) of another bean in the container to a <constructor-arg/> or <property/>
element.
<bean id="theTargetBean" class="..."/> <bean id="theClientBean" class="..."> <property name="targetName"> <idref bean="theTargetBean"/> </property> </bean>
The above bean definition snippet is exactly equivalent (at runtime) to the following snippet:
<bean id="theTargetBean" class="..." /> <bean id="client" class="..."> <property name="targetName" value="theTargetBean"/> </bean>
The first form is preferable to the second, because using the idref tag allows the
container to validate at deployment time that the referenced, named bean actually
exists. In the second variation, no validation is performed on the value that is passed
to the targetName property of the client bean. Typos are only discovered (with most
likely fatal results) when the client bean is actually instantiated. If the client
bean is a prototype bean, this typo and the resulting exception
may only be discovered long after the container is deployed.
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The |
A common place (at least in versions earlier than Spring 2.0) where the <idref/> element
brings value is in the configuration of AOP interceptors in a
ProxyFactoryBean bean definition. Using <idref/> elements when you specify the
interceptor names prevents you from misspelling an interceptor id.
The ref element is the final element inside a <constructor-arg/> or <property/>
definition element. Here you set the value of the specified property of a bean to be a
reference to another bean (a collaborator) managed by the container. The referenced bean
is a dependency of the bean whose property will be set, and it is initialized on demand
as needed before the property is set. (If the collaborator is a singleton bean, it may
be initialized already by the container.) All references are ultimately a reference to
another object. Scoping and validation depend on whether you specify the id/name of the
other object through the bean, local, or parent attributes.
Specifying the target bean through the bean attribute of the <ref/> tag is the most
general form, and allows creation of a reference to any bean in the same container or
parent container, regardless of whether it is in the same XML file. The value of the
bean attribute may be the same as the id attribute of the target bean, or as one of
the values in the name attribute of the target bean.
<ref bean="someBean"/>
Specifying the target bean through the parent attribute creates a reference to a bean
that is in a parent container of the current container. The value of the parent
attribute may be the same as either the id attribute of the target bean, or one of the
values in the name attribute of the target bean, and the target bean must be in a
parent container of the current one. You use this bean reference variant mainly when you
have a hierarchy of containers and you want to wrap an existing bean in a parent
container with a proxy that will have the same name as the parent bean.
<!-- in the parent context --> <bean id="accountService" class="com.foo.SimpleAccountService"> <!-- insert dependencies as required as here --> </bean>
<!-- in the child (descendant) context --> <bean id="accountService" <!-- bean name is the same as the parent bean --> class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="target"> <ref parent="accountService"/> <!-- notice how we refer to the parent bean --> </property> <!-- insert other configuration and dependencies as required here --> </bean>
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The |
A <bean/> element inside the <property/> or <constructor-arg/> elements defines a
so-called inner bean.
<bean id="outer" class="..."> <!-- instead of using a reference to a target bean, simply define the target bean inline --> <property name="target"> <bean class="com.example.Person"> <!-- this is the inner bean --> <property name="name" value="Fiona Apple"/> <property name="age" value="25"/> </bean> </property> </bean>
An inner bean definition does not require a defined id or name; if specified, the container
does not use such a value as an identifier. The container also ignores the scope flag on
creation: Inner beans are always anonymous and they are always created with the outer
bean. It is not possible to inject inner beans into collaborating beans other than into
the enclosing bean or to access them independently.
As a corner case, it is possible to receive destruction callbacks from a custom scope, e.g. for a request-scoped inner bean contained within a singleton bean: The creation of the inner bean instance will be tied to its containing bean, but destruction callbacks allow it to participate in the request scope’s lifecycle. This is not a common scenario; inner beans typically simply share their containing bean’s scope.
In the <list/>, <set/>, <map/>, and <props/> elements, you set the properties
and arguments of the Java Collection types List, Set, Map, and Properties,
respectively.
<bean id="moreComplexObject" class="example.ComplexObject"> <!-- results in a setAdminEmails(java.util.Properties) call --> <property name="adminEmails"> <props> <prop key="administrator">[email protected]</prop> <prop key="support">[email protected]</prop> <prop key="development">[email protected]</prop> </props> </property> <!-- results in a setSomeList(java.util.List) call --> <property name="someList"> <list> <value>a list element followed by a reference</value> <ref bean="myDataSource" /> </list> </property> <!-- results in a setSomeMap(java.util.Map) call --> <property name="someMap"> <map> <entry key="an entry" value="just some string"/> <entry key ="a ref" value-ref="myDataSource"/> </map> </property> <!-- results in a setSomeSet(java.util.Set) call --> <property name="someSet"> <set> <value>just some string</value> <ref bean="myDataSource" /> </set> </property> </bean>
The value of a map key or value, or a set value, can also again be any of the following elements:
bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null
The Spring container also supports the merging of collections. An application
developer can define a parent-style <list/>, <map/>, <set/> or <props/> element,
and have child-style <list/>, <map/>, <set/> or <props/> elements inherit and
override values from the parent collection. That is, the child collection’s values are
the result of merging the elements of the parent and child collections, with the child’s
collection elements overriding values specified in the parent collection.
This section on merging discusses the parent-child bean mechanism. Readers unfamiliar with parent and child bean definitions may wish to read the relevant section before continuing.
The following example demonstrates collection merging:
<beans> <bean id="parent" abstract="true" class="example.ComplexObject"> <property name="adminEmails"> <props> <prop key="administrator">[email protected]</prop> <prop key="support">[email protected]</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="child" parent="parent"> <property name="adminEmails"> <!-- the merge is specified on the child collection definition --> <props merge="true"> <prop key="sales">[email protected]</prop> <prop key="support">[email protected]</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <beans>
Notice the use of the merge=true attribute on the <props/> element of the
adminEmails property of the child bean definition. When the child bean is resolved
and instantiated by the container, the resulting instance has an adminEmails
Properties collection that contains the result of the merging of the child’s
adminEmails collection with the parent’s adminEmails collection.
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
The child Properties collection’s value set inherits all property elements from the
parent <props/>, and the child’s value for the support value overrides the value in
the parent collection.
This merging behavior applies similarly to the <list/>, <map/>, and <set/>
collection types. In the specific case of the <list/> element, the semantics
associated with the List collection type, that is, the notion of an ordered
collection of values, is maintained; the parent’s values precede all of the child list’s
values. In the case of the Map, Set, and Properties collection types, no ordering
exists. Hence no ordering semantics are in effect for the collection types that underlie
the associated Map, Set, and Properties implementation types that the container
uses internally.
You cannot merge different collection types (such as a Map and a List), and if you
do attempt to do so an appropriate Exception is thrown. The merge attribute must be
specified on the lower, inherited, child definition; specifying the merge attribute on
a parent collection definition is redundant and will not result in the desired merging.
With the introduction of generic types in Java 5, you can use strongly typed collections.
That is, it is possible to declare a Collection type such that it can only contain
String elements (for example). If you are using Spring to dependency-inject a
strongly-typed Collection into a bean, you can take advantage of Spring’s
type-conversion support such that the elements of your strongly-typed Collection
instances are converted to the appropriate type prior to being added to the Collection.
public class Foo { private Map<String, Float> accounts; public void setAccounts(Map<String, Float> accounts) { this.accounts = accounts; } }
<beans> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo"> <property name="accounts"> <map> <entry key="one" value="9.99"/> <entry key="two" value="2.75"/> <entry key="six" value="3.99"/> </map> </property> </bean> </beans>
When the accounts property of the foo bean is prepared for injection, the generics
information about the element type of the strongly-typed Map<String, Float> is
available by reflection. Thus Spring’s type conversion infrastructure recognizes the
various value elements as being of type Float, and the string values 9.99, 2.75, and
3.99 are converted into an actual Float type.
Spring treats empty arguments for properties and the like as empty Strings. The
following XML-based configuration metadata snippet sets the email property to the empty
String value ("").
<bean class="ExampleBean"> <property name="email" value=""/> </bean>
The preceding example is equivalent to the following Java code:
exampleBean.setEmail("");
The <null/> element handles null values. For example:
<bean class="ExampleBean"> <property name="email"> <null/> </property> </bean>
The above configuration is equivalent to the following Java code:
exampleBean.setEmail(null);
The p-namespace enables you to use the bean element’s attributes, instead of nested
<property/> elements, to describe your property values and/or collaborating beans.
Spring supports extensible configuration formats with namespaces, which are
based on an XML Schema definition. The beans configuration format discussed in this
chapter is defined in an XML Schema document. However, the p-namespace is not defined in
an XSD file and exists only in the core of Spring.
The following example shows two XML snippets that resolve to the same result: The first uses standard XML format and the second uses the p-namespace.
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean name="classic" class="com.example.ExampleBean"> <property name="email" value="[email protected]"/> </bean> <bean name="p-namespace" class="com.example.ExampleBean" p:email="[email protected]"/> </beans>
The example shows an attribute in the p-namespace called email in the bean definition. This tells Spring to include a property declaration. As previously mentioned, the p-namespace does not have a schema definition, so you can set the name of the attribute to the property name.
This next example includes two more bean definitions that both have a reference to another bean:
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:p="http://www.springframework.org/schema/p" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean name="john-classic" class="com.example.Person"> <property name="name" value="John Doe"/> <property name="spouse" ref="jane"/> </bean> <bean name="john-modern" class="com.example.Person" p:name="John Doe" p:spouse-ref="jane"/> <bean name="jane" class="com.example.Person"> <property name="name" value="Jane Doe"/> </bean> </beans>
As you can see, this example includes not only a property value using the p-namespace,
but also uses a special format to declare property references. Whereas the first bean
definition uses <property name="spouse" ref="jane"/> to create a reference from bean
john to bean jane, the second bean definition uses p:spouse-ref="jane" as an
attribute to do the exact same thing. In this case spouse is the property name,
whereas the -ref part indicates that this is not a straight value but rather a
reference to another bean.
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The p-namespace is not as flexible as the standard XML format. For example, the format
for declaring property references clashes with properties that end in |
Similar to the the section called “XML shortcut with the p-namespace”, the c-namespace, newly introduced in Spring
3.1, allows usage of inlined attributes for configuring the constructor arguments rather
then nested constructor-arg elements.
Let’s review the examples from the section called “Constructor-based dependency injection” with the c: namespace:
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:c="http://www.springframework.org/schema/c" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd"> <bean id="bar" class="x.y.Bar"/> <bean id="baz" class="x.y.Baz"/> <!-- traditional declaration --> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo"> <constructor-arg ref="bar"/> <constructor-arg ref="baz"/> <constructor-arg value="[email protected]"/> </bean> <!-- c-namespace declaration --> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo" c:bar-ref="bar" c:baz-ref="baz" c:email="[email protected]"/> </beans>
The c: namespace uses the same conventions as the p: one (trailing -ref for bean
references) for setting the constructor arguments by their names. And just as well, it
needs to be declared even though it is not defined in an XSD schema (but it exists
inside the Spring core).
For the rare cases where the constructor argument names are not available (usually if the bytecode was compiled without debugging information), one can use fallback to the argument indexes:
<!-- c-namespace index declaration --> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo" c:_0-ref="bar" c:_1-ref="baz"/>
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Due to the XML grammar, the index notation requires the presence of the leading |
In practice, the constructor resolution mechanism is quite efficient in matching arguments so unless one really needs to, we recommend using the name notation through-out your configuration.
You can use compound or nested property names when you set bean properties, as long as
all components of the path except the final property name are not null. Consider the
following bean definition.
<bean id="foo" class="foo.Bar"> <property name="fred.bob.sammy" value="123" /> </bean>
The foo bean has a fred property, which has a bob property, which has a sammy
property, and that final sammy property is being set to the value 123. In order for
this to work, the fred property of foo, and the bob property of fred must not be
null after the bean is constructed, or a NullPointerException is thrown.
If a bean is a dependency of another that usually means that one bean is set as a
property of another. Typically you accomplish this with the <ref/>
element in XML-based configuration metadata. However, sometimes dependencies between
beans are less direct; for example, a static initializer in a class needs to be
triggered, such as database driver registration. The depends-on attribute can
explicitly force one or more beans to be initialized before the bean using this element
is initialized. The following example uses the depends-on attribute to express a
dependency on a single bean:
<bean id="beanOne" class="ExampleBean" depends-on="manager"/> <bean id="manager" class="ManagerBean" />
To express a dependency on multiple beans, supply a list of bean names as the value of
the depends-on attribute, with commas, whitespace and semicolons, used as valid
delimiters:
<bean id="beanOne" class="ExampleBean" depends-on="manager,accountDao"> <property name="manager" ref="manager" /> </bean> <bean id="manager" class="ManagerBean" /> <bean id="accountDao" class="x.y.jdbc.JdbcAccountDao" />
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The |
By default, ApplicationContext implementations eagerly create and configure all
singleton beans as part of the initialization
process. Generally, this pre-instantiation is desirable, because errors in the
configuration or surrounding environment are discovered immediately, as opposed to hours
or even days later. When this behavior is not desirable, you can prevent
pre-instantiation of a singleton bean by marking the bean definition as
lazy-initialized. A lazy-initialized bean tells the IoC container to create a bean
instance when it is first requested, rather than at startup.
In XML, this behavior is controlled by the lazy-init attribute on the <bean/>
element; for example:
<bean id="lazy" class="com.foo.ExpensiveToCreateBean" lazy-init="true"/> <bean name="not.lazy" class="com.foo.AnotherBean"/>
When the preceding configuration is consumed by an ApplicationContext, the bean named
lazy is not eagerly pre-instantiated when the ApplicationContext is starting up,
whereas the not.lazy bean is eagerly pre-instantiated.
However, when a lazy-initialized bean is a dependency of a singleton bean that is
not lazy-initialized, the ApplicationContext creates the lazy-initialized bean at
startup, because it must satisfy the singleton’s dependencies. The lazy-initialized bean
is injected into a singleton bean elsewhere that is not lazy-initialized.
You can also control lazy-initialization at the container level by using the
default-lazy-init attribute on the <beans/> element; for example:
<beans default-lazy-init="true"> <!-- no beans will be pre-instantiated... --> </beans>
The Spring container can autowire relationships between collaborating beans. You can
allow Spring to resolve collaborators (other beans) automatically for your bean by
inspecting the contents of the ApplicationContext. Autowiring has the following
advantages:
When using XML-based configuration metadata [2], you specify autowire
mode for a bean definition with the autowire attribute of the <bean/> element. The
autowiring functionality has four modes. You specify autowiring per bean and thus
can choose which ones to autowire.
Table 7.2. Autowiring modes
| Mode | Explanation |
|---|---|
no | (Default) No autowiring. Bean references must be defined via a |
byName | Autowiring by property name. Spring looks for a bean with the same name as the
property that needs to be autowired. For example, if a bean definition is set to
autowire by name, and it contains a master property (that is, it has a
setMaster(..) method), Spring looks for a bean definition named |
byType | Allows a property to be autowired if exactly one bean of the property type exists in the container. If more than one exists, a fatal exception is thrown, which indicates that you may not use byType autowiring for that bean. If there are no matching beans, nothing happens; the property is not set. |
constructor | Analogous to byType, but applies to constructor arguments. If there is not exactly one bean of the constructor argument type in the container, a fatal error is raised. |
With byType or constructor autowiring mode, you can wire arrays and
typed-collections. In such cases all autowire candidates within the container that
match the expected type are provided to satisfy the dependency. You can autowire
strongly-typed Maps if the expected key type is String. An autowired Maps values will
consist of all bean instances that match the expected type, and the Maps keys will
contain the corresponding bean names.
You can combine autowire behavior with dependency checking, which is performed after autowiring completes.
Autowiring works best when it is used consistently across a project. If autowiring is not used in general, it might be confusing to developers to use it to wire only one or two bean definitions.
Consider the limitations and disadvantages of autowiring:
property and constructor-arg settings always override
autowiring. You cannot autowire so-called simple properties such as primitives,
Strings, and Classes (and arrays of such simple properties). This limitation is
by-design.
In the latter scenario, you have several options:
autowire-candidate attributes
to false as described in the next section.
primary attribute of its <bean/> element to true.
On a per-bean basis, you can exclude a bean from autowiring. In Spring’s XML format, set
the autowire-candidate attribute of the <bean/> element to false; the container
makes that specific bean definition unavailable to the autowiring infrastructure
(including annotation style configurations such as @Autowired).
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The |
You can also limit autowire candidates based on pattern-matching against bean names. The
top-level <beans/> element accepts one or more patterns within its
default-autowire-candidates attribute. For example, to limit autowire candidate status
to any bean whose name ends with Repository, provide a value of *Repository. To
provide multiple patterns, define them in a comma-separated list. An explicit value of
true or false for a bean definitions autowire-candidate attribute always takes
precedence, and for such beans, the pattern matching rules do not apply.
These techniques are useful for beans that you never want to be injected into other beans by autowiring. It does not mean that an excluded bean cannot itself be configured using autowiring. Rather, the bean itself is not a candidate for autowiring other beans.
In most application scenarios, most beans in the container are singletons. When a singleton bean needs to collaborate with another singleton bean, or a non-singleton bean needs to collaborate with another non-singleton bean, you typically handle the dependency by defining one bean as a property of the other. A problem arises when the bean lifecycles are different. Suppose singleton bean A needs to use non-singleton (prototype) bean B, perhaps on each method invocation on A. The container only creates the singleton bean A once, and thus only gets one opportunity to set the properties. The container cannot provide bean A with a new instance of bean B every time one is needed.
A solution is to forego some inversion of control. You can make
bean A aware of the container by implementing the ApplicationContextAware interface,
and by making a getBean("B") call to the container ask for (a
typically new) bean B instance every time bean A needs it. The following is an example
of this approach:
// a class that uses a stateful Command-style class to perform some processing package fiona.apple; // Spring-API imports import org.springframework.beans.BeansException; import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext; import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContextAware; public class CommandManager implements ApplicationContextAware { private ApplicationContext applicationContext; public Object process(Map commandState) { // grab a new instance of the appropriate Command Command command = createCommand(); // set the state on the (hopefully brand new) Command instance command.setState(commandState); return command.execute(); } protected Command createCommand() { // notice the Spring API dependency! return this.applicationContext.getBean("command", Command.class); } public void setApplicationContext( ApplicationContext applicationContext) throws BeansException { this.applicationContext = applicationContext; } }
The preceding is not desirable, because the business code is aware of and coupled to the Spring Framework. Method Injection, a somewhat advanced feature of the Spring IoC container, allows this use case to be handled in a clean fashion.
Lookup method injection is the ability of the container to override methods on container managed beans, to return the lookup result for another named bean in the container. The lookup typically involves a prototype bean as in the scenario described in the preceding section. The Spring Framework implements this method injection by using bytecode generation from the CGLIB library to generate dynamically a subclass that overrides the method.
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Looking at the CommandManager class in the previous code snippet, you see that the
Spring container will dynamically override the implementation of the createCommand()
method. Your CommandManager class will not have any Spring dependencies, as can be
seen in the reworked example:
package fiona.apple; // no more Spring imports! public abstract class CommandManager { public Object process(Object commandState) { // grab a new instance of the appropriate Command interface Command command = createCommand(); // set the state on the (hopefully brand new) Command instance command.setState(commandState); return command.execute(); } // okay... but where is the implementation of this method? protected abstract Command createCommand(); }
In the client class containing the method to be injected (the CommandManager in this
case), the method to be injected requires a signature of the following form:
<public|protected> [abstract] <return-type> theMethodName(no-arguments);
If the method is abstract, the dynamically-generated subclass implements the method.
Otherwise, the dynamically-generated subclass overrides the concrete method defined in
the original class. For example:
<!-- a stateful bean deployed as a prototype (non-singleton) --> <bean id="myCommand" class="fiona.apple.AsyncCommand" scope="prototype"> <!-- inject dependencies here as required --> </bean> <!-- commandProcessor uses statefulCommandHelper --> <bean id="commandManager" class="fiona.apple.CommandManager"> <lookup-method name="createCommand" bean="myCommand"/> </bean>
The bean identified as commandManager calls its own method createCommand()
whenever it needs a new instance of the myCommand bean. You must be careful to deploy
the myCommand bean as a prototype, if that is actually what is needed. If it is
as a singleton, the same instance of the myCommand
bean is returned each time.
Alternatively, within the annotation-based component model, you may declare a lookup
method through the @Lookup annotation:
public abstract class CommandManager { public Object process(Object commandState) { Command command = createCommand(); command.setState(commandState); return command.execute(); } @Lookup("myCommand") protected abstract Command createCommand(); }
Or, more idiomatically, you may rely on the target bean getting resolved against the declared return type of the lookup method:
public abstract class CommandManager { public Object process(Object commandState) { MyCommand command = createCommand(); command.setState(commandState); return command.execute(); } @Lookup protected abstract MyCommand createCommand(); }
Note that you will typically declare such annotated lookup methods with a concrete stub implementation, in order for them to be compatible with Spring’s component scanning rules where abstract classes get ignored by default. This limitation does not apply in case of explicitly registered or explicitly imported bean classes.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Another way of accessing differently scoped target beans is an The interested reader may also find the |
A less useful form of method injection than lookup method injection is the ability to replace arbitrary methods in a managed bean with another method implementation. Users may safely skip the rest of this section until the functionality is actually needed.
With XML-based configuration metadata, you can use the replaced-method element to
replace an existing method implementation with another, for a deployed bean. Consider
the following class, with a method computeValue, which we want to override:
public class MyValueCalculator { public String computeValue(String input) { // some real code... } // some other methods... }
A class implementing the org.springframework.beans.factory.support.MethodReplacer
interface provides the new method definition.
/** * meant to be used to override the existing computeValue(String) * implementation in MyValueCalculator */ public class ReplacementComputeValue implements MethodReplacer { public Object reimplement(Object o, Method m, Object[] args) throws Throwable { // get the input value, work with it, and return a computed result String input = (String) args[0]; ... return ...; } }
The bean definition to deploy the original class and specify the method override would look like this:
<bean id="myValueCalculator" class="x.y.z.MyValueCalculator"> <!-- arbitrary method replacement --> <replaced-method name="computeValue" replacer="replacementComputeValue"> <arg-type>String</arg-type> </replaced-method> </bean> <bean id="replacementComputeValue" class="a.b.c.ReplacementComputeValue"/>
You can use one or more contained <arg-type/> elements within the <replaced-method/>
element to indicate the method signature of the method being overridden. The signature
for the arguments is necessary only if the method is overloaded and multiple variants
exist within the class. For convenience, the type string for an argument may be a
substring of the fully qualified type name. For example, the following all match
java.lang.String:
java.lang.String String Str
Because the number of arguments is often enough to distinguish between each possible choice, this shortcut can save a lot of typing, by allowing you to type only the shortest string that will match an argument type.
When you create a bean definition, you create a recipe for creating actual instances of the class defined by that bean definition. The idea that a bean definition is a recipe is important, because it means that, as with a class, you can create many object instances from a single recipe.
You can control not only the various dependencies and configuration values that are to
be plugged into an object that is created from a particular bean definition, but also
the scope of the objects created from a particular bean definition. This approach is
powerful and flexible in that you can choose the scope of the objects you create
through configuration instead of having to bake in the scope of an object at the Java
class level. Beans can be defined to be deployed in one of a number of scopes: out of
the box, the Spring Framework supports seven scopes, five of which are available only if
you use a web-aware ApplicationContext.
The following scopes are supported out of the box. You can also create a custom scope.
Table 7.3. Bean scopes
| Scope | Description |
|---|---|
(Default) Scopes a single bean definition to a single object instance per Spring IoC container. | |
Scopes a single bean definition to any number of object instances. | |
Scopes a single bean definition to the lifecycle of a single HTTP request; that is,
each HTTP request has its own instance of a bean created off the back of a single bean
definition. Only valid in the context of a web-aware Spring | |
Scopes a single bean definition to the lifecycle of an HTTP | |
Scopes a single bean definition to the lifecycle of a global HTTP | |
Scopes a single bean definition to the lifecycle of a | |
Scopes a single bean definition to the lifecycle of a |
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
As of Spring 3.0, a thread scope is available, but is not registered by default. For
more information, see the documentation for
|
Only one shared instance of a singleton bean is managed, and all requests for beans with an id or ids matching that bean definition result in that one specific bean instance being returned by the Spring container.
To put it another way, when you define a bean definition and it is scoped as a singleton, the Spring IoC container creates exactly one instance of the object defined by that bean definition. This single instance is stored in a cache of such singleton beans, and all subsequent requests and references for that named bean return the cached object.

Spring’s concept of a singleton bean differs from the Singleton pattern as defined in the Gang of Four (GoF) patterns book. The GoF Singleton hard-codes the scope of an object such that one and only one instance of a particular class is created per ClassLoader. The scope of the Spring singleton is best described as per container and per bean. This means that if you define one bean for a particular class in a single Spring container, then the Spring container creates one and only one instance of the class defined by that bean definition. The singleton scope is the default scope in Spring. To define a bean as a singleton in XML, you would write, for example:
<bean id="accountService" class="com.foo.DefaultAccountService"/> <!-- the following is equivalent, though redundant (singleton scope is the default) --> <bean id="accountService" class="com.foo.DefaultAccountService" scope="singleton"/>
The non-singleton, prototype scope of bean deployment results in the creation of a new
bean instance every time a request for that specific bean is made. That is, the bean
is injected into another bean or you request it through a getBean() method call on the
container. As a rule, use the prototype scope for all stateful beans and the singleton
scope for stateless beans.
The following diagram illustrates the Spring prototype scope. A data access object (DAO) is not typically configured as a prototype, because a typical DAO does not hold any conversational state; it was just easier for this author to reuse the core of the singleton diagram.

The following example defines a bean as a prototype in XML:
<bean id="accountService" class="com.foo.DefaultAccountService" scope="prototype"/>
In contrast to the other scopes, Spring does not manage the complete lifecycle of a prototype bean: the container instantiates, configures, and otherwise assembles a prototype object, and hands it to the client, with no further record of that prototype instance. Thus, although initialization lifecycle callback methods are called on all objects regardless of scope, in the case of prototypes, configured destruction lifecycle callbacks are not called. The client code must clean up prototype-scoped objects and release expensive resources that the prototype bean(s) are holding. To get the Spring container to release resources held by prototype-scoped beans, try using a custom bean post-processor, which holds a reference to beans that need to be cleaned up.
In some respects, the Spring container’s role in regard to a prototype-scoped bean is a
replacement for the Java new operator. All lifecycle management past that point must
be handled by the client. (For details on the lifecycle of a bean in the Spring
container, see Section 7.6.1, “Lifecycle callbacks”.)
When you use singleton-scoped beans with dependencies on prototype beans, be aware that dependencies are resolved at instantiation time. Thus if you dependency-inject a prototype-scoped bean into a singleton-scoped bean, a new prototype bean is instantiated and then dependency-injected into the singleton bean. The prototype instance is the sole instance that is ever supplied to the singleton-scoped bean.
However, suppose you want the singleton-scoped bean to acquire a new instance of the prototype-scoped bean repeatedly at runtime. You cannot dependency-inject a prototype-scoped bean into your singleton bean, because that injection occurs only once, when the Spring container is instantiating the singleton bean and resolving and injecting its dependencies. If you need a new instance of a prototype bean at runtime more than once, see Section 7.4.6, “Method injection”
The request, session, globalSession, application, and websocket scopes are
only available if you use a web-aware Spring ApplicationContext implementation
(such as XmlWebApplicationContext). If you use these scopes with regular Spring IoC
containers such as the ClassPathXmlApplicationContext, an IllegalStateException will
be thrown complaining about an unknown bean scope.
To support the scoping of beans at the request, session, globalSession,
application, and websocket levels (web-scoped beans), some minor initial
configuration is required before you define your beans. (This initial setup is not
required for the standard scopes, singleton and prototype.)
How you accomplish this initial setup depends on your particular Servlet environment.
If you access scoped beans within Spring Web MVC, in effect, within a request that is
processed by the Spring DispatcherServlet or DispatcherPortlet, then no special
setup is necessary: DispatcherServlet and DispatcherPortlet already expose all
relevant state.
If you use a Servlet 2.5 web container, with requests processed outside of Spring’s
DispatcherServlet (for example, when using JSF or Struts), you need to register the
org.springframework.web.context.request.RequestContextListener ServletRequestListener.
For Servlet 3.0+, this can be done programmatically via the WebApplicationInitializer
interface. Alternatively, or for older containers, add the following declaration to
your web application’s web.xml file:
<web-app> ... <listener> <listener-class> org.springframework.web.context.request.RequestContextListener </listener-class> </listener> ... </web-app>
Alternatively, if there are issues with your listener setup, consider using Spring’s
RequestContextFilter. The filter mapping depends on the surrounding web
application configuration, so you have to change it as appropriate.
<web-app> ... <filter> <filter-name>requestContextFilter</filter-name> <filter-class>org.springframework.web.filter.RequestContextFilter</filter-class> </filter> <filter-mapping> <filter-name>requestContextFilter</filter-name> <url-pattern>/*</url-pattern> </filter-mapping> ... </web-app>
DispatcherServlet, RequestContextListener, and RequestContextFilter all do exactly
the same thing, namely bind the HTTP request object to the Thread that is servicing
that request. This makes beans that are request- and session-scoped available further
down the call chain.
Consider the following XML configuration for a bean definition:
<bean id="loginAction" class="com.foo.LoginAction" scope="request"/>
The Spring container creates a new instance of the LoginAction bean by using the
loginAction bean definition for each and every HTTP request. That is, the
loginAction bean is scoped at the HTTP request level. You can change the internal
state of the instance that is created as much as you want, because other instances
created from the same loginAction bean definition will not see these changes in state;
they are particular to an individual request. When the request completes processing, the
bean that is scoped to the request is discarded.
When using annotation-driven components or Java Config, the @RequestScope annotation
can be used to assign a component to the request scope.
@RequestScope @Component public class LoginAction { // ... }
Consider the following XML configuration for a bean definition:
<bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.UserPreferences" scope="session"/>
The Spring container creates a new instance of the UserPreferences bean by using the
userPreferences bean definition for the lifetime of a single HTTP Session. In other
words, the userPreferences bean is effectively scoped at the HTTP Session level. As
with request-scoped beans, you can change the internal state of the instance that is
created as much as you want, knowing that other HTTP Session instances that are also
using instances created from the same userPreferences bean definition do not see these
changes in state, because they are particular to an individual HTTP Session. When the
HTTP Session is eventually discarded, the bean that is scoped to that particular HTTP
Session is also discarded.
When using annotation-driven components or Java Config, the @SessionScope annotation
can be used to assign a component to the session scope.
@SessionScope @Component public class UserPreferences { // ... }
Consider the following bean definition:
<bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.UserPreferences" scope="globalSession"/>
The globalSession scope is similar to the standard HTTP Session scope
(described above), and applies only in the context of
portlet-based web applications. The portlet specification defines the notion of a global
Session that is shared among all portlets that make up a single portlet web
application. Beans defined at the globalSession scope are scoped (or bound) to the
lifetime of the global portlet Session.
If you write a standard Servlet-based web application and you define one or more beans
as having globalSession scope, the standard HTTP Session scope is used, and no
error is raised.
Consider the following XML configuration for a bean definition:
<bean id="appPreferences" class="com.foo.AppPreferences" scope="application"/>
The Spring container creates a new instance of the AppPreferences bean by using the
appPreferences bean definition once for the entire web application. That is, the
appPreferences bean is scoped at the ServletContext level, stored as a regular
ServletContext attribute. This is somewhat similar to a Spring singleton bean but
differs in two important ways: It is a singleton per ServletContext, not per Spring
'ApplicationContext' (for which there may be several in any given web application),
and it is actually exposed and therefore visible as a ServletContext attribute.
When using annotation-driven components or Java Config, the @ApplicationScope
annotation can be used to assign a component to the application scope.
@ApplicationScope @Component public class AppPreferences { // ... }
The Spring IoC container manages not only the instantiation of your objects (beans), but also the wiring up of collaborators (or dependencies). If you want to inject (for example) an HTTP request scoped bean into another bean of a longer-lived scope, you may choose to inject an AOP proxy in place of the scoped bean. That is, you need to inject a proxy object that exposes the same public interface as the scoped object but that can also retrieve the real target object from the relevant scope (such as an HTTP request) and delegate method calls onto the real object.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
You may also use When declaring Also, scoped proxies are not the only way to access beans from shorter scopes in a
lifecycle-safe fashion. You may also simply declare your injection point (i.e. the
constructor/setter argument or autowired field) as As an extended variant, you may declare The JSR-330 variant of this is called |
The configuration in the following example is only one line, but it is important to understand the "why" as well as the "how" behind it.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:aop="http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop https://www.springframework.org/schema/aop/spring-aop.xsd"> <!-- an HTTP Session-scoped bean exposed as a proxy --> <bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.UserPreferences" scope="session"> <!-- instructs the container to proxy the surrounding bean --> <aop:scoped-proxy/> </bean> <!-- a singleton-scoped bean injected with a proxy to the above bean --> <bean id="userService" class="com.foo.SimpleUserService"> <!-- a reference to the proxied userPreferences bean --> <property name="userPreferences" ref="userPreferences"/> </bean> </beans>
To create such a proxy, you insert a child <aop:scoped-proxy/> element into a scoped
bean definition (see the section called “Choosing the type of proxy to create” and
Chapter 41, XML Schema-based configuration). Why do definitions of beans scoped at the request, session,
globalSession and custom-scope levels require the <aop:scoped-proxy/> element?
Let’s examine the following singleton bean definition and contrast it with what you need
to define for the aforementioned scopes (note that the following userPreferences bean
definition as it stands is incomplete).
<bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.UserPreferences" scope="session"/> <bean id="userManager" class="com.foo.UserManager"> <property name="userPreferences" ref="userPreferences"/> </bean>
In the preceding example, the singleton bean userManager is injected with a reference
to the HTTP Session-scoped bean userPreferences. The salient point here is that the
userManager bean is a singleton: it will be instantiated exactly once per
container, and its dependencies (in this case only one, the userPreferences bean) are
also injected only once. This means that the userManager bean will only operate on the
exact same userPreferences object, that is, the one that it was originally injected
with.
This is not the behavior you want when injecting a shorter-lived scoped bean into a
longer-lived scoped bean, for example injecting an HTTP Session-scoped collaborating
bean as a dependency into singleton bean. Rather, you need a single userManager
object, and for the lifetime of an HTTP Session, you need a userPreferences object
that is specific to said HTTP Session. Thus the container creates an object that
exposes the exact same public interface as the UserPreferences class (ideally an
object that is a UserPreferences instance) which can fetch the real
UserPreferences object from the scoping mechanism (HTTP request, Session, etc.). The
container injects this proxy object into the userManager bean, which is unaware that
this UserPreferences reference is a proxy. In this example, when a UserManager
instance invokes a method on the dependency-injected UserPreferences object, it
actually is invoking a method on the proxy. The proxy then fetches the real
UserPreferences object from (in this case) the HTTP Session, and delegates the
method invocation onto the retrieved real UserPreferences object.
Thus you need the following, correct and complete, configuration when injecting
request-, session-, and globalSession-scoped beans into collaborating objects:
<bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.UserPreferences" scope="session"> <aop:scoped-proxy/> </bean> <bean id="userManager" class="com.foo.UserManager"> <property name="userPreferences" ref="userPreferences"/> </bean>
By default, when the Spring container creates a proxy for a bean that is marked up with
the <aop:scoped-proxy/> element, a CGLIB-based class proxy is created.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
CGLIB proxies only intercept public method calls! Do not call non-public methods on such a proxy; they will not be delegated to the actual scoped target object. |
Alternatively, you can configure the Spring container to create standard JDK
interface-based proxies for such scoped beans, by specifying false for the value of
the proxy-target-class attribute of the <aop:scoped-proxy/> element. Using JDK
interface-based proxies means that you do not need additional libraries in your
application classpath to effect such proxying. However, it also means that the class of
the scoped bean must implement at least one interface, and that all collaborators
into which the scoped bean is injected must reference the bean through one of its
interfaces.
<!-- DefaultUserPreferences implements the UserPreferences interface --> <bean id="userPreferences" class="com.foo.DefaultUserPreferences" scope="session"> <aop:scoped-proxy proxy-target-class="false"/> </bean> <bean id="userManager" class="com.foo.UserManager"> <property name="userPreferences" ref="userPreferences"/> </bean>
For more detailed information about choosing class-based or interface-based proxying, see Section 11.6, “Proxying mechanisms”.
The bean scoping mechanism is extensible; You can define your own
scopes, or even redefine existing scopes, although the latter is considered bad practice
and you cannot override the built-in singleton and prototype scopes.
To integrate your custom scope(s) into the Spring container, you need to implement the
org.springframework.beans.factory.config.Scope interface, which is described in this
section. For an idea of how to implement your own scopes, see the Scope
implementations that are supplied with the Spring Framework itself and the
Scope javadocs,
which explains the methods you need to implement in more detail.
The Scope interface has four methods to get objects from the scope, remove them from
the scope, and allow them to be destroyed.
The following method returns the object from the underlying scope. The session scope implementation, for example, returns the session-scoped bean (and if it does not exist, the method returns a new instance of the bean, after having bound it to the session for future reference).
Object get(String name, ObjectFactory objectFactory)
The following method removes the object from the underlying scope. The session scope implementation for example, removes the session-scoped bean from the underlying session. The object should be returned, but you can return null if the object with the specified name is not found.
Object remove(String name)
The following method registers the callbacks the scope should execute when it is destroyed or when the specified object in the scope is destroyed. Refer to the javadocs or a Spring scope implementation for more information on destruction callbacks.
void registerDestructionCallback(String name, Runnable destructionCallback)
The following method obtains the conversation identifier for the underlying scope. This identifier is different for each scope. For a session scoped implementation, this identifier can be the session identifier.
String getConversationId()
After you write and test one or more custom Scope implementations, you need to make
the Spring container aware of your new scope(s). The following method is the central
method to register a new Scope with the Spring container:
void registerScope(String scopeName, Scope scope);
This method is declared on the ConfigurableBeanFactory interface, which is available
on most of the concrete ApplicationContext implementations that ship with Spring via
the BeanFactory property.
The first argument to the registerScope(..) method is the unique name associated with
a scope; examples of such names in the Spring container itself are singleton and
prototype. The second argument to the registerScope(..) method is an actual instance
of the custom Scope implementation that you wish to register and use.
Suppose that you write your custom Scope implementation, and then register it as below.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
The example below uses |
Scope threadScope = new SimpleThreadScope(); beanFactory.registerScope("thread", threadScope);
You then create bean definitions that adhere to the scoping rules of your custom Scope:
<bean id="..." class="..." scope="thread">
With a custom Scope implementation, you are not limited to programmatic registration
of the scope. You can also do the Scope registration declaratively, using the
CustomScopeConfigurer class:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:aop="http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop https://www.springframework.org/schema/aop/spring-aop.xsd"> <bean class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.CustomScopeConfigurer"> <property name="scopes"> <map> <entry key="thread"> <bean class="org.springframework.context.support.SimpleThreadScope"/> </entry> </map> </property> </bean> <bean id="bar" class="x.y.Bar" scope="thread"> <property name="name" value="Rick"/> <aop:scoped-proxy/> </bean> <bean id="foo" class="x.y.Foo"> <property name="bar" ref="bar"/> </bean> </beans>
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
When you place |
To interact with the container’s management of the bean lifecycle, you can implement the
Spring InitializingBean and DisposableBean interfaces. The container calls
afterPropertiesSet() for the former and destroy() for the latter to allow the bean
to perform certain actions upon initialization and destruction of your beans.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
The JSR-250 If you don’t want to use the JSR-250 annotations but you are still looking to remove coupling consider the use of init-method and destroy-method object definition metadata. |
Internally, the Spring Framework uses BeanPostProcessor implementations to process any
callback interfaces it can find and call the appropriate methods. If you need custom
features or other lifecycle behavior Spring does not offer out-of-the-box, you can
implement a BeanPostProcessor yourself. For more information, see
Section 7.8, “Container Extension Points”.
In addition to the initialization and destruction callbacks, Spring-managed objects may
also implement the Lifecycle interface so that those objects can participate in the
startup and shutdown process as driven by the container’s own lifecycle.
The lifecycle callback interfaces are described in this section.
The org.springframework.beans.factory.InitializingBean interface allows a bean to
perform initialization work after all necessary properties on the bean have been set by
the container. The InitializingBean interface specifies a single method:
void afterPropertiesSet() throws Exception;
It is recommended that you do not use the InitializingBean interface because it
unnecessarily couples the code to Spring. Alternatively, use
the @PostConstruct annotation or
specify a POJO initialization method. In the case of XML-based configuration metadata,
you use the init-method attribute to specify the name of the method that has a void
no-argument signature. With Java config, you use the initMethod attribute of @Bean,
see the section called “Receiving lifecycle callbacks”. For example, the following:
<bean id="exampleInitBean" class="examples.ExampleBean" init-method="init"/>
public class ExampleBean { public void init() { // do some initialization work } }
…is exactly the same as…
<bean id="exampleInitBean" class="examples.AnotherExampleBean"/>
public class AnotherExampleBean implements InitializingBean { public void afterPropertiesSet() { // do some initialization work } }
but does not couple the code to Spring.
Implementing the org.springframework.beans.factory.DisposableBean interface allows a
bean to get a callback when the container containing it is destroyed. The
DisposableBean interface specifies a single method:
void destroy() throws Exception;
It is recommended that you do not use the DisposableBean callback interface because it
unnecessarily couples the code to Spring. Alternatively, use
the @PreDestroy annotation or
specify a generic method that is supported by bean definitions. With XML-based
configuration metadata, you use the destroy-method attribute on the <bean/>.
With Java config, you use the destroyMethod attribute of @Bean, see
the section called “Receiving lifecycle callbacks”. For example, the following definition:
<bean id="exampleInitBean" class="examples.ExampleBean" destroy-method="cleanup"/>
public class ExampleBean { public void cleanup() { // do some destruction work (like releasing pooled connections) } }
is exactly the same as:
<bean id="exampleInitBean" class="examples.AnotherExampleBean"/>
public class AnotherExampleBean implements DisposableBean { public void destroy() { // do some destruction work (like releasing pooled connections) } }
but does not couple the code to Spring.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
The |
When you write initialization and destroy method callbacks that do not use the
Spring-specific InitializingBean and DisposableBean callback interfaces, you
typically write methods with names such as init(), initialize(), dispose(), and so
on. Ideally, the names of such lifecycle callback methods are standardized across a
project so that all developers use the same method names and ensure consistency.
You can configure the Spring container to look for named initialization and destroy
callback method names on every bean. This means that you, as an application
developer, can write your application classes and use an initialization callback called
init(), without having to configure an init-method="init" attribute with each bean
definition. The Spring IoC container calls that method when the bean is created (and in
accordance with the standard lifecycle callback contract described previously). This
feature also enforces a consistent naming convention for initialization and destroy
method callbacks.
Suppose that your initialization callback methods are named init() and destroy
callback methods are named destroy(). Your class will resemble the class in the
following example.
public class DefaultBlogService implements BlogService { private BlogDao blogDao; public void setBlogDao(BlogDao blogDao) { this.blogDao = blogDao; } // this is (unsurprisingly) the initialization callback method public void init() { if (this.blogDao == null) { throw new IllegalStateException("The [blogDao] property must be set."); } } }
<beans default-init-method="init"> <bean id="blogService" class="com.foo.DefaultBlogService"> <property name="blogDao" ref="blogDao" /> </bean> </beans>
The presence of the default-init-method attribute on the top-level <beans/> element
attribute causes the Spring IoC container to recognize a method called init on beans
as the initialization method callback. When a bean is created and assembled, if the bean
class has such a method, it is invoked at the appropriate time.
You configure destroy method callbacks similarly (in XML, that is) by using the
default-destroy-method attribute on the top-level <beans/> element.
Where existing bean classes already have callback methods that are named at variance
with the convention, you can override the default by specifying (in XML, that is) the
method name using the init-method and destroy-method attributes of the <bean/>
itself.
The Spring container guarantees that a configured initialization callback is called immediately after a bean is supplied with all dependencies. Thus the initialization callback is called on the raw bean reference, which means that AOP interceptors and so forth are not yet applied to the bean. A target bean is fully created first, then an AOP proxy (for example) with its interceptor chain is applied. If the target bean and the proxy are defined separately, your code can even interact with the raw target bean, bypassing the proxy. Hence, it would be inconsistent to apply the interceptors to the init method, because doing so would couple the lifecycle of the target bean with its proxy/interceptors and leave strange semantics when your code interacts directly to the raw target bean.
As of Spring 2.5, you have three options for controlling bean lifecycle behavior: the
InitializingBean and
DisposableBean callback interfaces; custom
init() and destroy() methods; and the
@PostConstruct and @PreDestroy
annotations. You can combine these mechanisms to control a given bean.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
If multiple lifecycle mechanisms are configured for a bean, and each mechanism is
configured with a different method name, then each configured method is executed in the
order listed below. However, if the same method name is configured - for example,
|
Multiple lifecycle mechanisms configured for the same bean, with different initialization methods, are called as follows:
@PostConstruct
afterPropertiesSet() as defined by the InitializingBean callback interface
init() method
Destroy methods are called in the same order:
@PreDestroy
destroy() as defined by the DisposableBean callback interface
destroy() method
The Lifecycle interface defines the essential methods for any object that has its own
lifecycle requirements (e.g. starts and stops some background process):
public interface Lifecycle { void start(); void stop(); boolean isRunning(); }
Any Spring-managed object may implement that interface. Then, when the
ApplicationContext itself receives start and stop signals, e.g. for a stop/restart
scenario at runtime, it will cascade those calls to all Lifecycle implementations
defined within that context. It does this by delegating to a LifecycleProcessor:
public interface LifecycleProcessor extends Lifecycle { void onRefresh(); void onClose(); }
Notice that the LifecycleProcessor is itself an extension of the Lifecycle
interface. It also adds two other methods for reacting to the context being refreshed
and closed.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Note that the regular |
The order of startup and shutdown invocations can be important. If a "depends-on"
relationship exists between any two objects, the dependent side will start after its
dependency, and it will stop before its dependency. However, at times the direct
dependencies are unknown. You may only know that objects of a certain type should start
prior to objects of another type. In those cases, the SmartLifecycle interface defines
another option, namely the getPhase() method as defined on its super-interface,
Phased.
public interface Phased { int getPhase(); }
public interface SmartLifecycle extends Lifecycle, Phased { boolean isAutoStartup(); void stop(Runnable callback); }
When starting, the objects with the lowest phase start first, and when stopping, the
reverse order is followed. Therefore, an object that implements SmartLifecycle and
whose getPhase() method returns Integer.MIN_VALUE would be among the first to start
and the last to stop. At the other end of the spectrum, a phase value of
Integer.MAX_VALUE would indicate that the object should be started last and stopped
first (likely because it depends on other processes to be running). When considering the
phase value, it’s also important to know that the default phase for any "normal"
Lifecycle object that does not implement SmartLifecycle would be 0. Therefore, any
negative phase value would indicate that an object should start before those standard
components (and stop after them), and vice versa for any positive phase value.
As you can see the stop method defined by SmartLifecycle accepts a callback. Any
implementation must invoke that callback’s run() method after that implementation’s
shutdown process is complete. That enables asynchronous shutdown where necessary since
the default implementation of the LifecycleProcessor interface,
DefaultLifecycleProcessor, will wait up to its timeout value for the group of objects
within each phase to invoke that callback. The default per-phase timeout is 30 seconds.
You can override the default lifecycle processor instance by defining a bean named
"lifecycleProcessor" within the context. If you only want to modify the timeout, then
defining the following would be sufficient:
<bean id="lifecycleProcessor" class="org.springframework.context.support.DefaultLifecycleProcessor"> <!-- timeout value in milliseconds --> <property name="timeoutPerShutdownPhase" value="10000"/> </bean>
As mentioned, the LifecycleProcessor interface defines callback methods for the
refreshing and closing of the context as well. The latter will simply drive the shutdown
process as if stop() had been called explicitly, but it will happen when the context is
closing. The 'refresh' callback on the other hand enables another feature of
SmartLifecycle beans. When the context is refreshed (after all objects have been
instantiated and initialized), that callback will be invoked, and at that point the
default lifecycle processor will check the boolean value returned by each
SmartLifecycle object’s isAutoStartup() method. If "true", then that object will be
started at that point rather than waiting for an explicit invocation of the context’s or
its own start() method (unlike the context refresh, the context start does not happen
automatically for a standard context implementation). The "phase" value as well as any
"depends-on" relationships will determine the startup order in the same way as described
above.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
This section applies only to non-web applications. Spring’s web-based
|
If you are using Spring’s IoC container in a non-web application environment; for example, in a rich client desktop environment; you register a shutdown hook with the JVM. Doing so ensures a graceful shutdown and calls the relevant destroy methods on your singleton beans so that all resources are released. Of course, you must still configure and implement these destroy callbacks correctly.
To register a shutdown hook, you call the registerShutdownHook() method that is
declared on the ConfigurableApplicationContext interface:
import org.springframework.context.ConfigurableApplicationContext; import org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext; public final class Boot { public static void main(final String[] args) throws Exception { ConfigurableApplicationContext ctx = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("beans.xml"); // add a shutdown hook for the above context... ctx.registerShutdownHook(); // app runs here... // main method exits, hook is called prior to the app shutting down... } }
When an ApplicationContext creates an object instance that implements the
org.springframework.context.ApplicationContextAware interface, the instance is provided
with a reference to that ApplicationContext.
public interface ApplicationContextAware { void setApplicationContext(ApplicationContext applicationContext) throws BeansException; }
Thus beans can manipulate programmatically the ApplicationContext that created them,
through the ApplicationContext interface, or by casting the reference to a known
subclass of this interface, such as ConfigurableApplicationContext, which exposes
additional functionality. One use would be the programmatic retrieval of other beans.
Sometimes this capability is useful; however, in general you should avoid it, because it
couples the code to Spring and does not follow the Inversion of Control style, where
collaborators are provided to beans as properties. Other methods of the
ApplicationContext provide access to file resources, publishing application events, and
accessing a MessageSource. These additional features are described in
Section 7.15, “Additional capabilities of the ApplicationContext”
As of Spring 2.5, autowiring is another alternative to obtain reference to the
ApplicationContext. The "traditional" constructor and byType autowiring modes (as
described in Section 7.4.5, “Autowiring collaborators”) can provide a dependency of type
ApplicationContext for a constructor argument or setter method parameter,
respectively. For more flexibility, including the ability to autowire fields and
multiple parameter methods, use the new annotation-based autowiring features. If you do,
the ApplicationContext is autowired into a field, constructor argument, or method
parameter that is expecting the ApplicationContext type if the field, constructor, or
method in question carries the @Autowired annotation. For more information, see
Section 7.9.2, “@Autowired”.
When an ApplicationContext creates a class that implements the
org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanNameAware interface, the class is provided with
a reference to the name defined in its associated object definition.
public interface BeanNameAware { void setBeanName(String name) throws BeansException; }
The callback is invoked after population of normal bean properties but before an
initialization callback such as InitializingBean afterPropertiesSet or a custom
init-method.
Besides ApplicationContextAware and BeanNameAware discussed above, Spring offers
a range of Aware callback interfaces that allow beans to indicate to the container
that they require a certain infrastructure dependency. The most important Aware
interfaces are summarized below - as a general rule, the name is a good indication of
the dependency type:
Table 7.4. Aware interfaces
| Name | Injected Dependency | Explained in… |
|---|---|---|
| Declaring | |
| Event publisher of the enclosing | Section 7.15, “Additional capabilities of the ApplicationContext” |
| Class loader used to load the bean classes. | |
| Declaring | |
| Name of the declaring bean | |
| Resource adapter | |
| Defined weaver for processing class definition at load time | Section 11.8.4, “Load-time weaving with AspectJ in the Spring Framework” |
| Configured strategy for resolving messages (with support for parametrization and internationalization) | Section 7.15, “Additional capabilities of the ApplicationContext” |
| Spring JMX notification publisher | |
| Current | |
| Current | |
| Configured loader for low-level access to resources | |
| Current | |
| Current |
Note again that usage of these interfaces ties your code to the Spring API and does not follow the Inversion of Control style. As such, they are recommended for infrastructure beans that require programmatic access to the container.
A bean definition can contain a lot of configuration information, including constructor arguments, property values, and container-specific information such as initialization method, static factory method name, and so on. A child bean definition inherits configuration data from a parent definition. The child definition can override some values, or add others, as needed. Using parent and child bean definitions can save a lot of typing. Effectively, this is a form of templating.
If you work with an ApplicationContext interface programmatically, child bean
definitions are represented by the ChildBeanDefinition class. Most users do not work
with them on this level, instead configuring bean definitions declaratively in something
like the ClassPathXmlApplicationContext. When you use XML-based configuration
metadata, you indicate a child bean definition by using the parent attribute,
specifying the parent bean as the value of this attribute.
<bean id="inheritedTestBean" abstract="true" class="org.springframework.beans.TestBean"> <property name="name" value="parent"/> <property name="age" value="1"/> </bean> <bean id="inheritsWithDifferentClass" class="org.springframework.beans.DerivedTestBean" parent="inheritedTestBean" init-method="initialize"> <property name="name" value="override"/> <!-- the age property value of 1 will be inherited from parent --> </bean>
A child bean definition uses the bean class from the parent definition if none is specified, but can also override it. In the latter case, the child bean class must be compatible with the parent, that is, it must accept the parent’s property values.
A child bean definition inherits scope, constructor argument values, property values, and
method overrides from the parent, with the option to add new values. Any scope, initialization
method, destroy method, and/or static factory method settings that you specify will
override the corresponding parent settings.
The remaining settings are always taken from the child definition: depends on, autowire mode, dependency check, singleton, lazy init.
The preceding example explicitly marks the parent bean definition as abstract by using
the abstract attribute. If the parent definition does not specify a class, explicitly
marking the parent bean definition as abstract is required, as follows:
<bean id="inheritedTestBeanWithoutClass" abstract="true"> <property name="name" value="parent"/> <property name="age" value="1"/> </bean> <bean id="inheritsWithClass" class="org.springframework.beans.DerivedTestBean" parent="inheritedTestBeanWithoutClass" init-method="initialize"> <property name="name" value="override"/> <!-- age will inherit the value of 1 from the parent bean definition--> </bean>
The parent bean cannot be instantiated on its own because it is incomplete, and it is
also explicitly marked as abstract. When a definition is abstract like this, it is
usable only as a pure template bean definition that serves as a parent definition for
child definitions. Trying to use such an abstract parent bean on its own, by referring
to it as a ref property of another bean or doing an explicit getBean() call with the
parent bean id, returns an error. Similarly, the container’s internal
preInstantiateSingletons() method ignores bean definitions that are defined as
abstract.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
|
Typically, an application developer does not need to subclass ApplicationContext
implementation classes. Instead, the Spring IoC container can be extended by plugging in
implementations of special integration interfaces. The next few sections describe these
integration interfaces.
The BeanPostProcessor interface defines callback methods that you can implement to
provide your own (or override the container’s default) instantiation logic,
dependency-resolution logic, and so forth. If you want to implement some custom logic
after the Spring container finishes instantiating, configuring, and initializing a bean,
you can plug in one or more custom BeanPostProcessor implementations.
You can configure multiple BeanPostProcessor instances, and you can control the order
in which these BeanPostProcessors execute by setting the order property. You can
set this property only if the BeanPostProcessor implements the Ordered interface; if
you write your own BeanPostProcessor you should consider implementing the Ordered
interface too. For further details, consult the javadocs of the BeanPostProcessor and
Ordered interfaces. See also the note below on
programmatic
registration of BeanPostProcessors.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
To change the actual bean definition (i.e., the blueprint that defines the bean),
you instead need to use a |
The org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor interface consists of
exactly two callback methods. When such a class is registered as a post-processor with
the container, for each bean instance that is created by the container, the
post-processor gets a callback from the container both before container
initialization methods (such as InitializingBean’s afterPropertiesSet() or any
declared init method) are called as well as after any bean initialization callbacks.
The post-processor can take any action with the bean instance, including ignoring the
callback completely. A bean post-processor typically checks for callback interfaces or
may wrap a bean with a proxy. Some Spring AOP infrastructure classes are implemented as
bean post-processors in order to provide proxy-wrapping logic.
An ApplicationContext automatically detects any beans that are defined in the
configuration metadata which implement the BeanPostProcessor interface. The
ApplicationContext registers these beans as post-processors so that they can be called
later upon bean creation. Bean post-processors can be deployed in the container just
like any other beans.
Note that when declaring a BeanPostProcessor using an @Bean factory method on a
configuration class, the return type of the factory method should be the implementation
class itself or at least the org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor
interface, clearly indicating the post-processor nature of that bean. Otherwise, the
ApplicationContext won’t be able to autodetect it by type before fully creating it.
Since a BeanPostProcessor needs to be instantiated early in order to apply to the
initialization of other beans in the context, this early type detection is critical.
![]() | BeanPostProcessors and AOP auto-proxying |
|---|---|
|
Classes that implement the For any such bean, you should see an informational log message: "Bean foo is not eligible for getting processed by all BeanPostProcessor interfaces (for example: not eligible for auto-proxying)". Note that if you have beans wired into your |
The following examples show how to write, register, and use BeanPostProcessors in an
ApplicationContext.
This first example illustrates basic usage. The example shows a custom
BeanPostProcessor implementation that invokes the toString() method of each bean as
it is created by the container and prints the resulting string to the system console.
Find below the custom BeanPostProcessor implementation class definition:
package scripting; import org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor; public class InstantiationTracingBeanPostProcessor implements BeanPostProcessor { // simply return the instantiated bean as-is public Object postProcessBeforeInitialization(Object bean, String beanName) { return bean; // we could potentially return any object reference here... } public Object postProcessAfterInitialization(Object bean, String beanName) { System.out.println("Bean '" + beanName + "' created : " + bean.toString()); return bean; } }
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:lang="http://www.springframework.org/schema/lang" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/lang https://www.springframework.org/schema/lang/spring-lang.xsd"> <lang:groovy id="messenger" script-source="classpath:org/springframework/scripting/groovy/Messenger.groovy"> <lang:property name="message" value="Fiona Apple Is Just So Dreamy."/> </lang:groovy> <!-- when the above bean (messenger) is instantiated, this custom BeanPostProcessor implementation will output the fact to the system console --> <bean class="scripting.InstantiationTracingBeanPostProcessor"/> </beans>
Notice how the InstantiationTracingBeanPostProcessor is simply defined. It does not
even have a name, and because it is a bean it can be dependency-injected just like any
other bean. (The preceding configuration also defines a bean that is backed by a Groovy
script. The Spring dynamic language support is detailed in the chapter entitled
Chapter 35, Dynamic language support.)
The following simple Java application executes the preceding code and configuration:
import org.springframework.context.ApplicationContext; import org.springframework.context.support.ClassPathXmlApplicationContext; import org.springframework.scripting.Messenger; public final class Boot { public static void main(final String[] args) throws Exception { ApplicationContext ctx = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("scripting/beans.xml"); Messenger messenger = (Messenger) ctx.getBean("messenger"); System.out.println(messenger); } }
The output of the preceding application resembles the following:
Bean 'messenger' created : org.springframework.scripting.groovy.GroovyMessenger@272961 org.springframework.scripting.groovy.GroovyMessenger@272961
Using callback interfaces or annotations in conjunction with a custom
BeanPostProcessor implementation is a common means of extending the Spring IoC
container. An example is Spring’s RequiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor - a
BeanPostProcessor implementation that ships with the Spring distribution which ensures
that JavaBean properties on beans that are marked with an (arbitrary) annotation are
actually (configured to be) dependency-injected with a value.
The next extension point that we will look at is the
org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanFactoryPostProcessor. The semantics of
this interface are similar to those of the BeanPostProcessor, with one major
difference: BeanFactoryPostProcessor operates on the bean configuration metadata;
that is, the Spring IoC container allows a BeanFactoryPostProcessor to read the
configuration metadata and potentially change it before the container instantiates
any beans other than BeanFactoryPostProcessors.
You can configure multiple BeanFactoryPostProcessors, and you can control the order in
which these BeanFactoryPostProcessors execute by setting the order property.
However, you can only set this property if the BeanFactoryPostProcessor implements the
Ordered interface. If you write your own BeanFactoryPostProcessor, you should
consider implementing the Ordered interface too. Consult the javadocs of the
BeanFactoryPostProcessor and Ordered interfaces for more details.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
If you want to change the actual bean instances (i.e., the objects that are created
from the configuration metadata), then you instead need to use a Also, |
A bean factory post-processor is executed automatically when it is declared inside an
ApplicationContext, in order to apply changes to the configuration metadata that
define the container. Spring includes a number of predefined bean factory
post-processors, such as PropertyOverrideConfigurer and
PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer. A custom BeanFactoryPostProcessor can also be used,
for example, to register custom property editors.
An ApplicationContext automatically detects any beans that are deployed into it that
implement the BeanFactoryPostProcessor interface. It uses these beans as bean factory
post-processors, at the appropriate time. You can deploy these post-processor beans as
you would any other bean.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
As with |
You use the PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer to externalize property values from a bean
definition in a separate file using the standard Java Properties format. Doing so
enables the person deploying an application to customize environment-specific properties
such as database URLs and passwords, without the complexity or risk of modifying the
main XML definition file or files for the container.
Consider the following XML-based configuration metadata fragment, where a DataSource
with placeholder values is defined. The example shows properties configured from an
external Properties file. At runtime, a PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer is applied to
the metadata that will replace some properties of the DataSource. The values to replace
are specified as placeholders of the form ${property-name} which follows the Ant /
log4j / JSP EL style.
<bean class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer"> <property name="locations" value="classpath:com/foo/jdbc.properties"/> </bean> <bean id="dataSource" destroy-method="close" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource"> <property name="driverClassName" value="${jdbc.driverClassName}"/> <property name="url" value="${jdbc.url}"/> <property name="username" value="${jdbc.username}"/> <property name="password" value="${jdbc.password}"/> </bean>
The actual values come from another file in the standard Java Properties format:
jdbc.driverClassName=org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver jdbc.url=jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://production:9002 jdbc.username=sa jdbc.password=root
Therefore, the string ${jdbc.username} is replaced at runtime with the value 'sa', and
the same applies for other placeholder values that match keys in the properties file.
The PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer checks for placeholders in most properties and
attributes of a bean definition. Furthermore, the placeholder prefix and suffix can be
customized.
With the context namespace introduced in Spring 2.5, it is possible to configure
property placeholders with a dedicated configuration element. One or more locations can
be provided as a comma-separated list in the location attribute.
<context:property-placeholder location="classpath:com/foo/jdbc.properties"/>
The PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer not only looks for properties in the Properties
file you specify. By default it also checks against the Java System properties if it
cannot find a property in the specified properties files. You can customize this
behavior by setting the systemPropertiesMode property of the configurer with one of
the following three supported integer values:
Consult the PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer javadocs for more information.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
You can use the <bean class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer"> <property name="locations"> <value>classpath:com/foo/strategy.properties</value> </property> <property name="properties"> <value>custom.strategy.class=com.foo.DefaultStrategy</value> </property> </bean> <bean id="serviceStrategy" class="${custom.strategy.class}"/> If the class cannot be resolved at runtime to a valid class, resolution of the bean
fails when it is about to be created, which is during the |
The PropertyOverrideConfigurer, another bean factory post-processor, resembles the
PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer, but unlike the latter, the original definitions can
have default values or no values at all for bean properties. If an overriding
Properties file does not have an entry for a certain bean property, the default
context definition is used.
Note that the bean definition is not aware of being overridden, so it is not
immediately obvious from the XML definition file that the override configurer is being
used. In case of multiple PropertyOverrideConfigurer instances that define different
values for the same bean property, the last one wins, due to the overriding mechanism.
Properties file configuration lines take this format:
beanName.property=value
For example:
dataSource.driverClassName=com.mysql.jdbc.Driver dataSource.url=jdbc:mysql:mydb
This example file can be used with a container definition that contains a bean called dataSource, which has driver and url properties.
Compound property names are also supported, as long as every component of the path except the final property being overridden is already non-null (presumably initialized by the constructors). In this example…
foo.fred.bob.sammy=123
sammy property of the bob property of the fred property of the foo bean
is set to the scalar value 123.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Specified override values are always literal values; they are not translated into bean references. This convention also applies when the original value in the XML bean definition specifies a bean reference. |
With the context namespace introduced in Spring 2.5, it is possible to configure
property overriding with a dedicated configuration element:
<context:property-override location="classpath:override.properties"/>
Implement the org.springframework.beans.factory.FactoryBean interface for objects that
are themselves factories.
The FactoryBean interface is a point of pluggability into the Spring IoC container’s
instantiation logic. If you have complex initialization code that is better expressed in
Java as opposed to a (potentially) verbose amount of XML, you can create your own
FactoryBean, write the complex initialization inside that class, and then plug your
custom FactoryBean into the container.
The FactoryBean interface provides three methods:
Object getObject(): returns an instance of the object this factory creates. The
instance can possibly be shared, depending on whether this factory returns singletons
or prototypes.
boolean isSingleton(): returns true if this FactoryBean returns singletons,
false otherwise.
Class getObjectType(): returns the object type returned by the getObject() method
or null if the type is not known in advance.
The FactoryBean concept and interface is used in a number of places within the Spring
Framework; more than 50 implementations of the FactoryBean interface ship with Spring
itself.
When you need to ask a container for an actual FactoryBean instance itself instead of
the bean it produces, preface the bean’s id with the ampersand symbol ( &) when
calling the getBean() method of the ApplicationContext. So for a given FactoryBean
with an id of myBean, invoking getBean("myBean") on the container returns the
product of the FactoryBean; whereas, invoking getBean("&myBean") returns the
FactoryBean instance itself.
An alternative to XML setups is provided by annotation-based configuration which rely on
the bytecode metadata for wiring up components instead of angle-bracket declarations.
Instead of using XML to describe a bean wiring, the developer moves the configuration
into the component class itself by using annotations on the relevant class, method, or
field declaration. As mentioned in the section called “Example: The RequiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor”, using
a BeanPostProcessor in conjunction with annotations is a common means of extending the
Spring IoC container. For example, Spring 2.0 introduced the possibility of enforcing
required properties with the @Required annotation. Spring
2.5 made it possible to follow that same general approach to drive Spring’s dependency
injection. Essentially, the @Autowired annotation provides the same capabilities as
described in Section 7.4.5, “Autowiring collaborators” but with more fine-grained control and wider
applicability. Spring 2.5 also added support for JSR-250 annotations such as
@PostConstruct, and @PreDestroy. Spring 3.0 added support for JSR-330 (Dependency
Injection for Java) annotations contained in the javax.inject package such as @Inject
and @Named. Details about those annotations can be found in the
relevant section.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Annotation injection is performed before XML injection, thus the latter configuration will override the former for properties wired through both approaches. |
As always, you can register them as individual bean definitions, but they can also be
implicitly registered by including the following tag in an XML-based Spring
configuration (notice the inclusion of the context namespace):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:annotation-config/> </beans>
(The implicitly registered post-processors include
AutowiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor,
CommonAnnotationBeanPostProcessor,
PersistenceAnnotationBeanPostProcessor,
as well as the aforementioned
RequiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor.)
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
|
The @Required annotation applies to bean property setter methods, as in the following
example:
public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Required public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
This annotation simply indicates that the affected bean property must be populated at
configuration time, through an explicit property value in a bean definition or through
autowiring. The container throws an exception if the affected bean property has not been
populated; this allows for eager and explicit failure, avoiding NullPointerExceptions
or the like later on. It is still recommended that you put assertions into the bean
class itself, for example, into an init method. Doing so enforces those required
references and values even when you use the class outside of a container.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
JSR 330’s |
You can apply the @Autowired annotation to constructors:
public class MovieRecommender { private final CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao; @Autowired public MovieRecommender(CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao) { this.customerPreferenceDao = customerPreferenceDao; } // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
As of Spring Framework 4.3, an |
As expected, you can also apply the @Autowired annotation to "traditional" setter
methods:
public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Autowired public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
You can also apply the annotation to methods with arbitrary names and/or multiple arguments:
public class MovieRecommender { private MovieCatalog movieCatalog; private CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao; @Autowired public void prepare(MovieCatalog movieCatalog, CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao) { this.movieCatalog = movieCatalog; this.customerPreferenceDao = customerPreferenceDao; } // ... }
You can apply @Autowired to fields as well and even mix it with constructors:
public class MovieRecommender { private final CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao; @Autowired private MovieCatalog movieCatalog; @Autowired public MovieRecommender(CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao) { this.customerPreferenceDao = customerPreferenceDao; } // ... }
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Make sure that your target components (e.g. For XML-defined beans or component classes found through a classpath scan, the container
usually knows the concrete type upfront. However, for |
It is also possible to provide all beans of a particular type from the
ApplicationContext by adding the annotation to a field or method that expects an array
of that type:
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired private MovieCatalog[] movieCatalogs; // ... }
The same applies for typed collections:
public class MovieRecommender { private Set<MovieCatalog> movieCatalogs; @Autowired public void setMovieCatalogs(Set<MovieCatalog> movieCatalogs) { this.movieCatalogs = movieCatalogs; } // ... }
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Your target beans can implement the The Note that the standard |
Even typed Maps can be autowired as long as the expected key type is String. The Map
values will contain all beans of the expected type, and the keys will contain the
corresponding bean names:
public class MovieRecommender { private Map<String, MovieCatalog> movieCatalogs; @Autowired public void setMovieCatalogs(Map<String, MovieCatalog> movieCatalogs) { this.movieCatalogs = movieCatalogs; } // ... }
By default, the autowiring fails whenever zero candidate beans are available; the default behavior is to treat annotated methods, constructors, and fields as indicating required dependencies. This behavior can be changed as demonstrated below.
public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Autowired(required = false) public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Only one annotated constructor per-class can be marked as required, but multiple non-required constructors can be annotated. In that case, each is considered among the candidates and Spring uses the greediest constructor whose dependencies can be satisfied, that is the constructor that has the largest number of arguments. The required attribute of |
Alternatively, you may express the non-required nature of a particular dependency
through Java 8’s java.util.Optional:
public class SimpleMovieLister { @Autowired public void setMovieFinder(Optional<MovieFinder> movieFinder) { ... } }
You can also use @Autowired for interfaces that are well-known resolvable
dependencies: BeanFactory, ApplicationContext, Environment, ResourceLoader,
ApplicationEventPublisher, and MessageSource. These interfaces and their extended
interfaces, such as ConfigurableApplicationContext or ResourcePatternResolver, are
automatically resolved, with no special setup necessary.
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired private ApplicationContext context; public MovieRecommender() { } // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
|
Because autowiring by type may lead to multiple candidates, it is often necessary to have
more control over the selection process. One way to accomplish this is with Spring’s
@Primary annotation. @Primary indicates that a particular bean should be given
preference when multiple beans are candidates to be autowired to a single-valued
dependency. If exactly one 'primary' bean exists among the candidates, it will be the
autowired value.
Let’s assume we have the following configuration that defines firstMovieCatalog as the
primary MovieCatalog.
@Configuration public class MovieConfiguration { @Bean @Primary public MovieCatalog firstMovieCatalog() { ... } @Bean public MovieCatalog secondMovieCatalog() { ... } // ... }
With such configuration, the following MovieRecommender will be autowired with the
firstMovieCatalog.
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired private MovieCatalog movieCatalog; // ... }
The corresponding bean definitions appear as follows.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:annotation-config/> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog" primary="true"> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean id="movieRecommender" class="example.MovieRecommender"/> </beans>
@Primary is an effective way to use autowiring by type with several instances when one
primary candidate can be determined. When more control over the selection process is
required, Spring’s @Qualifier annotation can be used. You can associate qualifier values
with specific arguments, narrowing the set of type matches so that a specific bean is
chosen for each argument. In the simplest case, this can be a plain descriptive value:
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired @Qualifier("main") private MovieCatalog movieCatalog; // ... }
The @Qualifier annotation can also be specified on individual constructor arguments or
method parameters:
public class MovieRecommender { private MovieCatalog movieCatalog; private CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao; @Autowired public void prepare(@Qualifier("main")MovieCatalog movieCatalog, CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao) { this.movieCatalog = movieCatalog; this.customerPreferenceDao = customerPreferenceDao; } // ... }
The corresponding bean definitions appear as follows. The bean with qualifier value "main" is wired with the constructor argument that is qualified with the same value.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:annotation-config/> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier value="main"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier value="action"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean id="movieRecommender" class="example.MovieRecommender"/> </beans>
For a fallback match, the bean name is considered a default qualifier value. Thus you
can define the bean with an id "main" instead of the nested qualifier element, leading
to the same matching result. However, although you can use this convention to refer to
specific beans by name, @Autowired is fundamentally about type-driven injection with
optional semantic qualifiers. This means that qualifier values, even with the bean name
fallback, always have narrowing semantics within the set of type matches; they do not
semantically express a reference to a unique bean id. Good qualifier values are "main"
or "EMEA" or "persistent", expressing characteristics of a specific component that are
independent from the bean id, which may be auto-generated in case of an anonymous bean
definition like the one in the preceding example.
Qualifiers also apply to typed collections, as discussed above, for example, to
Set<MovieCatalog>. In this case, all matching beans according to the declared
qualifiers are injected as a collection. This implies that qualifiers do not have to be
unique; they rather simply constitute filtering criteria. For example, you can define
multiple MovieCatalog beans with the same qualifier value "action", all of which would
be injected into a Set<MovieCatalog> annotated with @Qualifier("action").
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Letting qualifier values select against target bean names, within the type-matching
candidates, doesn’t even require a That said, if you intend to express annotation-driven injection by name, do not
primarily use For beans that are themselves defined as a collection/map or array type, As of 4.3,
|
You can create your own custom qualifier annotations. Simply define an annotation and
provide the @Qualifier annotation within your definition:
@Target({ElementType.FIELD, ElementType.PARAMETER}) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Qualifier public @interface Genre { String value(); }
Then you can provide the custom qualifier on autowired fields and parameters:
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired @Genre("Action") private MovieCatalog actionCatalog; private MovieCatalog comedyCatalog; @Autowired public void setComedyCatalog(@Genre("Comedy") MovieCatalog comedyCatalog) { this.comedyCatalog = comedyCatalog; } // ... }
Next, provide the information for the candidate bean definitions. You can add
<qualifier/> tags as sub-elements of the <bean/> tag and then specify the type and
value to match your custom qualifier annotations. The type is matched against the
fully-qualified class name of the annotation. Or, as a convenience if no risk of
conflicting names exists, you can use the short class name. Both approaches are
demonstrated in the following example.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:annotation-config/> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier type="Genre" value="Action"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier type="example.Genre" value="Comedy"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean id="movieRecommender" class="example.MovieRecommender"/> </beans>
In Section 7.10, “Classpath scanning and managed components”, you will see an annotation-based alternative to providing the qualifier metadata in XML. Specifically, see Section 7.10.8, “Providing qualifier metadata with annotations”.
In some cases, it may be sufficient to use an annotation without a value. This may be useful when the annotation serves a more generic purpose and can be applied across several different types of dependencies. For example, you may provide an offline catalog that would be searched when no Internet connection is available. First define the simple annotation:
@Target({ElementType.FIELD, ElementType.PARAMETER}) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Qualifier public @interface Offline { }
Then add the annotation to the field or property to be autowired:
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired @Offline private MovieCatalog offlineCatalog; // ... }
Now the bean definition only needs a qualifier type:
<bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier type="Offline"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean>
You can also define custom qualifier annotations that accept named attributes in
addition to or instead of the simple value attribute. If multiple attribute values are
then specified on a field or parameter to be autowired, a bean definition must match
all such attribute values to be considered an autowire candidate. As an example,
consider the following annotation definition:
@Target({ElementType.FIELD, ElementType.PARAMETER}) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Qualifier public @interface MovieQualifier { String genre(); Format format(); }
In this case Format is an enum:
public enum Format {
VHS, DVD, BLURAY
}
The fields to be autowired are annotated with the custom qualifier and include values
for both attributes: genre and format.
public class MovieRecommender { @Autowired @MovieQualifier(format=Format.VHS, genre="Action") private MovieCatalog actionVhsCatalog; @Autowired @MovieQualifier(format=Format.VHS, genre="Comedy") private MovieCatalog comedyVhsCatalog; @Autowired @MovieQualifier(format=Format.DVD, genre="Action") private MovieCatalog actionDvdCatalog; @Autowired @MovieQualifier(format=Format.BLURAY, genre="Comedy") private MovieCatalog comedyBluRayCatalog; // ... }
Finally, the bean definitions should contain matching qualifier values. This example
also demonstrates that bean meta attributes may be used instead of the
<qualifier/> sub-elements. If available, the <qualifier/> and its attributes take
precedence, but the autowiring mechanism falls back on the values provided within the
<meta/> tags if no such qualifier is present, as in the last two bean definitions in
the following example.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:annotation-config/> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier type="MovieQualifier"> <attribute key="format" value="VHS"/> <attribute key="genre" value="Action"/> </qualifier> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <qualifier type="MovieQualifier"> <attribute key="format" value="VHS"/> <attribute key="genre" value="Comedy"/> </qualifier> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <meta key="format" value="DVD"/> <meta key="genre" value="Action"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> <bean class="example.SimpleMovieCatalog"> <meta key="format" value="BLURAY"/> <meta key="genre" value="Comedy"/> <!-- inject any dependencies required by this bean --> </bean> </beans>
In addition to the @Qualifier annotation, it is also possible to use Java generic types
as an implicit form of qualification. For example, suppose you have the following
configuration:
@Configuration public class MyConfiguration { @Bean public StringStore stringStore() { return new StringStore(); } @Bean public IntegerStore integerStore() { return new IntegerStore(); } }
Assuming that beans above implement a generic interface, i.e. Store<String> and
Store<Integer>, you can @Autowire the Store interface and the generic will
be used as a qualifier:
@Autowired private Store<String> s1; // <String> qualifier, injects the stringStore bean @Autowired private Store<Integer> s2; // <Integer> qualifier, injects the integerStore bean
Generic qualifiers also apply when autowiring Lists, Maps and Arrays:
// Inject all Store beans as long as they have an <Integer> generic // Store<String> beans will not appear in this list @Autowired private List<Store<Integer>> s;
The
CustomAutowireConfigurer
is a BeanFactoryPostProcessor that enables you to register your own custom qualifier
annotation types even if they are not annotated with Spring’s @Qualifier annotation.
<bean id="customAutowireConfigurer" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.CustomAutowireConfigurer"> <property name="customQualifierTypes"> <set> <value>example.CustomQualifier</value> </set> </property> </bean>
The AutowireCandidateResolver determines autowire candidates by:
autowire-candidate value of each bean definition
default-autowire-candidates pattern(s) available on the <beans/> element
@Qualifier annotations and any custom annotations registered
with the CustomAutowireConfigurer
When multiple beans qualify as autowire candidates, the determination of a "primary" is
the following: if exactly one bean definition among the candidates has a primary
attribute set to true, it will be selected.
Spring also supports injection using the JSR-250 @Resource annotation on fields or
bean property setter methods. This is a common pattern in Java EE 5 and 6, for example
in JSF 1.2 managed beans or JAX-WS 2.0 endpoints. Spring supports this pattern for
Spring-managed objects as well.
@Resource takes a name attribute, and by default Spring interprets that value as the
bean name to be injected. In other words, it follows by-name semantics, as
demonstrated in this example:
public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Resource(name="myMovieFinder") public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } }
If no name is specified explicitly, the default name is derived from the field name or setter method. In case of a field, it takes the field name; in case of a setter method, it takes the bean property name. So the following example is going to have the bean with name "movieFinder" injected into its setter method:
public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Resource public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
The name provided with the annotation is resolved as a bean name by the
|
In the exclusive case of @Resource usage with no explicit name specified, and similar
to @Autowired, @Resource finds a primary type match instead of a specific named bean
and resolves well-known resolvable dependencies: the BeanFactory,
ApplicationContext, ResourceLoader, ApplicationEventPublisher, and MessageSource
interfaces.
Thus in the following example, the customerPreferenceDao field first looks for a bean
named customerPreferenceDao, then falls back to a primary type match for the type
CustomerPreferenceDao. The "context" field is injected based on the known resolvable
dependency type ApplicationContext.
public class MovieRecommender { @Resource private CustomerPreferenceDao customerPreferenceDao; @Resource private ApplicationContext context; public MovieRecommender() { } // ... }
The CommonAnnotationBeanPostProcessor not only recognizes the @Resource annotation
but also the JSR-250 lifecycle annotations. Introduced in Spring 2.5, the support
for these annotations offers yet another alternative to those described in
initialization callbacks and
destruction callbacks. Provided that the
CommonAnnotationBeanPostProcessor is registered within the Spring
ApplicationContext, a method carrying one of these annotations is invoked at the same
point in the lifecycle as the corresponding Spring lifecycle interface method or
explicitly declared callback method. In the example below, the cache will be
pre-populated upon initialization and cleared upon destruction.
public class CachingMovieLister { @PostConstruct public void populateMovieCache() { // populates the movie cache upon initialization... } @PreDestroy public void clearMovieCache() { // clears the movie cache upon destruction... } }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
For details about the effects of combining various lifecycle mechanisms, see the section called “Combining lifecycle mechanisms”. |
Most examples in this chapter use XML to specify the configuration metadata that produces
each BeanDefinition within the Spring container. The previous section
(Section 7.9, “Annotation-based container configuration”) demonstrates how to provide a lot of the configuration
metadata through source-level annotations. Even in those examples, however, the "base"
bean definitions are explicitly defined in the XML file, while the annotations only drive
the dependency injection. This section describes an option for implicitly detecting the
candidate components by scanning the classpath. Candidate components are classes that
match against a filter criteria and have a corresponding bean definition registered with
the container. This removes the need to use XML to perform bean registration; instead you
can use annotations (for example @Component), AspectJ type expressions, or your own
custom filter criteria to select which classes will have bean definitions registered with
the container.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Starting with Spring 3.0, many features provided by the Spring JavaConfig project are
part of the core Spring Framework. This allows you to define beans using Java rather
than using the traditional XML files. Take a look at the |
The @Repository annotation is a marker for any class that fulfills the role or
stereotype of a repository (also known as Data Access Object or DAO). Among the uses
of this marker is the automatic translation of exceptions as described in
Section 20.2.2, “Exception translation”.
Spring provides further stereotype annotations: @Component, @Service, and
@Controller. @Component is a generic stereotype for any Spring-managed component.
@Repository, @Service, and @Controller are specializations of @Component for
more specific use cases, for example, in the persistence, service, and presentation
layers, respectively. Therefore, you can annotate your component classes with
@Component, but by annotating them with @Repository, @Service, or @Controller
instead, your classes are more properly suited for processing by tools or associating
with aspects. For example, these stereotype annotations make ideal targets for
pointcuts. It is also possible that @Repository, @Service, and @Controller may
carry additional semantics in future releases of the Spring Framework. Thus, if you are
choosing between using @Component or @Service for your service layer, @Service is
clearly the better choice. Similarly, as stated above, @Repository is already
supported as a marker for automatic exception translation in your persistence layer.
Many of the annotations provided by Spring can be used as meta-annotations in your
own code. A meta-annotation is simply an annotation that can be applied to another
annotation. For example, the @Service annotation mentioned above is meta-annotated with
@Component:
@Target(ElementType.TYPE) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Documented @Component // Spring will see this and treat @Service in the same way as @Component public @interface Service { // .... }
Meta-annotations can also be combined to create composed annotations. For example,
the @RestController annotation from Spring MVC is composed of @Controller and
@ResponseBody.
In addition, composed annotations may optionally redeclare attributes from
meta-annotations to allow user customization. This can be particularly useful when you
want to only expose a subset of the meta-annotation’s attributes. For example, Spring’s
@SessionScope annotation hardcodes the scope name to session but still allows
customization of the proxyMode.
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD}) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Documented @Scope(WebApplicationContext.SCOPE_SESSION) public @interface SessionScope { /** * Alias for {@link Scope#proxyMode}. * <p>Defaults to {@link ScopedProxyMode#TARGET_CLASS}. */ @AliasFor(annotation = Scope.class) ScopedProxyMode proxyMode() default ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS; }
@SessionScope can then be used without declaring the proxyMode as follows:
@Service @SessionScope public class SessionScopedService { // ... }
Or with an overridden value for the proxyMode as follows:
@Service @SessionScope(proxyMode = ScopedProxyMode.INTERFACES) public class SessionScopedUserService implements UserService { // ... }
For further details, consult the Spring Annotation Programming Model.
Spring can automatically detect stereotyped classes and register corresponding
BeanDefinitions with the ApplicationContext. For example, the following two classes
are eligible for such autodetection:
@Service public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Autowired public SimpleMovieLister(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } }
@Repository public class JpaMovieFinder implements MovieFinder { // implementation elided for clarity }
To autodetect these classes and register the corresponding beans, you need to add
@ComponentScan to your @Configuration class, where the basePackages attribute
is a common parent package for the two classes. (Alternatively, you can specify a
comma/semicolon/space-separated list that includes the parent package of each class.)
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example") public class AppConfig { ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
For concision, the above may have used the |
The following is an alternative using XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/context https://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd"> <context:component-scan base-package="org.example"/> </beans>
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
The use of |
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
The scanning of classpath packages requires the presence of corresponding directory entries in the classpath. When you build JARs with Ant, make sure that you do not activate the files-only switch of the JAR task. Also, classpath directories may not get exposed based on security policies in some environments, e.g. standalone apps on JDK 1.7.0_45 and higher (which requires 'Trusted-Library' setup in your manifests; see https://stackoverflow.com/questions/19394570/java-jre-7u45-breaks-classloader-getresources). |
Furthermore, the AutowiredAnnotationBeanPostProcessor and
CommonAnnotationBeanPostProcessor are both included implicitly when you use the
component-scan element. That means that the two components are autodetected and
wired together - all without any bean configuration metadata provided in XML.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
You can disable the registration of |
By default, classes annotated with @Component, @Repository, @Service,
@Controller, or a custom annotation that itself is annotated with @Component are the
only detected candidate components. However, you can modify and extend this behavior
simply by applying custom filters. Add them as includeFilters or excludeFilters
parameters of the @ComponentScan annotation (or as include-filter or exclude-filter
sub-elements of the component-scan element). Each filter element requires the type
and expression attributes. The following table describes the filtering options.
Table 7.5. Filter Types
| Filter Type | Example Expression | Description |
|---|---|---|
annotation (default) |
| An annotation to be present at the type level in target components. |
assignable |
| A class (or interface) that the target components are assignable to (extend/implement). |
aspectj |
| An AspectJ type expression to be matched by the target components. |
regex |
| A regex expression to be matched by the target components class names. |
custom |
| A custom implementation of the |
The following example shows the configuration ignoring all @Repository annotations
and using "stub" repositories instead.
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example", includeFilters = @Filter(type = FilterType.REGEX, pattern = ".*Stub.*Repository"), excludeFilters = @Filter(Repository.class)) public class AppConfig { ... }
and the equivalent using XML
<beans> <context:component-scan base-package="org.example"> <context:include-filter type="regex" expression=".*Stub.*Repository"/> <context:exclude-filter type="annotation" expression="org.springframework.stereotype.Repository"/> </context:component-scan> </beans>
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
You can also disable the default filters by setting |
Spring components can also contribute bean definition metadata to the container. You do
this with the same @Bean annotation used to define bean metadata within @Configuration
annotated classes. Here is a simple example:
@Component public class FactoryMethodComponent { @Bean @Qualifier("public") public TestBean publicInstance() { return new TestBean("publicInstance"); } public void doWork() { // Component method implementation omitted } }
This class is a Spring component that has application-specific code contained in its
doWork() method. However, it also contributes a bean definition that has a factory
method referring to the method publicInstance(). The @Bean annotation identifies the
factory method and other bean definition properties, such as a qualifier value through
the @Qualifier annotation. Other method level annotations that can be specified are
@Scope, @Lazy, and custom qualifier annotations.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
In addition to its role for component initialization, the |
Autowired fields and methods are supported as previously discussed, with additional
support for autowiring of @Bean methods:
@Component public class FactoryMethodComponent { private static int i; @Bean @Qualifier("public") public TestBean publicInstance() { return new TestBean("publicInstance"); } // use of a custom qualifier and autowiring of method parameters @Bean protected TestBean protectedInstance( @Qualifier("public") TestBean spouse, @Value("#{privateInstance.age}") String country) { TestBean tb = new TestBean("protectedInstance", 1); tb.setSpouse(spouse); tb.setCountry(country); return tb; } @Bean private TestBean privateInstance() { return new TestBean("privateInstance", i++); } @Bean @RequestScope public TestBean requestScopedInstance() { return new TestBean("requestScopedInstance", 3); } }
The example autowires the String method parameter country to the value of the age
property on another bean named privateInstance. A Spring Expression Language element
defines the value of the property through the notation #{ <expression> }. For @Value
annotations, an expression resolver is preconfigured to look for bean names when
resolving expression text.
As of Spring Framework 4.3, you may also declare a factory method parameter of type
InjectionPoint (or its more specific subclass DependencyDescriptor) in order to
access the requesting injection point that triggers the creation of the current bean.
Note that this will only apply to the actual creation of bean instances, not to the
injection of existing instances. As a consequence, this feature makes most sense for
beans of prototype scope. For other scopes, the factory method will only ever see the
injection point which triggered the creation of a new bean instance in the given scope:
for example, the dependency that triggered the creation of a lazy singleton bean.
Use the provided injection point metadata with semantic care in such scenarios.
@Component public class FactoryMethodComponent { @Bean @Scope("prototype") public TestBean prototypeInstance(InjectionPoint injectionPoint) { return new TestBean("prototypeInstance for " + injectionPoint.getMember()); } }
The @Bean methods in a regular Spring component are processed differently than their
counterparts inside a Spring @Configuration class. The difference is that @Component
classes are not enhanced with CGLIB to intercept the invocation of methods and fields.
CGLIB proxying is the means by which invoking methods or fields within @Bean methods
in @Configuration classes creates bean metadata references to collaborating objects;
such methods are not invoked with normal Java semantics but rather go through the
container in order to provide the usual lifecycle management and proxying of Spring
beans even when referring to other beans via programmatic calls to @Bean methods.
In contrast, invoking a method or field in an @Bean method within a plain @Component
class has standard Java semantics, with no special CGLIB processing or other
constraints applying.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
You may declare Note that calls to static The Java language visibility of
Finally, note that a single class may hold multiple |
When a component is autodetected as part of the scanning process, its bean name is
generated by the BeanNameGenerator strategy known to that scanner. By default, any
Spring stereotype annotation (@Component, @Repository, @Service, and
@Controller) that contains a name value will thereby provide that name to the
corresponding bean definition.
If such an annotation contains no name value or for any other detected component
(such as those discovered by custom filters), the default bean name generator returns
the uncapitalized non-qualified class name. For example, if the following component
classes were detected, the names would be myMovieLister and movieFinderImpl:
@Service("myMovieLister") public class SimpleMovieLister { // ... }
@Repository public class MovieFinderImpl implements MovieFinder { // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
If you do not want to rely on the default bean-naming strategy, you can provide a custom
bean-naming strategy. First, implement the
|
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example", nameGenerator = MyNameGenerator.class) public class AppConfig { ... }
<beans> <context:component-scan base-package="org.example" name-generator="org.example.MyNameGenerator" /> </beans>
As a general rule, consider specifying the name with the annotation whenever other components may be making explicit references to it. On the other hand, the auto-generated names are adequate whenever the container is responsible for wiring.
As with Spring-managed components in general, the default and most common scope for
autodetected components is singleton. However, sometimes you need a different scope
which can be specified via the @Scope annotation. Simply provide the name of the
scope within the annotation:
@Scope("prototype") @Repository public class MovieFinderImpl implements MovieFinder { // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
|
For details on web-specific scopes such as "request"/"session" in a Spring context,
see Section 7.5.4, “Request, session, global session, application, and WebSocket scopes”. Like the pre-built annotations for those scopes,
you may also compose your own scoping annotations using Spring’s meta-annotation
approach: e.g. a custom annotation meta-annotated with @Scope("prototype"),
possibly also declaring a custom scoped-proxy mode.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
To provide a custom strategy for scope resolution rather than relying on the
annotation-based approach, implement the
|
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example", scopeResolver = MyScopeResolver.class) public class AppConfig { ... }
<beans> <context:component-scan base-package="org.example" scope-resolver="org.example.MyScopeResolver"/> </beans>
When using certain non-singleton scopes, it may be necessary to generate proxies for the scoped objects. The reasoning is described in the section called “Scoped beans as dependencies”. For this purpose, a scoped-proxy attribute is available on the component-scan element. The three possible values are: no, interfaces, and targetClass. For example, the following configuration will result in standard JDK dynamic proxies:
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example", scopedProxy = ScopedProxyMode.INTERFACES) public class AppConfig { ... }
<beans> <context:component-scan base-package="org.example" scoped-proxy="interfaces"/> </beans>
The @Qualifier annotation is discussed in Section 7.9.4, “Fine-tuning annotation-based autowiring with qualifiers”.
The examples in that section demonstrate the use of the @Qualifier annotation and
custom qualifier annotations to provide fine-grained control when you resolve autowire
candidates. Because those examples were based on XML bean definitions, the qualifier
metadata was provided on the candidate bean definitions using the qualifier or meta
sub-elements of the bean element in the XML. When relying upon classpath scanning for
autodetection of components, you provide the qualifier metadata with type-level
annotations on the candidate class. The following three examples demonstrate this
technique:
@Component @Qualifier("Action") public class ActionMovieCatalog implements MovieCatalog { // ... }
@Component @Genre("Action") public class ActionMovieCatalog implements MovieCatalog { // ... }
@Component @Offline public class CachingMovieCatalog implements MovieCatalog { // ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
As with most annotation-based alternatives, keep in mind that the annotation metadata is bound to the class definition itself, while the use of XML allows for multiple beans of the same type to provide variations in their qualifier metadata, because that metadata is provided per-instance rather than per-class. |
Starting with Spring 3.0, Spring offers support for JSR-330 standard annotations (Dependency Injection). Those annotations are scanned in the same way as the Spring annotations. You just need to have the relevant jars in your classpath.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
If you are using Maven, the <dependency> <groupId>javax.inject</groupId> <artifactId>javax.inject</artifactId> <version>1</version> </dependency> |
Instead of @Autowired, @javax.inject.Inject may be used as follows:
import javax.inject.Inject; public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Inject public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } public void listMovies() { this.movieFinder.findMovies(...); ... } }
As with @Autowired, it is possible to use @Inject at the field level, method level
and constructor-argument level. Furthermore, you may declare your injection point as a
Provider, allowing for on-demand access to beans of shorter scopes or lazy access to
other beans through a Provider.get() call. As a variant of the example above:
import javax.inject.Inject; import javax.inject.Provider; public class SimpleMovieLister { private Provider<MovieFinder> movieFinder; @Inject public void setMovieFinder(Provider<MovieFinder> movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } public void listMovies() { this.movieFinder.get().findMovies(...); ... } }
If you would like to use a qualified name for the dependency that should be injected,
you should use the @Named annotation as follows:
import javax.inject.Inject; import javax.inject.Named; public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Inject public void setMovieFinder(@Named("main") MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
Like @Autowired, @Inject can also be used with java.util.Optional or
@Nullable. This is even more applicable here since @Inject does not have
a required attribute.
public class SimpleMovieLister { @Inject public void setMovieFinder(Optional<MovieFinder> movieFinder) { ... } }
public class SimpleMovieLister { @Inject public void setMovieFinder(@Nullable MovieFinder movieFinder) { ... } }
Instead of @Component, @javax.inject.Named or javax.annotation.ManagedBean may be
used as follows:
import javax.inject.Inject; import javax.inject.Named; @Named("movieListener") // @ManagedBean("movieListener") could be used as well public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Inject public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
It is very common to use @Component without specifying a name for the component.
@Named can be used in a similar fashion:
import javax.inject.Inject; import javax.inject.Named; @Named public class SimpleMovieLister { private MovieFinder movieFinder; @Inject public void setMovieFinder(MovieFinder movieFinder) { this.movieFinder = movieFinder; } // ... }
When using @Named or @ManagedBean, it is possible to use component scanning in the
exact same way as when using Spring annotations:
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "org.example") public class AppConfig { ... }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
In contrast to |
When working with standard annotations, it is important to know that some significant features are not available as shown in the table below:
Table 7.6. Spring component model elements vs. JSR-330 variants
| Spring | javax.inject.* | javax.inject restrictions / comments |
|---|---|---|
@Autowired | @Inject |
|
@Component | @Named / @ManagedBean | JSR-330 does not provide a composable model, just a way to identify named components. |
@Scope("singleton") | @Singleton | The JSR-330 default scope is like Spring’s |
@Qualifier | @Qualifier / @Named |
|
@Value | - | no equivalent |
@Required | - | no equivalent |
@Lazy | - | no equivalent |
ObjectFactory | Provider |
|
The central artifacts in Spring’s new Java-configuration support are
@Configuration-annotated classes and @Bean-annotated methods.
The @Bean annotation is used to indicate that a method instantiates, configures and
initializes a new object to be managed by the Spring IoC container. For those familiar
with Spring’s <beans/> XML configuration the @Bean annotation plays the same role as
the <bean/> element. You can use @Bean annotated methods with any Spring
@Component, however, they are most often used with @Configuration beans.
Annotating a class with @Configuration indicates that its primary purpose is as a
source of bean definitions. Furthermore, @Configuration classes allow inter-bean
dependencies to be defined by simply calling other @Bean methods in the same class.
The simplest possible @Configuration class would read as follows:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public MyService myService() { return new MyServiceImpl(); } }
The AppConfig class above would be equivalent to the following Spring <beans/> XML:
<beans> <bean id="myService" class="com.acme.services.MyServiceImpl"/> </beans>
The @Bean and @Configuration annotations will be discussed in depth in the sections
below. First, however, we’ll cover the various ways of creating a spring container using
Java-based configuration.
The sections below document Spring’s AnnotationConfigApplicationContext, new in Spring
3.0. This versatile ApplicationContext implementation is capable of accepting not only
@Configuration classes as input, but also plain @Component classes and classes
annotated with JSR-330 metadata.
When @Configuration classes are provided as input, the @Configuration class itself
is registered as a bean definition, and all declared @Bean methods within the class
are also registered as bean definitions.
When @Component and JSR-330 classes are provided, they are registered as bean
definitions, and it is assumed that DI metadata such as @Autowired or @Inject are
used within those classes where necessary.
In much the same way that Spring XML files are used as input when instantiating a
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext, @Configuration classes may be used as input when
instantiating an AnnotationConfigApplicationContext. This allows for completely
XML-free usage of the Spring container:
public static void main(String[] args) { ApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(AppConfig.class); MyService myService = ctx.getBean(MyService.class); myService.doStuff(); }
As mentioned above, AnnotationConfigApplicationContext is not limited to working only
with @Configuration classes. Any @Component or JSR-330 annotated class may be supplied
as input to the constructor. For example:
public static void main(String[] args) { ApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(MyServiceImpl.class, Dependency1.class, Dependency2.class); MyService myService = ctx.getBean(MyService.class); myService.doStuff(); }
The above assumes that MyServiceImpl, Dependency1 and Dependency2 use Spring
dependency injection annotations such as @Autowired.
An AnnotationConfigApplicationContext may be instantiated using a no-arg constructor
and then configured using the register() method. This approach is particularly useful
when programmatically building an AnnotationConfigApplicationContext.
public static void main(String[] args) { AnnotationConfigApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(); ctx.register(AppConfig.class, OtherConfig.class); ctx.register(AdditionalConfig.class); ctx.refresh(); MyService myService = ctx.getBean(MyService.class); myService.doStuff(); }
To enable component scanning, just annotate your @Configuration class as follows:
@Configuration @ComponentScan(basePackages = "com.acme") public class AppConfig { ... }
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
Experienced Spring users will be familiar with the XML declaration equivalent from
Spring’s <beans> <context:component-scan base-package="com.acme"/> </beans> |
In the example above, the com.acme package will be scanned, looking for any
@Component-annotated classes, and those classes will be registered as Spring bean
definitions within the container. AnnotationConfigApplicationContext exposes the
scan(String…) method to allow for the same component-scanning functionality:
public static void main(String[] args) { AnnotationConfigApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(); ctx.scan("com.acme"); ctx.refresh(); MyService myService = ctx.getBean(MyService.class); }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
Remember that |
A WebApplicationContext variant of AnnotationConfigApplicationContext is available
with AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext. This implementation may be used when
configuring the Spring ContextLoaderListener servlet listener, Spring MVC
DispatcherServlet, etc. What follows is a web.xml snippet that configures a typical
Spring MVC web application. Note the use of the contextClass context-param and
init-param:
<web-app> <!-- Configure ContextLoaderListener to use AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext instead of the default XmlWebApplicationContext --> <context-param> <param-name>contextClass</param-name> <param-value> org.springframework.web.context.support.AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext </param-value> </context-param> <!-- Configuration locations must consist of one or more comma- or space-delimited fully-qualified @Configuration classes. Fully-qualified packages may also be specified for component-scanning --> <context-param> <param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> <param-value>com.acme.AppConfig</param-value> </context-param> <!-- Bootstrap the root application context as usual using ContextLoaderListener --> <listener> <listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class> </listener> <!-- Declare a Spring MVC DispatcherServlet as usual --> <servlet> <servlet-name>dispatcher</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <!-- Configure DispatcherServlet to use AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext instead of the default XmlWebApplicationContext --> <init-param> <param-name>contextClass</param-name> <param-value> org.springframework.web.context.support.AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext </param-value> </init-param> <!-- Again, config locations must consist of one or more comma- or space-delimited and fully-qualified @Configuration classes --> <init-param> <param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> <param-value>com.acme.web.MvcConfig</param-value> </init-param> </servlet> <!-- map all requests for /app/* to the dispatcher servlet --> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>dispatcher</servlet-name> <url-pattern>/app/*</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> </web-app>
@Bean is a method-level annotation and a direct analog of the XML <bean/> element.
The annotation supports some of the attributes offered by <bean/>, such as:
init-method,
destroy-method,
autowiring and name.
You can use the @Bean annotation in a @Configuration-annotated or in a
@Component-annotated class.
To declare a bean, simply annotate a method with the @Bean annotation. You use this
method to register a bean definition within an ApplicationContext of the type
specified as the method’s return value. By default, the bean name will be the same as
the method name. The following is a simple example of a @Bean method declaration:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public TransferServiceImpl transferService() { return new TransferServiceImpl(); } }
The preceding configuration is exactly equivalent to the following Spring XML:
<beans> <bean id="transferService" class="com.acme.TransferServiceImpl"/> </beans>
Both declarations make a bean named transferService available in the
ApplicationContext, bound to an object instance of type TransferServiceImpl:
transferService -> com.acme.TransferServiceImpl
You may also declare your @Bean method with an interface (or base class)
return type:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public TransferService transferService() { return new TransferServiceImpl(); } }
However, this limits the visibility for advance type prediction to the specified
interface type (TransferService) then, with the full type (TransferServiceImpl)
only known to the container once the affected singleton bean has been instantiated.
Non-lazy singleton beans get instantiated according to their declaration order,
so you may see different type matching results depending on when another component
tries to match by a non-declared type (such as @Autowired TransferServiceImpl
which will only resolve once the "transferService" bean has been instantiated).
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
If you consistently refer to your types by a declared service interface, your
|
A @Bean annotated method can have an arbitrary number of parameters describing the
dependencies required to build that bean. For instance if our TransferService
requires an AccountRepository we can materialize that dependency via a method
parameter:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public TransferService transferService(AccountRepository accountRepository) { return new TransferServiceImpl(accountRepository); } }
The resolution mechanism is pretty much identical to constructor-based dependency injection, see the relevant section for more details.
Any classes defined with the @Bean annotation support the regular lifecycle callbacks
and can use the @PostConstruct and @PreDestroy annotations from JSR-250, see
JSR-250 annotations for further
details.
The regular Spring lifecycle callbacks are fully supported as
well. If a bean implements InitializingBean, DisposableBean, or Lifecycle, their
respective methods are called by the container.
The standard set of *Aware interfaces such as BeanFactoryAware,
BeanNameAware,
MessageSourceAware,
ApplicationContextAware, and so on are also fully supported.
The @Bean annotation supports specifying arbitrary initialization and destruction
callback methods, much like Spring XML’s init-method and destroy-method attributes
on the bean element:
public class Foo { public void init() { // initialization logic } } public class Bar { public void cleanup() { // destruction logic } } @Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean(initMethod = "init") public Foo foo() { return new Foo(); } @Bean(destroyMethod = "cleanup") public Bar bar() { return new Bar(); } }
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
By default, beans defined using Java config that have a public You may want to do that by default for a resource that you acquire via JNDI as its
lifecycle is managed outside the application. In particular, make sure to always do it
for a @Bean(destroyMethod="") public DataSource dataSource() throws NamingException { return (DataSource) jndiTemplate.lookup("MyDS"); } Also, with |
Of course, in the case of Foo above, it would be equally as valid to call the init()
method directly during construction:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public Foo foo() { Foo foo = new Foo(); foo.init(); return foo; } // ... }
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
When you work directly in Java, you can do anything you like with your objects and do not always need to rely on the container lifecycle! |
You can specify that your beans defined with the @Bean annotation should have a
specific scope. You can use any of the standard scopes specified in the
Bean Scopes section.
The default scope is singleton, but you can override this with the @Scope annotation:
@Configuration public class MyConfiguration { @Bean @Scope("prototype") public Encryptor encryptor() { // ... } }
Spring offers a convenient way of working with scoped dependencies through
scoped proxies. The easiest way to create such
a proxy when using the XML configuration is the <aop:scoped-proxy/> element.
Configuring your beans in Java with a @Scope annotation offers equivalent support with
the proxyMode attribute. The default is no proxy ( ScopedProxyMode.NO), but you can
specify ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS or ScopedProxyMode.INTERFACES.
If you port the scoped proxy example from the XML reference documentation (see preceding
link) to our @Bean using Java, it would look like the following:
// an HTTP Session-scoped bean exposed as a proxy @Bean @SessionScope public UserPreferences userPreferences() { return new UserPreferences(); } @Bean public Service userService() { UserService service = new SimpleUserService(); // a reference to the proxied userPreferences bean service.setUserPreferences(userPreferences()); return service; }
By default, configuration classes use a @Bean method’s name as the name of the
resulting bean. This functionality can be overridden, however, with the name attribute.
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean(name = "myFoo") public Foo foo() { return new Foo(); } }
As discussed in Section 7.3.1, “Naming beans”, it is sometimes desirable to give a single bean
multiple names, otherwise known as bean aliasing. The name attribute of the @Bean
annotation accepts a String array for this purpose.
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean({"dataSource", "subsystemA-dataSource", "subsystemB-dataSource"}) public DataSource dataSource() { // instantiate, configure and return DataSource bean... } }
Sometimes it is helpful to provide a more detailed textual description of a bean. This can be particularly useful when beans are exposed (perhaps via JMX) for monitoring purposes.
To add a description to a @Bean the
@Description
annotation can be used:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean @Description("Provides a basic example of a bean") public Foo foo() { return new Foo(); } }
@Configuration is a class-level annotation indicating that an object is a source of
bean definitions. @Configuration classes declare beans via public @Bean annotated
methods. Calls to @Bean methods on @Configuration classes can also be used to define
inter-bean dependencies. See Section 7.12.1, “Basic concepts: @Bean and @Configuration” for a general introduction.
When @Beans have dependencies on one another, expressing that dependency is as simple
as having one bean method call another:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public Foo foo() { return new Foo(bar()); } @Bean public Bar bar() { return new Bar(); } }
In the example above, the foo bean receives a reference to bar via constructor
injection.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
This method of declaring inter-bean dependencies only works when the |
As noted earlier, lookup method injection is an advanced feature that you should use rarely. It is useful in cases where a singleton-scoped bean has a dependency on a prototype-scoped bean. Using Java for this type of configuration provides a natural means for implementing this pattern.
public abstract class CommandManager { public Object process(Object commandState) { // grab a new instance of the appropriate Command interface Command command = createCommand(); // set the state on the (hopefully brand new) Command instance command.setState(commandState); return command.execute(); } // okay... but where is the implementation of this method? protected abstract Command createCommand(); }
Using Java-configuration support , you can create a subclass of CommandManager where
the abstract createCommand() method is overridden in such a way that it looks up a new
(prototype) command object:
@Bean @Scope("prototype") public AsyncCommand asyncCommand() { AsyncCommand command = new AsyncCommand(); // inject dependencies here as required return command; } @Bean public CommandManager commandManager() { // return new anonymous implementation of CommandManager with command() overridden // to return a new prototype Command object return new CommandManager() { protected Command createCommand() { return asyncCommand(); } } }
The following example shows a @Bean annotated method being called twice:
@Configuration public class AppConfig { @Bean public ClientService clientService1() { ClientServiceImpl clientService = new ClientServiceImpl(); clientService.setClientDao(clientDao()); return clientService; } @Bean public ClientService clientService2() { ClientServiceImpl clientService = new ClientServiceImpl(); clientService.setClientDao(clientDao()); return clientService; } @Bean public ClientDao clientDao() { return new ClientDaoImpl(); } }
clientDao() has been called once in clientService1() and once in clientService2().
Since this method creates a new instance of ClientDaoImpl and returns it, you would
normally expect having 2 instances (one for each service). That definitely would be
problematic: in Spring, instantiated beans have a singleton scope by default. This is
where the magic comes in: All @Configuration classes are subclassed at startup-time
with CGLIB. In the subclass, the child method checks the container first for any
cached (scoped) beans before it calls the parent method and creates a new instance. Note
that as of Spring 3.2, it is no longer necessary to add CGLIB to your classpath because
CGLIB classes have been repackaged under org.springframework.cglib and included directly
within the spring-core JAR.
![]() | Note |
|---|---|
|
The behavior could be different according to the scope of your bean. We are talking about singletons here. |
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
There are a few restrictions due to the fact that CGLIB dynamically adds features at
startup-time, in particular that configuration classes must not be final. However, as
of 4.3, any constructors are allowed on configuration classes, including the use of
If you prefer to avoid any CGLIB-imposed limitations, consider declaring your |
Much as the <import/> element is used within Spring XML files to aid in modularizing
configurations, the @Import annotation allows for loading @Bean definitions from
another configuration class:
@Configuration public class ConfigA { @Bean public A a() { return new A(); } } @Configuration @Import(ConfigA.class) public class ConfigB { @Bean public B b() { return new B(); } }
Now, rather than needing to specify both ConfigA.class and ConfigB.class when
instantiating the context, only ConfigB needs to be supplied explicitly:
public static void main(String[] args) { ApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(ConfigB.class); // now both beans A and B will be available... A a = ctx.getBean(A.class); B b = ctx.getBean(B.class); }
This approach simplifies container instantiation, as only one class needs to be dealt
with, rather than requiring the developer to remember a potentially large number of
@Configuration classes during construction.
![]() | Tip |
|---|---|
|
As of Spring Framework 4.2, |
The example above works, but is simplistic. In most practical scenarios, beans will have
dependencies on one another across configuration classes. When using XML, this is not an
issue, per se, because there is no compiler involved, and one can simply declare
ref="someBean" and trust that Spring will work it out during container initialization.
Of course, when using @Configuration classes, the Java compiler places constraints on
the configuration model, in that references to other beans must be valid Java syntax.
Fortunately, solving this problem is simple. As we already discussed,
@Bean method can have an arbitrary number of parameters describing the bean
dependencies. Let’s consider a more real-world scenario with several @Configuration
classes, each depending on beans declared in the others:
@Configuration public class ServiceConfig { @Bean public TransferService transferService(AccountRepository accountRepository) { return new TransferServiceImpl(accountRepository); } } @Configuration public class RepositoryConfig { @Bean public AccountRepository accountRepository(DataSource dataSource) { return new JdbcAccountRepository(dataSource); } } @Configuration @Import({ServiceConfig.class, RepositoryConfig.class}) public class SystemTestConfig { @Bean public DataSource dataSource() { // return new DataSource } } public static void main(String[] args) { ApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(SystemTestConfig.class); // everything wires up across configuration classes... TransferService transferService = ctx.getBean(TransferService.class); transferService.transfer(100.00, "A123", "C456"); }
There is another way to achieve the same result. Remember that @Configuration classes are
ultimately just another bean in the container: This means that they can take advantage of
@Autowired and @Value injection etc just like any other bean!
![]() | Warning |
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Make sure that the dependencies you inject that way are of the simplest kind only. Also, be particularly careful with |
@Configuration public class ServiceConfig { @Autowired private AccountRepository accountRepository; @Bean public TransferService transferService() { return new TransferServiceImpl(accountRepository); } } @Configuration public class RepositoryConfig { private final DataSource dataSource; @Autowired public RepositoryConfig(DataSource dataSource) { this.dataSource = dataSource; } @Bean public AccountRepository accountRepository() { return new JdbcAccountRepository(dataSource); } } @Configuration @Import({ServiceConfig.class, RepositoryConfig.class}) public class SystemTestConfig { @Bean public DataSource dataSource() { // return new DataSource } } public static void main(String[] args) { ApplicationContext ctx = new AnnotationConfigApplicationContext(SystemTestConfig.class); // everything wires up across configuration classes... TransferService transferService = ctx.getBean(TransferService.class); transferService.transfer(100.00, "A123", "C456"); }