Spring Reference
Spring Reference
Spring Reference
Version 1.1.5
(Work in progress)
Copyright (c) 2004 - Rod Johnson, Juergen Hoeller, Alef Arendsen, Colin Sampaleanu, Darren Davison, Dmitriy Kopylenko, Thomas Risberg, Mark Pollack, Rob Harrop
Copies of this document may be made for your own use and for distribution to others, provided that you do not charge any fee for such copies and further provided that each copy contains this Copyright Notice, whether distributed in print or electronically.
Table of Contents
Preface ................................................................................................................................................ 1. Introduction .................................................................................................................................. 1.1. Overview ............................................................................................................................. 1.2. Usage scenarios .................................................................................................................... 2. Background information ............................................................................................................... 2.1. Inversion of Control / Dependency Injection .......................................................................... 3. Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext .......................................................................... 3.1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 3.2. BeanFactory and BeanDefinitions - the basics ........................................................................ 3.2.1. The BeanFactory ....................................................................................................... 3.2.2. The BeanDefinition ................................................................................................... 3.2.3. The bean class ........................................................................................................... 3.2.4. The bean identifiers (id and name) ............................................................................................................................ 3.2.5. To singleton or not to singleton .................................................................................. 3.3. Properties, collaborators, autowiring and dependency checking ............................................... 3.3.1. Setting bean properties and collaborators .................................................................... 3.3.2. Constructor Argument Resolution ............................................................................... 3.3.3. Bean properties and constructor arguments detailed ..................................................... 3.3.4. Method Injection ....................................................................................................... 3.3.5. Using depends-on ...................................................................................................... 3.3.6. Autowiring collaborators ............................................................................................ 3.3.7. Checking for dependencies ......................................................................................... 3.4. Customizing the nature of a bean ........................................................................................... 3.4.1. Lifecycle interfaces ................................................................................................... 3.4.2. Knowing who you are ................................................................................................ 3.4.3. FactoryBean .............................................................................................................. 3.5. Abstract and child bean definitions ........................................................................................ 3.6. Interacting with the BeanFactory ........................................................................................... 3.6.1. Obtaining a FactoryBean, not its product ..................................................................... 3.7. Customizing beans with BeanPostprocessors .......................................................................... 3.8. Customizing bean factories with BeanFactoryPostprocessors .................................................. 3.8.1. The PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer ............................................................................ 3.8.2. The PropertyOverrideConfigurer ................................................................................ 3.9. Registering additional custom PropertyEditors ....................................................................... 3.10. Introduction to the ApplicationContext ................................................................................ 3.11. Added functionality of the ApplicationContext ..................................................................... 3.11.1. Using the MessageSource ......................................................................................... 3.11.2. Propagating events ................................................................................................... 3.11.3. Using resources within Spring .................................................................................. 3.12. Customized behavior in the ApplicationContext ................................................................... 3.12.1. ApplicationContextAware marker interface ............................................................... 3.12.2. The BeanPostProcessor ............................................................................................ 3.12.3. The BeanFactoryPostProcessor ................................................................................. 3.12.4. The PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer .......................................................................... 3.13. Registering additional custom PropertyEditors ..................................................................... 3.14. Setting a bean property or constructor arg from a property expression ............................................................................................................................... Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 1 2 5 6 6 6 7 8 10 10 11 11 14 15 17 19 20 21 22 22 23 24 24 25 26 26 27 27 28 28 29 30 30 30 32 32 33 33 33 33 33 34 ii
Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework Setting a bean property or constructor arg from a field value ................................................. Invoking another method and optionally using the return value. ............................................. Importing Bean Definitions from One File Into Another ....................................................... Creating an ApplicationContext from a web application ........................................................ Glue code and the evil singleton .......................................................................................... 3.19.1. Using SingletonBeanFactoryLocator and ContextSingletonBeanFactoryLocator ............................................................................. 4. PropertyEditors, data binding, validation and the BeanWrapper ................................................. 4.1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 4.2. Binding data using the DataBinder ........................................................................................ 4.3. Bean manipulation and the BeanWrapper ............................................................................... 4.3.1. Setting and getting basic and nested properties ............................................................ 4.3.2. Built-in PropertyEditors, converting types ............................................................................................................................. 4.3.3. Other features worth mentioning ................................................................................. 5. Spring AOP: Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring ............................................................. 5.1. Concepts .............................................................................................................................. 5.1.1. AOP concepts ........................................................................................................... 5.1.2. Spring AOP capabilities and goals .............................................................................. 5.1.3. AOP Proxies in Spring ............................................................................................... 5.2. Pointcuts in Spring ............................................................................................................... 5.2.1. Concepts ................................................................................................................... 5.2.2. Operations on pointcuts ............................................................................................. 5.2.3. Convenience pointcut implementations ....................................................................... 5.2.4. Pointcut superclasses ................................................................................................. 5.2.5. Custom pointcuts ....................................................................................................... 5.3. Advice types in Spring .......................................................................................................... 5.3.1. Advice lifecycles ....................................................................................................... 5.3.2. Advice types in Spring ............................................................................................... 5.4. Advisors in Spring ................................................................................................................ 5.5. Using the ProxyFactoryBean to create AOP proxies ............................................................... 5.5.1. Basics ....................................................................................................................... 5.5.2. JavaBean properties ................................................................................................... 5.5.3. Proxying interfaces .................................................................................................... 5.5.4. Proxying classes ........................................................................................................ 5.6. Convenient proxy creation .................................................................................................... 5.6.1. TransactionProxyFactoryBean .................................................................................... 5.6.2. EJB proxies ............................................................................................................... 5.7. Concise proxy definitions ..................................................................................................... 5.8. Creating AOP proxies programmatically with the ProxyFactory .............................................. 5.9. Manipulating advised objects ................................................................................................ 5.10. Using the "autoproxy" facility ............................................................................................. 5.10.1. Autoproxy bean definitions ...................................................................................... 5.10.2. Using metadata-driven auto-proxying ....................................................................... 5.11. Using TargetSources ........................................................................................................... 5.11.1. Hot swappable target sources .................................................................................... 5.11.2. Pooling target sources .............................................................................................. 5.11.3. Prototype" target sources .......................................................................................... 5.12. Defining new Advice types ................................................................................................. 5.13. Further reading and resources .............................................................................................. 5.14. Roadmap ........................................................................................................................... 6. AspectJ Integration ....................................................................................................................... 3.15. 3.16. 3.17. 3.18. 3.19. 35 36 37 38 38 39 40 40 40 41 42 44 45 45 46 47 47 48 48 49 50 50 51 51 51 56 56 56 57 57 59 59 60 61 61 62 62 64 64 66 67 68 68 70 70 70 71
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Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework 6.1. Overview ............................................................................................................................. 6.2. Configuring AspectJ aspects using Spring IoC ....................................................................... 6.2.1. "Singleton" aspects .................................................................................................... 6.2.2. Non-singleton aspects ................................................................................................ 6.2.3. Gotchas .................................................................................................................... 6.3. Using AspectJ pointcuts to target Spring advice ..................................................................... 6.4. Spring aspects for AspectJ .................................................................................................... 7. Transaction management .............................................................................................................. 7.1. The Spring transaction abstraction ......................................................................................... 7.2. Transaction strategies ........................................................................................................... 7.3. Programmatic transaction management .................................................................................. 7.3.1. Using the TransactionTemplate .................................................................................. 7.3.2. Using the PlatformTransactionManager ...................................................................... 7.4. Declarative transaction management ...................................................................................... 7.4.1. BeanNameAutoProxyCreator, another declarative approach ........................................................................................... 7.5. Choosing between programmatic and declarative transaction management ............................................................................................................................ 7.6. Do you need an application server for transaction management? ........................................................................................................................... 7.7. Common problems ............................................................................................................... 8. Source Level Metadata Support .................................................................................................... 8.1. Source-level metadata ........................................................................................................... 8.2. Spring's metadata support ..................................................................................................... 8.3. Integration with Jakarta Commons Attributes ......................................................................... 8.4. Metadata and Spring AOP autoproxying ................................................................................ 8.4.1. Fundamentals ............................................................................................................ 8.4.2. Declarative transaction management ........................................................................... 8.4.3. Pooling ..................................................................................................................... 8.4.4. Custom metadata ....................................................................................................... 8.5. Using attributes to minimize MVC web tier configuration ....................................................... 8.6. Other uses of metadata attributes ........................................................................................... 8.7. Adding support for additional metadata APIs ......................................................................... 9. DAO support ................................................................................................................................. 9.1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 9.2. Consistent Exception Hierarchy ............................................................................................ 9.3. Consistent Abstract Classes for DAO Support ........................................................................ 10. Data Access using JDBC .............................................................................................................. 10.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 10.2. Using the JDBC Core classes to control basic JDBC processing and error handling .......................................................................................................................... 10.2.1. JdbcTemplate .......................................................................................................... 10.2.2. DataSource .............................................................................................................. 10.2.3. SQLExceptionTranslator .......................................................................................... 10.2.4. Executing Statements ............................................................................................... 10.2.5. Running Queries ...................................................................................................... 10.2.6. Updating the database .............................................................................................. 10.3. Controlling how we connect to the database ......................................................................... 10.3.1. DataSourceUtils ...................................................................................................... 10.3.2. SmartDataSource ..................................................................................................... 10.3.3. AbstractDataSource ................................................................................................. 10.3.4. SingleConnectionDataSource ................................................................................... 72 72 72 73 73 73 74 75 76 79 79 79 80 82 83 83 84 85 86 87 88 88 89 89 90 91 93 93 95 95 96 97 97 97 98 98 99 99 100 101 101 101 101 101
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Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework 10.3.5. DriverManagerDataSource ....................................................................................... 10.3.6. DataSourceTransactionManager ............................................................................... 10.4. Modeling JDBC operations as Java objects .......................................................................... 10.4.1. SqlQuery ................................................................................................................. 10.4.2. MappingSqlQuery ................................................................................................... 10.4.3. SqlUpdate ............................................................................................................... 10.4.4. StoredProcedure ...................................................................................................... 10.4.5. SqlFunction ............................................................................................................. 11. Data Access using O/R Mappers .................................................................................................. 11.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 11.2. Hibernate ........................................................................................................................... 11.2.1. Resource Management ............................................................................................. 11.2.2. Resource Definitions in an Application Context ......................................................... 11.2.3. Inversion of Control: Template and Callback ............................................................. 11.2.4. Applying an AOP Interceptor Instead of a Template .................................................. 11.2.5. Programmatic Transaction Demarcation .................................................................... 11.2.6. Declarative Transaction Demarcation ........................................................................ 11.2.7. Transaction Management Strategies .......................................................................... 11.2.8. Container Resources versus Local Resources ............................................................. 11.2.9. Samples .................................................................................................................. 11.3. JDO ................................................................................................................................... 11.4. iBATIS .............................................................................................................................. 11.4.1. Overview and differences between 1.3.x and 2.0 ........................................................ 11.4.2. Setting up the SqlMap .............................................................................................. 11.4.3. Using SqlMapDaoSupport ........................................................................................ 11.4.4. Transaction management .......................................................................................... 12. Web framework .......................................................................................................................... 12.1. Introduction to the web framework ...................................................................................... 12.1.1. Pluggability of MVC implementation ........................................................................ 12.1.2. Features of Spring MVC .......................................................................................... 12.2. The DispatcherServlet ......................................................................................................... 12.3. Controllers ......................................................................................................................... 12.3.1. AbstractController and WebContentGenerator ........................................................... 12.3.2. Other simple controllers ........................................................................................... 12.3.3. The MultiActionController ....................................................................................... 12.3.4. CommandControllers ............................................................................................... 12.4. Handler mappings .............................................................................................................. 12.4.1. BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping ................................................................................ 12.4.2. SimpleUrlHandlerMapping ...................................................................................... 12.4.3. Adding HandlerInterceptors ..................................................................................... 12.5. Views and resolving them ................................................................................................... 12.5.1. ViewResolvers ........................................................................................................ 12.5.2. Chaining ViewResolvers .......................................................................................... 12.6. Using locales ...................................................................................................................... 12.6.1. AcceptHeaderLocaleResolver ................................................................................... 12.6.2. CookieLocaleResolver ............................................................................................. 12.6.3. SessionLocaleResolver ............................................................................................ 12.6.4. LocaleChangeInterceptor ......................................................................................... 12.7. Using themes ..................................................................................................................... 12.8. Spring's multipart (fileupload) support ................................................................................. 12.8.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 12.8.2. Using the MultipartResolver ..................................................................................... 101 102 102 102 102 103 104 105 106 107 107 107 108 109 110 111 113 114 115 115 115 115 116 117 117 118 118 119 119 121 122 123 123 125 126 127 127 128 129 130 131 132 132 132 133 133 133 133 133 134
Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework 12.8.3. Handling a fileupload in a form ................................................................................ 12.9. Handling exceptions ........................................................................................................... 13. Integrating view technologies ...................................................................................................... 13.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 13.2. JSP & JSTL ....................................................................................................................... 13.2.1. View resolvers ......................................................................................................... 13.2.2. 'Plain-old' JSPs versus JSTL ..................................................................................... 13.2.3. Additional tags facilitating development ................................................................... 13.3. Tiles .................................................................................................................................. 13.3.1. Dependencies .......................................................................................................... 13.3.2. How to integrate Tiles .............................................................................................. 13.4. Velocity & FreeMarker ....................................................................................................... 13.4.1. Dependencies .......................................................................................................... 13.4.2. Context configuration .............................................................................................. 13.4.3. Creating templates ................................................................................................... 13.4.4. Advanced configuration ........................................................................................... 13.4.5. Bind support and form handling ................................................................................ 13.5. XSLT ................................................................................................................................ 13.5.1. My First Words ....................................................................................................... 13.5.2. Summary ................................................................................................................ 13.6. Document views (PDF/Excel) ............................................................................................. 13.6.1. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 13.6.2. Configuration and setup ........................................................................................... 13.7. JasperReports ..................................................................................................................... 13.7.1. Dependencies .......................................................................................................... 13.7.2. Configuration .......................................................................................................... 13.7.3. Populating the ModelAndView ................................................................................. 13.7.4. Working with Sub-Reports ....................................................................................... 13.7.5. Configuring Exporter Parameters .............................................................................. 14. Integrating with other web frameworks ...................................................................................... 14.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 14.2. JavaServer Faces ................................................................................................................ 14.2.1. DelegatingVariableResolver ..................................................................................... 14.2.2. FacesContextUtils .................................................................................................... 14.3. Struts ................................................................................................................................. 14.3.1. ContextLoaderPlugin ............................................................................................... 14.3.2. ActionSupport Classes ............................................................................................. 14.4. Tapestry ............................................................................................................................. 14.4.1. Architecture ............................................................................................................ 14.4.2. Implementation ....................................................................................................... 14.4.3. Summary ................................................................................................................ 14.5. WebWork .......................................................................................................................... 15. JMS ............................................................................................................................................. 15.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 15.2. Domain unification ............................................................................................................. 15.3. JmsTemplate ...................................................................................................................... 15.3.1. ConnectionFactory ................................................................................................... 15.3.2. Transaction Management ......................................................................................... 15.3.3. Destination Management .......................................................................................... 15.4. Using the JmsTemplate ....................................................................................................... 15.4.1. Sending a message ................................................................................................... 15.4.2. Synchronous Receiving ............................................................................................ 134 136 137 137 137 137 138 138 138 138 139 139 140 140 141 142 147 147 150 150 150 150 152 152 153 154 155 156 158 159 159 159 160 160 162 163 163 164 169 169 171 171 171 172 172 173 173 174 175
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Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework 15.4.3. Using Message Converters ....................................................................................... 15.4.4. SessionCallback and ProducerCallback ..................................................................... Accessing and implementing EJBs .............................................................................................. 16.1. Accessing EJBs .................................................................................................................. 16.1.1. Concepts ................................................................................................................. 16.1.2. Accessing local SLSBs ............................................................................................ 16.1.3. Accessing remote SLSBs ......................................................................................... 16.2. Using Spring convenience EJB implementation classes ......................................................... Remoting and web services using Spring ..................................................................................... 17.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 17.2. Exposing services using RMI .............................................................................................. 17.2.1. Exporting the service using the RmiServiceExporter .................................................. 17.2.2. Linking in the service at the client ............................................................................. 17.3. Using Hessian or Burlap to remotely call services via HTTP ................................................. 17.3.1. Wiring up the DispatcherServlet for Hessian ............................................................. 17.3.2. Exposing your beans by using the HessianServiceExporter ......................................... 17.3.3. Linking in the service on the client ............................................................................ 17.3.4. Using Burlap ........................................................................................................... 17.3.5. Applying HTTP basic authentication to a service exposed through Hessian or Burlap ............................................................................................................................................ 17.4. Exposing services using HTTP invokers .............................................................................. 17.4.1. Exposing the service object ...................................................................................... 17.4.2. Linking in the service at the client ............................................................................. 17.5. Web Services ..................................................................................................................... 17.5.1. Exposing services using JAX-RPC ........................................................................... 17.5.2. Accessing Web Services .......................................................................................... 17.5.3. Register Bean Mappings .......................................................................................... 17.5.4. Registering our own Handler .................................................................................... 17.6. Auto-detection is not implemented for remote interfaces ....................................................... 17.7. Considerations when choosing a technology ......................................................................... Sending Email with Spring mail abstraction layer ....................................................................... 18.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 18.2. Spring mail abstraction structure ......................................................................................... 18.3. Using Spring mail abstraction .............................................................................................. 18.3.1. Pluggable MailSender implementations ..................................................................... 18.4. Using the JavaMail MimeMessageHelper ............................................................................ 18.4.1. Creating a simple MimeMessage and sending it ......................................................... 18.4.2. Sending attachments and inline resources .................................................................. Scheduling jobs using Quartz or Timer ....................................................................................... 19.1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................... 19.2. Using the OpenSymphony Quartz Scheduler ........................................................................ 19.2.1. Using the JobDetailBean .......................................................................................... 19.2.2. Using the MethodInvokingJobDetailFactoryBean ...................................................... 19.2.3. Wiring up jobs using triggers and the SchedulerFactoryBean ...................................... 19.3. Using JDK Timer support ................................................................................................... 19.3.1. Creating custom timers ............................................................................................ 19.3.2. Using the MethodInvokingTimerTaskFactoryBean .................................................... 19.3.3. Wrapping up: setting up the tasks using the TimerFactoryBean ................................... Testing ......................................................................................................................................... 20.1. Unit testing ........................................................................................................................ 20.2. Integration testing ............................................................................................................... 20.2.1. Context management and caching ............................................................................. 175 176 177 177 177 179 179 182 183 183 184 184 184 184 185 185 185 186 186 186 187 187 188 189 190 190 191 192 192 193 195 195 195 196 197 197 197 198 198 199 199 200 201 202 202 203
16.
17.
18.
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Spring - Java/J2EE Application Framework 20.2.2. Dependency Injection of test class instances .............................................................. 20.2.3. Transaction management .......................................................................................... 20.2.4. Convenience variables ............................................................................................. 20.2.5. Example .................................................................................................................. 20.2.6. Running integration tests .......................................................................................... A. Spring's beans.dtd .......................................................................................................................... 203 203 204 204 206
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Preface
Developing software applications is hard enough even with good tools and technologies. Implementing applications using platforms which promise everything but turn out to be heavy-weight, hard to control and not very efficient during the development cycle makes it even harder. Spring provides a light-weight solution for building enterprise-ready applications, while still supporting the possibility of using declarative transaction management, remote access to your logic using RMI or webservices, mailing facilities and various options in persisting your data to a database. Spring provides an MVC framework, transparent ways of integrating AOP into your software and a well-structured exception hierarchy including automatic mapping from proprietary exception hierarchies. Spring could potentially be a one-stop-shop for all your enterprise applications, however, Spring is modular, allowing you to use parts of it, without having to bring in the rest. You can use the bean container, with Struts on top, but you could also choose to just use the Hibernate integration or the JDBC abstraction layer. Spring is non-intrusive, meaning dependencies on the framework are generally none or absolutely minimal, depending on the area of use.. This document provides a reference guide to Spring's features. Since this document is still a work-in-progress, if you have any requests or comments, please post them on the user mailing list or on the forum at the SourceForge project page: http://www.sf.net/projects/springframework Before we go on, a few words of gratitude: Chris Bauer (of the Hibernate team) prepared and adapted the DocBook-XSL software in order to be able to create Hibernate's reference guide, also allowing us to create this one.
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Chapter 1. Introduction
1.1. Overview
Spring contains a lot of functionality and features, which are well-organized in seven modules shown in the diagram below. This section discusses each the of modules in turn.
Overview of the the Spring Framework The Core package is the most fundamental part of the framework and provides the Dependency Injection features allowing you to manage bean container functionality. The basic concept here is the BeanFactory, which provides a factory pattern removing the need for programmatic singletons and allowing you to decouple the configuration and specification of dependencies from your actual program logic. On top of the Core package sits the Context package, providing a way to access beans in a framework-style manner, somewhat resembling a JNDI-registry. The context package inherits its features from the beans package and adds support for text messaging using e.g. resource bundles, event-propagation, resource-loading and transparent creation of contexts by, for example, a servlet container. The DAO package provides a JDBC-abstraction layer that removes the need to do tedious JDBC coding and parsing of database-vendor specific error codes. Also, the JDBC package provides a way to do programmatic as well as declarative transaction management, not only for classes implementing special interfaces, but for all your POJOs (plain old java objects). The ORM package provides integration layers for popular object-relational mapping APIs, including JDO, Hibernate and iBatis. Using the ORM package you can use all those O/R-mappers in combination with all the other features Spring offers, like simple declarative transaction management mentioned before. Spring's AOP package provides an AOP Alliance compliant aspect-oriented programming implementation allowing you to define, for example, method-interceptors and pointcuts to cleanly decouple code implementing functionality that should logically speaking be separated. Using source-level metadata functionality you can incorporate all kinds of behavioral information into your code, a little like .NET attributes.
Introduction
Spring's Web package provides basic web-oriented integration features, such as multipart functionality, initialization of contexts using servlet listeners and a web-oriented application context. When using Spring together with WebWork or Struts, this is the package to integrate with. Spring's Web MVC package provides a Model-View-Controller implementation for web-applications. Spring's MVC implementation is not just any implementation, it provides a clean separation between domain model code and web forms and allows you to use all the other features of the Spring Framework like validation.
Typical full-fledged Spring web application A typical web application using most of Spring's features. Using TransactionProxyFactoryBeans the web application is fully transactional, just as it would be when using container managed transaction as provided by Enterprise JavaBeans. All your custom business logic can be implemented using simple POJOs, managed by Spring's Dependency Injection container. Additional services such as sending email and validation, independent of the web layer enable you to choose where to execute validation rules. Spring's ORM support is integrated with Hibernate, JDO and iBatis. Using for example HibernateDaoSupport, you can re-use your existing Hibernate mappings. 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.
Introduction
Spring middle-tier using a third-party web framework Sometimes the current circumstances do not allow you to completely switch to a different framework. Spring does not force you to use everything within it; it's not an all-or-nothing solution. Existing frontends using WebWork, Struts, Tapestry, or other UI frameworks can be integrated perfectly well with a Spring-based middle-tier, allowing you to use the transaction features that Spring offers. The only thing you need to do is wire up your business logic using an ApplicationContext and integrate your Web UI layer using a WebApplicationContext.
Remoting usage scenario When you need to access existing code via webservices, you can use Spring's Hessian-, Burlap-, Rmi- or JaxRpcProxyFactory classes. Enabling remote access to existing application is all of a sudden not that hard anymore.
Introduction
EJBs - Wrapping existing POJOs Spring also provides an access layer and abstraction layer for Enterprise JavaBeans, enabling you to reuse your existing POJOs and wrap them in Stateless Session Beans, for use in scalable failsafe web applications, that might need declarative security.
provides an advanced configuration mechanism capable of managing beans (objects) of any nature, using potentially any kind of storage facility. The ApplicationContext [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/context/ApplicationContext.html] builds on top of the BeanFactory and adds other functionality such as easier integration with Springs AOP features, message resource handling (for use in internationalization), event propagation, declarative mechanisms to create the ApplicationContext and optional parent contexts, and application-layer specific contexts such as the WebApplicationContext, among other enhancements. In short, the BeanFactory provides the configuration framework and basic functionality, while the ApplicationContext adds enhanced capabilities to it, some of them perhaps more J2EE and enterprise-centric. In general, an ApplicationContext is a complete superset of a BeanFactory, and any description of BeanFactory capabilities and behavior should be considered to apply to ApplicationContexts as well. Users are sometimes unsure whether BeanFactory or ApplicationContext are best suited for use in a particular situation. Normally when building most applications in a J2EE-environment, the best option is to use the ApplicationContext, since it offers all the features of the BeanFactory and adds on to it in terms of features, while also allowing a more declarative approach to use of some functionality, which is generally desirable. The main usage scenario when you might prefer to use the BeanFactory is when memory usage is the greatest concern (such as in an applet where every last kilobyte counts), and you don't need all the features of the ApplicationContext. This chapter is roughly divided into two parts, the first part covering the basic principles that apply to both the BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext. The second part will cover some of the features that only apply to the ApplicationContext.
is the actual container which instantiates, configures, and manages a number of beans. These beans typically collaborate with one another, and thus have dependencies between themselves. These dependencies are reflected in the configuration data used by the BeanFactory (although some dependencies may not be visible as configuration data, but rather be a function of programmatic interactions between beans at runtime). A BeanFactory is represented by the interface org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory, for which there are multiple implementations. The most commonly used simple BeanFactory implementation is org.springframework.beans.factory.xml.XmlBeanFactory. (This should be qualified with the reminder that Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 6
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext ApplicationContexts are a subclass of BeanFactory, and most users ultimately prefer to use XML variants of ApplicationContext). Although for most scenarios, almost all user code managed by the BeanFactory does not have to be aware of the BeanFactory, the BeanFactory does have to be instantiated somehow. This can happen via explicit user code such as:
InputStream is = new FileInputStream("beans.xml"); XmlBeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(is);
or
ClassPathResource res = new ClassPathResource("beans.xml"); XmlBeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(res);
or
ClassPathXmlApplicationContext appContext = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext( new String[] {"applicationContext.xml", "applicationContext-part2.xml"}); // of course, an ApplicationContext is just a BeanFactory BeanFactory factory = (BeanFactory) appContext;
For many usage scenarios, user code will not have to instantiate the BeanFactory, since Spring Framework code will do it. For example, the web layer provides support code to load a Spring ApplicationContext automatically as part of the normal startup process of a J2EE web-app. This declarative process is described here: While programmatic manipulation of BeanFactories will be described later, the following sections will concentrate on describing the configuration of BeanFactories. A BeanFactory configuration consists of, at its most basic level, definitions of one or more beans that the BeanFactory must manage. In an XmlBeanFactory, these are configured as one or more bean elements inside a top-level beans element.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE beans PUBLIC "-//SPRING//DTD BEAN//EN" "http://www.springframework.org/dtd/spring-beans.dtd"> <beans> <bean id="..." class="..."> ... </bean> <bean id="..." class="..."> ... </bean> ... </beans>
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext methods) constructor arguments and property values to set in the newly created bean. An example would be the number of connections to use in a bean that manages a connection pool (either specified as a property or as a constructor argument), or the pool size limit. other beans a bean needs to do its work, i.e. collaborators (also specified as properties or as constructor arguments). These can also be called dependencies.
The concepts listed above directly translate to a set of elements the bean definition consists of. Some of these element groups are listed below, along with a link to further documentation about each of them. Table 3.1. Bean definition explanation Feature class id and name singleton or prototype constructor arguments bean properties autowiring mode dependency checking mode initialization method destruction method More info Section 3.2.3, The bean class Section 3.2.4, The bean identifiers (id and name) Section 3.2.5, To singleton or not to singleton Section 3.3.1, Setting bean properties and collaborators Section 3.3.1, Setting bean properties and collaborators Section 3.3.6, Autowiring collaborators Section 3.3.7, Checking for dependencies Section 3.4.1, Lifecycle interfaces Section 3.4.1, Lifecycle interfaces
and its various sub-interfaces and implementations. However, it is very unlikely that most user code would ever work with a BeanDefinition. Besides bean definitions which contain information on how to create a bean, a bean factory can also allow to register existing bean instances. DefaultListableBeanFactory supports this through the registerSingleton method, as defined by the org.springframework.beans.factory.config.ConfigurableBeanFactory interface. Typical applications purely work with bean definitions, though.
with Spring. That is, the class being created does not need to implement any specific interfaces or be coded in a specific fashion. Just specifying the bean class should be enough. However, depending on what type of IoC you are going to use for that specific bean, you may need a default (empty) constructor. Additionally, the BeanFactory isn't limited to just managing true JavaBeans, it is also able to manage virtually any class you want it to manage. Most people using Spring prefer to have actual JavaBeans (having just a default (no-argument) constructor and appropriate setters and getters modeled after the properties) in the BeanFactory, but it it's also possible to have more exotic non-bean-style classes in your BeanFactory. If, for example, you need to use a legacy connection pool that absolutely does not adhere to the JavaBean specification, no worries, Spring can manage it as well. Using the XmlBeanFactory you can specify your bean class as follows:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"/> <bean name="anotherExample" class="examples.ExampleBeanTwo"/>
The mechanism for supplying (optional) arguments to the constructor, or setting properties of the object instance after it has been constructed, will be described shortly. 3.2.3.2. Bean creation via static factory method When defining a bean which is to be created using a static factory method, along with the class attribute which specifies the class containing the static factory method, another attribute named factory-method is needed to specify the name of the factory method itself. Spring expects to be able to call this method (with an optional list of arguments as described later) and get back a live object, which from that point on is treated as if it had been created normally via a constructor. One use for such a bean definition is to call static factories in legacy code. Following is an example of a bean definition which specifies that the bean is to be created by calling a factory-method. Note that the definition does not specify the type (class) of the returned object, only the class containing the factory method. In this example, createInstance must be a static method.
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean2" factory-method="createInstance"/>
The mechanism for supplying (optional) arguments to the factory method, or setting properties of the object instance after it has been returned from the factory, will be described shortly. 3.2.3.3. Bean creation via instance factory method Quite similar to using a static factory method to create a bean, is the use of an instance (non-static) factory method, where a factory method of an existing bean from the factory is called to create the new bean. To use this mechanism, the class attribute must be left empty, and the factory-bean attribute must specify the name of a bean in the current or an ancestor bean factory which contains the factory method. The factory method itself should still be set via the factory-method attribute. Following is an example:
<!-- The factory bean, which contains a method called createInstance --> <bean id="myFactoryBean" class="..."> ... </bean>
<!-- The bean to be created via the factory bean --> <bean id="exampleBean" factory-bean="myFactoryBean" factory-method="createInstance"/>
Although the mechanisms for setting bean properties are still to be discussed, one implication of this approach is that the factory bean itself can be managed and configured via Dependency Injection, by the container.
Note: when deploying a bean in the prototype mode, the lifecycle of the bean changes slightly. By definition, Spring cannot manage the complete lifecycle of a non-singleton/prototype bean, since after it is created, it is given to the client and the container does not keep track of it at all any longer. You can think of Spring's role when talking about a non-singleton/prototype bean as a replacement for the 'new' operator. Any lifecycle aspects past that point have to be handled by the client. The lifecycle of a bean in the BeanFactory is further
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The BeanFactory supports both of these variants for injecting dependencies into beans it manages. (It in fact also supports injecting setter-based dependencies after some dependencies have already been supplied via the constructor approach.) The configuration for the dependencies comes in the form of a BeanDefinition, which is used together with JavaBeans PropertyEditors to know how to convert properties from one format to another. The actual values being passed around are done in the form of PropertyValue objects. However, most users of Spring will not be dealing with these classes directly (i.e. programmatically), but rather with an XML definition file which will be converted internally into instances of these classes, and used to load an entire BeanFactory or ApplicationContext. Bean dependency resolution generally happens as follows: 1. 2. The BeanFactory is created and initialized with a configuration which describes all the beans. Most Spring users use a BeanFactory or ApplicationContext variant which supports XML format configuration files. Each bean has dependencies expressed in the form of properties, constructor arguments, or arguments to the static-factory method when that is used instead of a normal constructor. These dependencies will be provided to the bean, when the bean is actually created. 11
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext 3. Each property or constructor-arg is either an actual definition of the value to set, or a reference to another bean in the BeanFactory. In the case of the ApplicationContext, the reference can be to a bean in a parent ApplicationContext. Each property or constructor argument which is a value must be able to be converted from whatever format it was specified in, to the actual type of that property or constructor argument. By default Spring can convert a value supplied in string format to all built-in types, such as int, long, String, boolean, etc. Additionally, when talking about the XML based BeanFactory variants (including the ApplicationContext variants), these have built-in support for defining Lists, Maps, Sets, and Properties collection types. Additionally, Spring uses JavaBeans PropertyEditor definitions to be able to convert string values to other, arbitrary types. (You can provide the BeanFactory with your own PropertyEditor definitions to be able to convert your own custom types; more information about PropertyEditors and how to manually add custom ones, can be found in Section 3.9, Registering additional custom PropertyEditors). When a bean property is a Java Class type, Spring allows you to specify the value for that property as a string value which is the name of the class, and the ClassEditor PropertyEditor, which is built-in, will take care of converting that class name to an actual Class instance. It is important to realize that Spring validates the configuration of each bean in the BeanFactory when the BeanFactory is created, including the validation that properties which are bean references are actually referring to valid beans (i.e. the beans being referred to are also defined in the BeanFactory, or in the case of ApplicationContext, a parent context). However, the bean properties themselves are not set until the bean is actually created. For beans which are singleton and set to be pre-instantiated (such as singleton beans in an ApplicationContext), creation happens at the time that the BeanFactory is created, but otherwise this is only when the bean is requested. When a bean actually has to be created, this will potentially cause a graph of other beans to be created, as its dependencies and its dependencies' dependencies (and so on) are created and assigned. You can generally trust Spring to do the right thing. It will pick up configuration issues, including references to non-existent beans and circular dependencies, at BeanFactory load-time. It will actually set properties and resolve dependencies (i.e. create those dependencies if needed) as late as possible, which is when the bean is actually created. This does mean that a BeanFactory which has loaded correctly, can later generate an exception when you request a bean, if there is a problem creating that bean or one of its dependencies. This could happen if the bean throws an exception as a result of a missing or invalid property, for example. This potentially delayed visibility of some configuration issues is why ApplicationContext by default pre-instantiates singleton beans. At the cost of some upfront time and memory to create these beans before they are actually needed, you find out about configuration issues when the ApplicationContext is created, not later. If you wish, you can still override this default behavior and set any of these singleton beans to lazy-load (not be pre-instantiated).
4.
5.
6.
Some examples: First, an example of using the BeanFactory for setter-based dependency injection. Below is a small part of an XmlBeanFactory configuration file specifying some bean definitions. Following is the code for the actual main bean itself, showing the appropriate setters declared.
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <property name="beanOne"><ref bean="anotherExampleBean"/></property> <property name="beanTwo"><ref bean="yetAnotherBean"/></property> <property name="integerProperty"><value>1</value></property> </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;
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public void setBeanOne(AnotherBean beanOne) { this.beanOne = beanOne; } public void setBeanTwo(YetAnotherBean beanTwo) { this.beanTwo = beanTwo; } public void setIntegerProperty(int i) { this.i = i; } }
As you can see, setters have been declared to match against the properties specified in the XML file. (The properties from the XML file, directly relate to the PropertyValues object from the RootBeanDefinition) Now, an example of using the BeanFactory for IoC type 3 (constructor-based dependency injection). Below is a snippet from an XML configuration that specifies constructor arguments and the actual bean code, showing the constructor:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg><ref bean="anotherExampleBean"/></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg><ref bean="yetAnotherBean"/></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg type="int"><value>1</value></constructor-arg> </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; } }
As you can see, the constructor arguments specified in the bean definition will be used to pass in as arguments to the constructor of the ExampleBean. Now consider a variant of this 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 bean="anotherExampleBean"/></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg><ref bean="yetAnotherBean"/></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg><value>1</value></constructor-arg> </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
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// 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; } }
Note that arguments to the static factory method are supplied via constructor-arg elements, exactly the same as if a constructor had actually been used. These arguments are optional. Also, it is important to realize that the type of the class being returned by the factory method does not have to be of the same type as the class which contains the static factory method, although in this example it is. An instance (non-static) factory method, mentioned previously, would be used in an essentially identical fashion (aside from the use of the factory-bean attribute instead of the class attribute), so will not be detailed here.
3.3.2.1. Constructor Argument Type Matching The above scenario can use type matching with simple types by explicitly specifying the type of the constructor argument using the type attribute. For example:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg type="int"><value>7500000</value></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg type="java.lang.String"><value>42</value></constructor-arg> </bean>
3.3.2.2. Constructor Argument Index Constructor arguments can have their index specified explicitly by use of the index attribute. For example:
<bean id="exampleBean" class="examples.ExampleBean"> <constructor-arg index="0"><value>7500000</value></constructor-arg> <constructor-arg index="1"><value>42</value></constructor-arg> </bean>
As well as solving the ambiguity problem of multiple simple values, specifying an index also solves the problem of ambiguity where a constructor may have two arguments of the same type. Note that the index is 0 based.
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Specifying a constructor argument index is the preferred way of performing constructor IoC.
The null element is used to handle null values. Spring treats empty arguments for properties and the like as empty Strings. The following XmlBeanFactory configuration:
<bean class="ExampleBean"> <property name="email"><value></value></property> </bean>
results in the email property being set to "", equivalent to the java code: exampleBean.setEmail(""). The special <null> element may be used to indicate a null value, so that:
<bean class="ExampleBean"> <property name="email"><null/></property> </bean>
is equivalent to the java code: exampleBean.setEmail(null). The list, set, map, and props elements allow properties and arguments of Java type List, Set, Map, and Properties, respectively, to be defined and set.
<beans> ... <bean id="moreComplexObject" class="example.ComplexObject"> <!-- results in a setPeople(java.util.Properties) call --> <property name="people"> <props> <prop key="HarryPotter">The magic property</prop> <prop key="JerrySeinfeld">The funny property</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>
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<entry key="yup an entry"> <value>just some string</value> </entry> <entry key="yup a ref"> <ref bean="myDataSource"/> </entry> </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> </beans>
Note that the value of a Map entry, or a set value, can also again be any of the elements:
(bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null)
A bean element inside the property element is used to define a bean value inline, instead of referring to a bean defined elsewhere in the BeanFactory. The inline bean definition does not need to have any id defined.
<bean id="outer" class="..."> <!-- Instead of using a reference to target, just use an inner bean --> <property name="target"> <bean class="com.mycompany.PersonImpl"> <property name="name"><value>Tony</value></property> <property name="age"><value>51</value></property> </bean> </property> </bean>
An idref element is simply a shorthand and error-proof way to set a property to the String id or name of another bean in the container.
<bean id="theTargetBean" class="..."> </bean> <bean id="theClientBean" class="..."> <property name="targetName"> <idref bean="theTargetBean"/> </property> </bean>
The main reason the first form is preferable to the second is that using the idref tag will allow Spring to validate at deployment time that the other bean actually exists. In the second variation, the class who's targetName property is forced to do its own validation, and that will only happen when that class is actually instantiated by Spring, possibly long after the container is actually deployed. Additionally, if the bean being referred to is in the same actual XML file, and the bean name is the bean id, the local attribute may be used, which will allow the XML parser itself to validate the bean name even earlier, at XML document parse time.
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The ref element is the final element allowed inside a property definition element. It is used to set the value of the specified property to be a reference to another bean managed by the container, a collaborator, so to speak. As mentioned in a previous section, the referred-to bean is considered to be a dependency of the bean who's property is being set, and will be initialized on demand as needed (if it is a singleton bean it may have already been initialized by the container) before the property is set. All references are ultimately just a reference to another object, but there are 3 variations on how the id/name of the other object may be specified, which determines how scoping and validation is handled. Specifying the target bean by using the bean attribute of the ref tag is the most general form, and will allow creating a reference to any bean in the same BeanFactory/ApplicationContext (whether or not in the same XML file), or parent BeanFactory/ApplicationContext. The value of the bean 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.
<ref bean="someBean"/>
Specifying the target bean by using the local attribute leverages the ability of the XML parser to validate XML id references within the same file. The value of the local attribute must be the same as the id attribute of the target bean. The XML parser will issue an error if no matching element is found in the same file. As such, using the local variant is the best choice (in order to know about errors are early as possible) if the target bean is in the same XML file.
<ref local="someBean"/>
Specifying the target bean by using the parent attribute allows a reference to be created to a bean which is in a parent BeanFactory (or ApplicationContext) of the current BeanFactory (or ApplicationContext). 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 BeanFactory or ApplicationContext to the current one. The main use of this bean reference variant is when there is a need to wrap an existing bean in a parent context with some sort of proxy (which may have the same name as the parent), and needs the original object so it may wrap it.
<ref parent="someBean"/>
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Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext solution since the bean code is then aware of and coupled to Spring. Method Injection, an advanced feature of the BeanFactory, allows this use case to be handled in a clean fashion, along with some other scenarios. 3.3.4.1. Lookup method Injection Lookup method injection refers to the ability of the container to override abstract or concrete methods on managed beans in the container, to return the result of looking up another named bean in the container. The lookup will typically be of a non-singleton bean as per the scenario described above (although it can also be a singleton). Spring implements this through a dynamically generated subclass overriding the method, using bytecode generation via the CGLIB library. In the client class containing the method to be injected, the method definition must be an abstract (or concrete) definition in this form:
protected abstract SingleShotHelper createSingleShotHelper();
If the method is not abstract, Spring will simply override the existing implementation. In the XmlBeanFactory case, you instruct Spring to inject/override this method to return a particular bean from the container, by using the lookup-method element inside the bean definition. For example:
<!-- a stateful bean deployed as a prototype (non-singleton) --> <bean id="singleShotHelper class="..." singleton="false"> </bean> <!-- myBean uses singleShotHelper --> <bean id="myBean" class="..."> <lookup-method name="createSingleShotHelper" bean="singleShotHelper"/> <property> ... </property> </bean>
The bean identified as myBean will call its own method createSingleShotHelper whenever it needs a new instance of the singleShotHelper bean. It is important to note that the person deploying the beans must be careful to deploy singleShotHelper as a non-singleton (if that is actually what is needed). If it is deployed as a singleton (either explicitly, or relying on the default true setting for this flag), the same instance of singleShotHelper will be returned each time! Note that lookup method injection can be combined with Constructor Injection (supplying optional constructor arguments to the bean being constructed), and also with Setter Injection (settings properties on the bean being constructed). 3.3.4.2. Arbitrary method replacement A less commonly 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 (which describes this somewhat advanced feature), until this functionality is actually needed. In an XmlBeanFactory, the replaced-method element may be used 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 {
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public String computeValue(String input) { ... some real code } ... some other methods }
A class implementing the org.springframework.beans.factory.support.MethodReplacer interface is needed to provide the new method definition.
/** meant to be used to override the existing computeValue 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 BeanFactory deployment definition to deploy the original class and specify the method override would look like:
<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"> </bean>
One or more contained arg-type elements within the replaced-method element may be used to indicate the method signature of the method being overridden. Note that the signature for the arguments is actually only needed in the case that the method is actually overloaded and there are multiple variants within the class. For convenience, the type string for an argument may be a substring of the fully qualified type name. For example, all the following would match java.lang.String.
java.lang.String String Str
Since the number of arguments is often enough to distinguish between each possible choice, this shortcut can save a lot of typing, by just using the shortest string which will match an argument.
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byName
byType
constructor autodetect
Note that explicit dependencies in property and constructor-arg elements always override autowiring. Autowire behavior can be combined with dependency checking, which will be performed after all autowiring has been completed. It's important to understand the pros and cons around autowiring. Some advantages of autowiring:
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It can significantly reduce the volume of configuration required. (However, mechanisms such as the use of a configuration "template," discussed elsewhere in this chapter, are also valuable here.) It can cause configuration to keep itself up to date as your objects evolve. For example, if you need to add an additional dependency to a class, that dependency can be satisfied automatically without the need to modify configuration. Thus there may be a strong case for autowiring during development, without ruling out the option of switching to explicit wiring when the code base becomes more stable.
Some disadvantages of autowiring: It's more magical than explicit wiring. Although, as noted in the above table, Spring is careful to avoid guessing in case of ambiguity which might have unexpected results, the relationships between your Spring-managed objects is no longer explicitly documented. Wiring information may not be available to tools that may generate documentation from a Spring application context. Autowiring by type will only work when there is a single bean definition of the type specified by the setter method or constructor argument. You need to use explicit wiring if there is any potential ambiguity.
There is no "wrong" or "right" answer in all cases. We recommend a degree of consistency across a project. For example, if autowiring is not used in general, it might be confusing to developers to use it just to one or two bean definitions.
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Note: generally, the use of the InitializingBean marker interface can be avoided (and is discouraged since it unnecessarily couples the code to Spring). A bean definition provides support for a generic initialization method to be specified. In the case of the XmlBeanFactory, this is done via the init-method attribute. For example, the following definition:
<bean id="exampleInitBean" class="examples.ExampleBean" init-method="init"/> public class ExampleBean { public void init() { // do some initialization work } }
but does not couple the code to Spring. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 22
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext 3.4.1.2. DisposableBean / destroy-method Implementing the org.springframework.beans.factory.DisposableBean interface allows a bean to get a callback when the BeanFactory containing it is destroyed. The DisposableBean interface specifies one method:
/** * Invoked by a BeanFactory on destruction of a singleton. * @throws Exception in case of shutdown errors. * Exceptions will get logged but not re-thrown to allow * other beans to release their resources too. */ void destroy() throws Exception;
Note: generally, the use of the DisposableBean marker interface can be avoided (and is discouraged since it unnecessarily couples the code to Spring). A bean definition provides support for a generic destroy method to be specified. In the case of the XmlBeanFactory, this is done via the destroy-method attribute. 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 closing connection) } }
but does not couple the code to Spring. Important note: when deploying a bean in the prototype mode, the lifecycle of the bean changes slightly. By definition, Spring cannot manage the complete lifecycle of a non-singleton/prototype bean, since after it is created, it is given to the client and the container does not keep track of it at all any longer. You can think of Spring's role when talking about a non-singleton/prototype bean as a replacement for the 'new' operator. Any lifecycle aspects past that point have to be handled by the client. The lifecycle of a bean in the BeanFactory is further described in Section 3.4.1, Lifecycle interfaces.
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This allows beans to manipulate the BeanFactory that created them programmatically, through the org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory interface, or by casting the reference to a known subclass of this which exposes additional functionality. Primarily this would consist of programmatic retrieval of other beans. While there are cases when this capability is useful, it should generally be avoided, since it couples the code to Spring, and does not follow the Inversion of Control style, where collaborators are provided to beans as properties. 3.4.2.2. BeanNameAware If a bean implements the org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanNameAware interface and is deployed in a BeanFactory, the BeanFactory will call the bean through this interface to inform the bean of the id it was deployed under. The callback will be Invoked after population of normal bean properties but before an init callback like InitializingBean's afterPropertiesSet or a custom init-method.
3.4.3. FactoryBean
The org.springframework.beans.factory.FactoryBean interface is to be implemented by objects that are themselves factories. The BeanFactory interface provides three method:
Object getObject():
has to return 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(): has to return true if this FactoryBean returns singletons, false otherwise Class getObjectType(): has to return either the object type returned by the getObject() method or null if the type isn't known in advance
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A child bean definition will use 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, i.e. it must accept the parent's property values. A child bean definition will inherit constructor argument values, property values and method overrides from the parent, with the option to add new values. If init method, destroy method and/or static factory method are specified, they will override the corresponding parent settings. The remaining settings will always be taken from the child definition: depends on, autowire mode, dependency check, singleton, lazy init. Note that in the example above, we have explicitly marked the parent bean definition as abstract by using the abstract attribute. In the case that the parent definition does not specify a class:
<bean id="inheritedTestBeanWithoutClass"> <property name="name"><value>parent</value></property> <property name="age"><value>1</value></property> </bean> <bean id="inheritsWithClass" class="org.springframework.beans.DerivedTestBean" parent="inheritedTestBeanWithoutClass" init-method="initialize"> <property name="name"><value>override</value></property> <!-- age should inherit value of 1 from parent --> </bean>
the parent bean cannot get instantiated on its own since it is incomplete, and it's also considered abstract. When a definition is considered abstract like this (explicitly or implicitly), it's usable just as a pure template or abstract bean definition that will serve as 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, will result in an error. Similarly, the container's internal preInstantiateSingletons method will completely ignore bean definitions which are considered abstract. Important Note: Application contexts (but not simple bean factories) will by default pre-instantiate all singletons. Therefore it is important (at least for singleton beans) that if you have a (parent) bean definition which you intend to use only as a template, and this definition specifies a class, you must make sure to set the abstract attribute to true, otherwise the application context will actually pre-instantiate it.
Basically that's all there is to it. Using getBean(String) you can retrieve instances of your beans. You'll get a reference to the same bean if you defined it as a singleton (the default) or you'll get a new instance each time if you set singleton to false. The client-side view of the BeanFactory is surprisingly simple. The BeanFactory interface has only five methods for clients to call:
boolean containsBean(String):
returns true if the BeanFactory contains a bean definition or bean instance that matches the given name Object getBean(String): returns an instance of the bean registered under the given name. Depending on 25
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext how the bean was configured by the BeanFactory configuration, either a singleton and thus shared instance or a newly created bean will be returned. A BeansException will be thrown when either the bean could not be found (in which case it'll be a NoSuchBeanDefinitionException), or an exception occurred while instantiating and preparing the bean Object getBean(String,Class): returns a bean, registered under the given name. The bean returned will be cast to the given Class. If the bean could not be cast, corresponding exceptions will be thrown (BeanNotOfRequiredTypeException). Furthermore, all rules of the getBean(String) method apply (see above) boolean isSingleton(String): determines whether or not the bean definition or bean instance registered under the given name is a singleton or a prototype. If no bean corresponding to the given name could not be found, an exception will be thrown (NoSuchBeanDefinitionException) String[] getAliases(String): Return the aliases for the given bean name, if any were defined in the bean definition
It is important to know that a BeanFactory treats bean post-processors slightly differently than an ApplicationContext. An ApplicationContext will automatically detect any beans which are deployed into it which implement the BeanPostProcessor interface, and register them as post-processors, to be then called appropriately by the factory on bean creation. Nothing else needs to be done other than deploying the post-processor in a similar fashion to any other bean. On the other hand, when using plain BeanFactories, bean post-processors have to manually be explicitly registered, with a code sequence such as the following:
ConfigurableBeanFactory bf = new .....; // create BeanFactory ... // now register some beans // now register any needed BeanPostProcessors MyBeanPostProcessor pp = new MyBeanPostProcessor(); bf.addBeanPostProcessor(pp); // now start using the factory ...
Since this manual registration step is not convenient, and ApplictionContexts are functionally supersets of BeanFactories, it is generally recommended that ApplicationContext variants are used when bean post-processors are needed.
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In a BeanFactory, the process of applying a BeanFactoryPostProcessor is manual, and will be similar to this:
XmlBeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(new FileSystemResource("beans.xml")); // create placeholderconfigurer to bring in some property // values from a Properties file PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer cfg = new PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer(); cfg.setLocation(new FileSystemResource("jdbc.properties")); // now actually do the replacement cfg.postProcessBeanFactory(factory);
An ApplicationContext will detect any beans which are deployed into it which implement the BeanFactoryPostProcessor interface, and automatically use them as bean factory post-processors, at the appropriate time. Nothing else needs to be done other than deploying these post-processor in a similar fashion to any other bean. Since this manual step is not convenient, and ApplictionContexts are functionally supersets of BeanFactories, it is generally recommended that ApplicationContext variants are used when bean factory post-processors are needed.
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To use this with a BeanFactory, the bean factory post-processor is manually executed on it:
XmlBeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(new FileSystemResource("beans.xml")); PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer cfg = new PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer(); cfg.setLocation(new FileSystemResource("jdbc.properties")); cfg.postProcessBeanFactory(factory);
Note that ApplicationContexts are able to automatically recognize and apply beans deployed in them which implement BeanFactoryPostProcessor. This means that as described here, applying PropertyPlaceholderConfiguer is much more convenient when using an ApplicationContext. For this reason, it is recommended that users wishing to use this or other bean factory postprocessors use an ApplicationContext instead of a BeanFactory. The PropertyPlaceHolderConfigurer doesn't only look for properties in the Properties file you specify, but also checks against the Java System properties if it cannot find a property you are trying to use. This behavior can be customized by setting the systemPropertiesMode property of the configurer. It has three values, one to tell the configurer to always override, one to let it never override and one to let it override only if the property cannot be found in the properties file specified. Please consult the JavaDoc for the PropertiesPlaceHolderConfigurer for more information.
This example file would be usable against a BeanFactory definition which contains a bean in it called dataSource, which has driver and url properties.
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PropertyEditors to convert these Strings to the complex type of the property. Spring pre-registers a number of custom PropertyEditors (for example, to convert a classname expressed as a string into a real Class object). Additionally, Java's standard JavaBeans PropertyEditor lookup mechanism allows a PropertyEditor for a class to be simply named appropriately and placed in the same package as the class it provides support for, to be found automatically. If there is a need to register other custom PropertyEditors, there are several mechanisms available. The most manual approach, which is not normally convenient or recommended, is to simply use the registerCustomEditor() method of the ConfigurableBeanFactory interface, assuming you have a BeanFactory reference. The more convenient mechanism is to use a special bean factory post-processor called CustomEditorConfigurer. Although bean factory post-processors can be used semi-manually with BeanFactories, this one has a nested property setup, so it is strongly recommended that, as described here, it is used with the ApplicationContext, where it may be deployed in similar fashion to any other bean, and automatically detected and applied. Note that all bean factories and application contexts automatically use a number of built-in property editors, through their use of something called a BeanWrapper to handle property conversions. The standard property editors that the BeanWrapper registers are listed in the next chapter. Additionally, ApplicationContexts also override or add an additional 3 editors to handle resource lookups in a manner appropriate to the specific application context type. Thee are: InputStreamEditor, ResourceEditor and URLEditor.
which enhances BeanFactory functionality in a more framework-oriented style. Many users will use ApplicationContext in a completely declarative fashion, not even having to create it manually, but instead relying on support classes such as ContextLoader to automatically start an ApplicationContext as part of the normal startup process of a J2EE web-app. Of course, it is still possible to programmatically create an ApplicationContext. The basis for the context package is the ApplicationContext interface, located in the org.springframework.context package. Deriving from the BeanFactory interface, it provides all the functionality of BeanFactory. To allow working in a more framework-oriented fashion, using layering and hierarchical contexts, the context package also provides the following: MessageSource, providing access to messages in, i18n-style Access to resources, such as URLs and files Event propagation to beans implementing the ApplicationListener interface Loading of multiple (hierarchical) contexts, allowing each to be focused on one particular layer, for example the web layer of an application
As the ApplicationContext includes all functionality of the BeanFactory, it is generally recommended that it be used over the BeanFactory, except for a few limited situations such as perhaps in an Applet, where memory consumption might be critical, and a few extra kilobytes might make a difference. The following sections described functionality which ApplicationContext adds to basic BeanFactory capabilities.
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the basic method used to retrieve a message from the MessageSource. When no message is found for the specified locale, the default message is used. Any arguments passed in are used as replacement values, using the MessageFormat functionality provided by the standard library. String getMessage (String code, Object[] args, Locale loc): essentially the same as the previous method, but with one difference: no default message can be specified; if the message cannot be found, a NoSuchMessageException is thrown. String getMessage(MessageSourceResolvable resolvable, Locale locale): all properties used in the methods above are also wrapped in a class named MessageSourceResolvable, which you can use via this method.
When an ApplicationContext gets loaded, it automatically searches for a MessageSource bean defined in the context. The bean has to have the name messageSource. If such a bean is found, all calls to the methods described above will be delegated to the message source that was found. If no message source was found, the ApplicationContext attempts to see if it has a parent containing a bean with the same name. If so, it uses that bean as the MessageSource. If it can't find any source for messages, an empty StaticMessageSource will be instantiated in order to be able to accept calls to the methods defined above. Spring currently provides two MessageSource implementations. These are the ResourceBundleMessageSource and the StaticMessageSource. Both implement NestingMessageSource in order to do nested messaging. The StaticMessageSource is hardly ever used but provides programmatic ways to add messages to the source. The ResourceBundleMessageSource is more interesting and is the one we will provides an example for:
<beans> <bean id="messageSource" class="org.springframework.context.support.ResourceBundleMessageSource"> <property name="basenames"> <list> <value>format</value> <value>exceptions</value> <value>windows</value> </list> </property> </bean> </beans>
This assumes you have three resource bundles defined on your classpath called format, exceptions and windows. Using the JDK standard way of resolving messages through ResourceBundles, any request to resolve a message will be handled. TODO: SHOW AN EXAMPLE
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Event handling in the ApplicationContext is provided through the ApplicationEvent class and ApplicationListener interface. If a bean which implements the ApplicationListener interface is deployed into the context, every time an ApplicationEvent gets published to the ApplicationContext, that bean will be notified. Essentially, this is the standard Observer design pattern. Spring provides three standard events: Table 3.4. Built-in Events Event
ContextRefreshedEvent
Explanation Event published when the ApplicationContext is initialized or refreshed. Initialized here means that all beans are loaded, singletons are pre-instantiated and the ApplicationContext is ready for use Event published when the ApplicationContext is closed, using the close() method on the ApplicationContext. Closed here means that singletons are destroyed A web-specific event telling all beans that a HTTP request has been serviced (i.e. this will be published after the request has been finished). Note that this event is only applicable for web applications using Spring's DispatcherServlet
ContextClosedEvent
RequestHandledEvent
Implementing custom events can be done as well. Simply call the publishEvent() method on the ApplicationContext, specifying a parameter which is an instance of your custom event class implementing ApplicationEvent. Event listeners receive events synchronously. This means the publishEvent() method blocks until all listeners have finished processing the event. Furthermore, when a listener receives an event it operates inside the transaction context of the publisher, if a transaction context is available. Let's look at an example. First, the ApplicationContext:
<bean id="emailer" class="example.EmailBean"> <property name="blackList"> <list> <value>[email protected]</value> <value>[email protected]</value> <value>[email protected]</value> </list> </property> </bean> <bean id="blackListListener" class="example.BlackListNotifier"> <property name="notificationAddress"> <value>[email protected]</value> </property> </bean>
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return; } // send email } } public class BlackListNotifier implement ApplicationListener { /** notification address */ private String notificationAddress; public void setNotificationAddress(String notificationAddress) { this.notificationAddress = notificationAddress; } public void onApplicationEvent(ApplicationEvent evt) { if (evt instanceof BlackListEvent) { // notify appropriate person } } }
Of course, this particular example could probably be implemented in better ways (perhaps by using AOP features), but it should be sufficient to illustrate the basic event mechanism.
Explanation Opens an InputStream on the resource and returns it Checks if the resource exists, returning false if it doesn't Will return true is multiple streams cannot be opened for this resource. This will be false for some resources, but file-based resources for instance, cannot be read multiple times concurrently Returns a description of the resource, often the fully qualified file name or the actual URL
getDescription()
A couple of Resource implementations are provided by Spring. They all need a String representing the actual location of the resource. Based upon that String, Spring will automatically choose the right Resource implementation for you. When asking an ApplicationContext for a resource first of all Spring will inspect the resource location you're specifying and look for any prefixes. Depending on the implementation of the ApplicationContext more or less Resource implementations are available. Resources can best be configured by using the ResourceEditor and for example the XmlBeanFactory.
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The BeanFactory already offers a number of mechanisms to control the lifecycle of beans deployed in it (such as marker interfaces like InitializingBean or DisposableBean, their configuration only equivalents such as the init-method and destroy-method attributes in an XmlBeanFactory config, and bean post-processors. In an ApplicationContext, all of these still work, but additional mechanisms are added for customizing behavior of beans and the container.
Consider a user class ExoticType, and another class DependsOnExoticType which needs ExoticType set as a property:
public class ExoticType { private String name; public ExoticType(String name) { this.name = name; } } public class DependsOnExoticType { private ExoticType type; public void setType(ExoticType type) { this.type = type; } }
When things are properly set up, we want to be able to assign the type property as a string, which a PropertyEditor will behind the scenes convert into a real ExoticType object.:
<bean id="sample" class="example.DependsOnExoticType"> <property name="type"><value>aNameForExoticType</value></property> </bean>
Finally, we use CustomEditorConfigurer to register the new PropertyEditor with the ApplicationContext, which will then be able to use it as needed.:
<bean id="customEditorConfigurer" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.CustomEditorConfigurer"> <property name="customEditors"> <map> <entry key="example.ExoticType"> <bean class="example.ExoticTypeEditor"> <property name="format"> <value>upperCase</value> </property> </bean> </entry> </map> </property> </bean>
is a FactoryBean that evaluates a property path on a given target object. The target 34
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext object can be specified directly or via a bean name. This value may then be used in another bean definition as a property value or constructor argument. Here's an example where a path is used against another bean, by name:
// target bean to be referenced by name <bean id="person" class="org.springframework.beans.TestBean" singleton="false"> <property name="age"><value>10</value></property> <property name="spouse"> <bean class="org.springframework.beans.TestBean"> <property name="age"><value>11</value></property> </bean> </property> </bean> // will result in 11, which is the value of property 'spouse.age' of bean 'person' <bean id="theAge" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPathFactoryBean"> <property name="targetBeanName"><value>person</value></property> <property name="propertyPath"><value>spouse.age</value></property> </bean>
There is also a shortcut form, where the bean name is the property path.
// will result in 10, which is the value of property 'age' of bean 'person' <bean id="person.age" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPathFactoryBean"/>
This form does mean that there is no choice in the name of the bean, any reference to it will also have to use the same id, which is the path. Of curse, if used as an inner bean, there is no need to refer to it at all:
<bean id="..." class="..."> <proprty name="age"> <bean id="person.age" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertyPathFactoryBean"/> </property> </bean>
The result type may be specifically set in the actual definition. This is not necessary for most use cases, but can be of use for some. Please see the JavaDocs for more info on this feature.
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There's also a convenience usage form where the static field is specified as a bean name:
<bean id="java.sql.Connection.TRANSACTION_SERIALIZABLE" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.FieldRetrievingFactoryBean"/>
This means there is no longer any choice in what the bean id is (so any other bean that refers to it will also have to use this longer name), but this form is very concise to define, and very convenient to use as an inner bean since the id doesn't have to be specified for the bean reference:
<bean id="..." class="..."> <proprty name="isolation"> <bean id="java.sql.Connection.TRANSACTION_SERIALIZABLE" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.FieldRetrievingFactoryBean"/> </property> </bean>
It's also possible to access a non-static field of another bean, as described in the JavaDocs.
3.16. Invoking another method and optionally using the return value.
it is sometimes necessary to call a static or non-static method in one class, just to perform some sort of initialization, before some other class is used. Additionally, it is sometimes necessary to set a property on a bean, as the result of a method call on another bean in the container, or a static method call on any arbitrary class. For both of these purposes, a helper class called MethodInvokingFactoryBean may be used. This is a FactoryBean which returns a value which is the result of a static or instance method invocation. We would however recommend that for the second use case, factory-methods, described previously, are a better all around choice. An example (in an XML based BeanFactory definition) of a bean definition which uses this class to force some sort of static initialization:
<bean id="force-init" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.MethodInvokingFactoryBean"> <property name="staticMethod"><value>com.example.MyClass.initialize</value></property> </bean> <bean id="bean1" class="..." depends-on="force-init"> ... </bean>
Note that the definition for bean1 has used the depends-on attribute to refer to the force-init bean, which will trigger initializing force-init first, and thus calling the static initializer method, when bean1 is first initialized. Here's an example of a bean definition which uses this class to call a static factory method:
<bean id="myClass" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.MethodInvokingFactoryBean"> <property name="staticMethod"><value>com.whatever.MyClassFactory.getInstance</value></property> </bean>
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An example of calling a static method then an instance method to get at a Java System property. Somewhat verbose, but it works.
<bean id="sysProps" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.MethodInvokingFactoryBean"> <property name="targetClass"><value>java.lang.System</value></property> <property name="targetMethod"><value>getProperties</value></property> </bean> <bean id="javaVersion" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.MethodInvokingFactoryBean"> <property name="targetObject"><ref local="sysProps"/></property> <property name="targetMethod"><value>getProperty</value></property> <property name="arguments"> <list> <value>java.version</value> </list> </property> </bean>
Note that as it is expected to be used mostly for accessing factory methods, MethodInvokingFactoryBean by default operates in a singleton fashion. The first request by the container for the factory to produce an object will cause the specified method invocation, whose return value will be cached and returned for the current and subsequent requests. An internal singleton property of the factory may be set to false, to cause it to invoke the target method each time it is asked for an object. A static target method may be specified by setting the targetMethod property to a String representing the static method name, with targetClass specifying the Class that the static method is defined on. Alternatively, a target instance method may be specified, by setting the targetObject property as the target object, and the targetMethod property as the name of the method to call on that target object. Arguments for the method invocation may be specified by setting the args property.
In this example, external bean definitions are being loaded from 3 files, services.xml, messageSource.xml, and themeSource.xml. All location paths are considered relative to the definition file doing the importing, so Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 37
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext in this case 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 actually ignored, but given that these are considered relative paths, it is probably better form not to use the slash at all.
services.xml
The contents of the files being imported must be fully valid XML bean definition files according to the DTD, including the top level beans element.
The listener inspects the contextConfigLocation parameter. If it doesn't exist, it'll use /WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml as a default. When it does exist, it'll separate the String using predefined delimiters (comma, semi-colon and space) and use the values as locations where application contexts will be searched for. The ContextLoaderServlet can - as said - be used instead of the ContextLoaderListener. The servlet will use the contextConfigLocation parameter just as the listener does.
Beans, BeanFactory and the ApplicationContext a real object to delegate to, then inversion of control has still been achieved for the majority of the code (the object coming out of the BeanFactory); thus most code is still unaware of the container or how it is accessed, and remains uncoupled from other code, with all ensuing benefits. EJBs may also use this stub/proxy approach to delegate to a plain java implementation object, coming out of a BeanFactory. While the BeanFactory ideally does not have to be a singleton, it may be unrealistic in terms of memory usage or initialization times (when using beans in the BeanFactory such as a Hibernate SessionFactory) for each bean to use its own, non-singleton BeanFactory. As another example, in a complex J2EE apps with multiple layers (i.e. various JAR files, EJBs, and WAR files packaged as an EAR), with each layer having its own ApplicationContext definition (effectively forming a hierarchy), the preferred approach when there is only one web-app (WAR) in the top hierarchy is to simply create one composite ApplicationContext from the multiple XML definition files from each layer. All the ApplicationContext variants may be constructed from multiple definition files in this fashion. However, if there are multiple sibling web-apps at the top of the hierarchy, it is problematic to create an ApplicationContext for each web-app which consists of mostly identical bean definitions from lower layers, as there may be issues due to increased memory usage, issues with creating multiple copies of beans which take a long time to initialize (i.e. a Hibernate SessionFactory), and possible issues due to side-effects. As an alternative, classes such as ContextSingletonBeanFactoryLocator [???] or SingletonBeanFactoryLocator may be used to demand load multiple hierarchical (i.e. one is a parent of another) BeanFactories or ApplicationContexts in an effectively singleton fashion, which may then be used as the parents of the web-app ApplicationContexts. The result is that bean definitions for lower layers are loaded only as needed, and loaded only once.
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/beans/factory/access/SingletonBeanFactoryLo
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/beans/factory/access/SingletonBeanFactoryLo
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PropertyEditors, data binding, validation and the and the BeanFactory. The way the BeanWrapper works is partly indicated by its name: it wraps a bean to perform actions on that bean, like setting and retrieving properties.
Explanation Indicates the property name corresponding to the methods getName() or isName() and setName() Indicates the nested property name of the property account corresponding e.g. to the methods getAccount().setName() or getAccount().getName() Indicates the third element of the indexed property account. Indexed properties can be of type array, list or other naturally ordered collection Indicates the value of the map entry indexed by the key COMPANYNAME of the Map property account
account.name
account[2]
account[COMPANYNAME]
Below you'll find some examples of working with the BeanWrapper to get and set properties. Note: this part is not important to you if you're not planning to work with the BeanWrapper directly. If you're just using the DataBinder and the BeanFactory and their out-of-the-box implementation, you should skip ahead to the section about PropertyEditors. Consider the following two classes:
public class Company { private String name; private Employee managingDirector; public String getName() { return this.name; } public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; } public Employee getManagingDirector() { return this.managingDirector; } public void setManagingDirector(Employee managingDirector) { this.managingDirector = managingDirector; } }
public class Employee { private float salary; public float getSalary() { return salary; } public void setSalary(float salary) {
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this.salary = salary; } }
The following code snippets show some examples of how to retrieve and manipulate some of the properties of instantiated: Companies and Employees
Company c = new Company(); BeanWrapper bwComp = BeanWrapperImpl(c); // setting the company name... bwComp.setPropertyValue("name", "Some Company Inc."); // ... can also be done like this: PropertyValue v = new PropertyValue("name", "Some Company Inc."); bwComp.setPropertyValue(v); // ok, let's create the director and tie it to the company: Employee jim = new Employee(); BeanWrapper bwJim = BeanWrapperImpl(jim); bwJim.setPropertyValue("name", "Jim Stravinsky"); bwComp.setPropertyValue("managingDirector", jim); // retrieving the salary of the managingDirector through the company Float salary = (Float)bwComp.getPropertyValue("managingDirector.salary");
Spring has a number of built-in PropertyEditors to make life easy. Each of those is listed below and they are all located in the org.springframework.beans.propertyeditors package. Most, but not all (as indicated below), are registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Where the property editor is configurable in some fashion, you can of course still register your own variant to override the default one: Table 4.2. Built-in PropertyEditors Class
ByteArrayPropertyEditor
Explanation Editor for byte arrays. Strings will simply be converted to their corresponding byte representations. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Parses Strings representing classes to actual classes and the other 42
ClassEditor
BeanWrapper Class Explanation way around. When a class is not found, an IllegalArgumentException is thrown. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl.
CustomBooleanEditor
Customizable property editor for Boolean properties. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl, but, can be overridden by registering custom instance of it as custom editor. Customizable property editor for java.util.Date, supporting a custom DateFormat. NOT registered by default. Must be user registered as needed with appropriate format. Customizable property editor for any Number subclass like Integer, Long, Float, Double. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl, but, can be overridden by registering custom instance of it as custom editor. Capable of resolving Strings to File-objects. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. One-way property editor, capable of taking a text string and producing (via an intermediate ResourceEditor and Resource) an InputStream, so InputStream properties may be directly setCapable of resolving Strings to File-objects. Note that the default usage will not close the InputStream for you!. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Capable of resolving Strings to Locale-objects and vice versa (the String format is [language]_[country]_[variant], which is the same thing the toString() method of Locale provides. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Capable of converting Strings (formatted using the format as defined in the Javadoc for the java.lang.Properties class) to Properties-objects. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Capable of resolving a comma-delimited list of String to a String-array and vice versa. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl. Property editor that trims Strings. Optionally allows transforming an empty string into a null value. NOT registered by default. Must be user registered as needed. Capable of resolving a String representation of a URL to an actual URL-object. Registered by default by BeanWrapperImpl.
CustomDateEditor
CustomNumberEditor
FileEditor
InputStreamEditor
LocaleEditor
PropertiesEditor
StringArrayPropertyEditor
StringTrimmerEditor
URLEditor
Spring uses the java.beans.PropertyEditorManager to set the search path for property editors that might be needed. The search path also includes sun.bean.editors, which includes PropertyEditors for Font, Color and all the primitive types. Note also that the standard JavaBeans infrastructure will automatically discover PropertyEditors (without you having to register them) if they are in the same package as the class they handle, and have the same name as that class, with 'Editor' appended.
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BeanWrapper
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Thus you can view Spring AOP as either an enabling technology that allows Spring to provide declarative transaction management without EJB; or use the full power of the Spring AOP framework to implement custom aspects. If you are interested only in generic declarative services or other pre-packaged declarative middleware services such as pooling, you don't need to work directly with Spring AOP, and can skip most of this chapter.
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Pointcut: A set of joinpoints specifying when an advice should fire. An AOP framework must allow developers to specify pointcuts: for example, using regular expressions. Introduction: Adding methods or fields to an advised class. Spring allows you to introduce new interfaces to any advised object. For example, you could use an introduction to make any object implement an IsModified interface, to simplify caching. Target object: Object containing the joinpoint. Also referred to as advised or proxied object. AOP proxy: Object created by the AOP framework, including advice. In Spring, an AOP proxy will be a JDK dynamic proxy or a CGLIB proxy. Weaving: Assembling aspects to create an advised object. This can be done at compile time (using the AspectJ compiler, for example), or at runtime. Spring, like other pure Java AOP frameworks, performs weaving at runtime.
Different advice types include: Around advice: Advice that surrounds a joinpoint such as a method invocation. This is the most powerful kind of advice. Around advices will perform custom behavior before and after the method invocation. They are responsible for choosing whether to proceed to the joinpoint or to shortcut executing by returning their own return value or throwing an exception. Before advice: Advice that executes before a joinpoint, but which does not have the ability to prevent execution flow proceeding to the joinpoint (unless it throws an exception). Throws advice: Advice to be executed if a method throws an exception. Spring provides strongly typed throws advice, so you can write code that catches the exception (and subclasses) you're interested in, without needing to cast from Throwable or Exception. After returning advice: Advice to be executed after a joinpoint completes normally: for example, if a method returns without throwing an exception.
Around advice is the most general kind of advice. Most interception-based AOP frameworks, such as Nanning Aspects, provide only around advice. As Spring, like AspectJ, provides a full range of advice types, we recommend that you use the least powerful advice type that can implement the required behavior. For example, if you need only to update a cache with the return value of a method, you are better off implementing an after returning advice than an around advice, although an around advice can accomplish the same thing. Using the most specific advice type provides a simpler programming model with less potential for errors. For example, you don't need to invoke the proceed() method on the MethodInvocation used for around advice, and hence can't fail to invoke it. The pointcut concept is the key to AOP, distinguishing AOP from older technologies offering interception. Pointcuts enable advice to be targeted independently of the OO hierarchy. For example, an around advice providing declarative transaction management can be applied to a set of methods spanning multiple objects. Thus pointcuts provide the structural element of AOP.
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Spring currently supports interception of method invocations. Field interception is not implemented, although support for field interception could be added without breaking the core Spring AOP APIs. Field interception arguably violates OO encapsulation. We don't believe it is wise in application development. If you require field interception, consider using AspectJ. Spring provides classes to represent pointcuts and different advice types. Spring uses the term advisor for an object representing an aspect, including both an advice and a pointcut targeting it to specific joinpoints. Different advice types are MethodInterceptor (from the AOP Alliance interception API); and the advice interfaces defined in the org.springframework.aop package. All advices must implement the org.aopalliance.aop.Advice tag interface. Advices supported out the box are MethodInterceptor ; ThrowsAdvice; BeforeAdvice; and AfterReturningAdvice. We'll discuss advice types in detail below. Spring implements the AOP Alliance interception interfaces (http://www.sourceforge.net/projects/aopalliance). Around advice must implement the AOP Alliance org.aopalliance.intercept.MethodInterceptor interface. Implementations of this interface can run in Spring or any other AOP Alliance compliant implementation. Currently JAC implements the AOP Alliance interfaces, and Nanning and Dynaop are likely to in early 2004. Spring's approach to AOP differs from that of most other AOP frameworks. The aim is not to provide the most complete AOP implementation (although Spring AOP is quite capable); it is rather to provide a close integration between AOP implementation and Spring IoC to help solve common problems in enterprise applications. Thus, for example, Spring's AOP functionality is normally used in conjunction with a Spring IoC container. AOP advice is specified using normal bean definition syntax (although this allows powerful "autoproxying" capabilities); advice and pointcuts are themselves managed by Spring IoC: a crucial difference from other AOP implementations. There are some things you can't do easily or efficiently with Spring AOP, such as advise very fine-grained objects. AspectJ is probably the best choice in such cases. However, our experience is that Spring AOP provides an excellent solution to most problems in J2EE applications that are amenable to AOP. Spring AOP will never strive to compete with AspectJ or AspectWerkz to provide a comprehensive AOP solution. We believe that both proxy-based frameworks like Spring and full-blown frameworks such as AspectJ are valuable, and that they are complementary, rather than in competition. Thus a major priority for Spring 1.1 will be seamlessly integrating Spring AOP and IoC with AspectJ, to enable all uses of AOP to be catered for within a consistent Spring-based application architecture. This integration will not affect the Spring AOP API or the AOP Alliance API; Spring AOP will remain backward-compatible.
5.2.1. Concepts
Spring's pointcut model enables pointcut reuse independent of advice types. It's possible to target different advice using the same pointcut. The org.springframework.aop.Pointcut interface is the central interface, used to target advices to particular classes and methods. The complete interface is shown below:
public interface Pointcut { ClassFilter getClassFilter(); MethodMatcher getMethodMatcher(); }
Splitting the Pointcut interface into two parts allows reuse of class and method matching parts, and fine-grained composition operations (such as performing a "union" with another method matcher). The ClassFilter interface is used to restrict the pointcut to a given set of target classes. If the matches() method always returns true, all target classes will be matched:
public interface ClassFilter { boolean matches(Class clazz); }
The MethodMatcher interface is normally more important. The complete interface is shown below:
public interface MethodMatcher { boolean matches(Method m, Class targetClass); boolean isRuntime(); boolean matches(Method m, Class targetClass, Object[] args); }
The matches(Method, Class) method is used to test whether this pointcut will ever match a given method on a target class. This evaluation can be performed when an AOP proxy is created, to avoid the need for a test on every method invocation. If the 2-argument matches method returns true for a given method, and the isRuntime() method for the MethodMatcher returns true, the 3-argument matches method will be invoked on every method invocation. This enables a pointcut to look at the arguments passed to the method invocation immediately before the target advice is to execute. Most MethodMatchers are static, meaning that their isRuntime() method returns false. In this case, the 3-argument matches method will never be invoked. If possible, try to make pointcuts static, allowing the AOP framework to cache the results of pointcut evaluation when an AOP proxy is created.
Intersection means the methods that both pointcuts match. Union is usually more useful. Pointcuts can be composed using the static methods in the org.springframework.aop.support.Pointcuts class, or using the ComposablePointcut class in the same package.
A convenience subclass of RegexpMethodPointcut, RegexpMethodPointcutAdvisor, allows us to reference an Advice also. (Remember that an Advice can be an interceptor, before advice, throws advice etc.) This simplifies wiring, as the one bean serves as both pointcut and advisor, as shown below:
<bean id="settersAndAbsquatulateAdvisor" class="org.springframework.aop.support.RegexpMethodPointcutAdvisor"> <property name="advice"> <ref local="beanNameOfAopAllianceInterceptor"/> </property> <property name="patterns"> <list> <value>.*get.*</value> <value>.*absquatulate</value> </list> </property> </bean>
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RegexpMethodPointcutAdvisor can be used with any Advice type. The RegexpMethodPointcut class requires the Jakarta ORO regular expression package.
Note
Control flow pointcuts are significantly more expensive to evaluate at runtime than even other dynamic pointcuts. In Java 1.4, the cost is about 5 times that of other dynamic pointcuts; in Java 1.3 more than 10.
There are also superclasses for dynamic pointcuts. You can use custom pointcuts with any advice type in Spring 1.0 RC2 and above.
can be arbitrarily complex. Later versions of Spring may offer support for "semantic pointcuts" as offered by JAC: for example, "all methods that change instance variables in the target object."
The MethodInvocation argument to the invoke() method exposes the method being invoked; the target joinpoint; the AOP proxy; and the arguments to the method. The invoke() method should return the invocation's result: the return value of the joinpoint. A simple MethodInterceptor implementation looks as follows:
public class DebugInterceptor implements MethodInterceptor { public Object invoke(MethodInvocation invocation) throws Throwable { System.out.println("Before: invocation=[" + invocation + "]"); Object rval = invocation.proceed(); System.out.println("Invocation returned"); return rval; } }
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Note the call to the MethodInvocation's proceed() method. This proceeds down the interceptor chain towards the joinpoint. Most interceptors will invoke this method, and return its return value. However, a MethodInterceptor, like any around advice, can return a different value or throw an exception rather than invoke the proceed method. However, you don't want to do this without good reason! MethodInterceptors offer interoperability with other AOP Alliance-compliant AOP implementations. The other advice types discussed in the remainder of this section implement common AOP concepts, but in a Spring-specific way. While there is an advantage in using the most specific advice type, stick with MethodInterceptor around advice if you are likely to want to run the aspect in another AOP framework. Note that pointcuts are not currently interoperable between frameworks, and the AOP Alliance does not currently define pointcut interfaces. 5.3.2.2. Before advice A simpler advice type is a before advice. This does not need a MethodInvocation object, since it will only be called before entering the method. The main advantage of a before advice is that there is no need to invoke the proceed() method, and therefore no possibility of inadvertently failing to proceed down the interceptor chain. The MethodBeforeAdvice interface is shown below. (Spring's API design would allow for field before advice, although the usual objects apply to field interception and it's unlikely that Spring will ever implement it).
public interface MethodBeforeAdvice extends BeforeAdvice { void before(Method m, Object[] args, Object target) throws Throwable; }
Note the the return type is void. Before advice can insert custom behavior before the joinpoint executes, but cannot change the return value. If a before advice throws an exception, this will abort further execution of the interceptor chain. The exception will propagate back up the interceptor chain. If it is unchecked, or on the signature of the invoked method, it will be passed directly to the client; otherwise it will be wrapped in an unchecked exception by the AOP proxy. An example of a before advice in Spring, which counts all methods that return normally:
public class CountingBeforeAdvice implements MethodBeforeAdvice { private int count; public void before(Method m, Object[] args, Object target) throws Throwable { ++count; } public int getCount() { return count; } }
Before advice can be used with any pointcut. 5.3.2.3. Throws advice Throws advice is invoked after the return of the joinpoint if the joinpoint threw an exception. Spring offers typed throws advice. Note that this means that the org.springframework.aop.ThrowsAdvice interface does not contain any methods: it is a tag interface identifying that the given object implements one or more typed throws advice methods. These should be of form
afterThrowing([Method], [args], [target], subclassOfThrowable)
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Only the last argument is required. Thus there from one to four arguments, depending on whether the advice method is interested in the method and arguments. The following are examples of throws advices. This advice will be invoked if a RemoteException is thrown (including subclasses):
public class RemoteThrowsAdvice implements ThrowsAdvice {
public void afterThrowing(RemoteException ex) throws Throwable { // Do something with remote exception } }
The following advice is invoked if a ServletException is thrown. Unlike the above advice, it declares 4 arguments, so that it has access to the invoked method, method arguments and target object:
public static class ServletThrowsAdviceWithArguments implements ThrowsAdvice { public void afterThrowing(Method m, Object[] args, Object target, ServletException ex) { // Do something will all arguments } }
The final example illustrates how these two methods could be used in a single class, which handles both RemoteException and ServletException. Any number of throws advice methods can be combined in a single class.
public static class CombinedThrowsAdvice implements ThrowsAdvice { public void afterThrowing(RemoteException ex) throws Throwable { // Do something with remote exception } public void afterThrowing(Method m, Object[] args, Object target, ServletException ex) { // Do something will all arguments } }
Throws advice can be used with any pointcut. 5.3.2.4. After Returning advice An after returning advice in Spring must implement the org.springframework.aop.AfterReturningAdvice interface, shown below:
public interface AfterReturningAdvice extends Advice { void afterReturning(Object returnValue, Method m, Object[] args, Object target) throws Throwable; }
An after returning advice has access to the return value (which it cannot modify), invoked method, methods arguments and target. The following after returning advice counts all successful method invocations that have not thrown exceptions:
public class CountingAfterReturningAdvice implements AfterReturningAdvice { private int count; public void afterReturning(Object returnValue, Method m, Object[] args, Object target) throws Throwable { ++count; } public int getCount() { return count;
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} }
This advice doesn't change the execution path. If it throws an exception, this will be thrown up the interceptor chain instead of the return value. After returning advice can be used with any pointcut. 5.3.2.5. Introduction advice Spring treats introduction advice as a special kind of interception advice. Introduction requires an IntroductionAdvisor, and an IntroductionInterceptor, implementing the following interface:
public interface IntroductionInterceptor extends MethodInterceptor { boolean implementsInterface(Class intf); }
The invoke() method inherited from the AOP Alliance MethodInterceptor interface must implement the introduction: that is, if the invoked method is on an introduced interface, the introduction interceptor is responsible for handling the method call--it cannot invoke proceed(). Introduction advice cannot be used with any pointcut, as it applies only at class, rather than method, level. You can only use introduction advice with the InterceptionIntroductionAdvisor, which has the following methods:
public interface InterceptionIntroductionAdvisor extends InterceptionAdvisor { ClassFilter getClassFilter(); IntroductionInterceptor getIntroductionInterceptor(); Class[] getInterfaces(); }
There is no MethodMatcher, and hence no Pointcut, associated with introduction advice. Only class filtering is logical. The getInterfaces() method returns the interfaces introduced by this advisor. Let's look at a simple example from the Spring test suite. Let's suppose we want to introduce the following interface to one or more objects:
public interface Lockable { void lock(); void unlock(); boolean locked(); }
This illustrates a mixin. We want to be able to cast advised objects to Lockable, whatever their type, and call lock and unlock methods. If we call the lock() method, we want all setter methods to throw a LockedException. Thus we can add an aspect that provides the ability to make objects immutable, without them having any knowledge of it: a good example of AOP. Firstly, we'll need an IntroductionInterceptor that does the heavy lifting. In this case, we extend the org.springframework.aop.support.DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor convenience class. We could
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Spring AOP: Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring implement IntroductionInterceptor directly, but using DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor is best for most cases. The DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor is designed to delegate an introduction to an actual implementation of the introduced interface(s), concealing the use of interception to do so. The delegate can be set to any object using a constructor argument; the default delegate (when the no-arg constructor is used) is this. Thus in the example below, the delegate is the LockMixin subclass of DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor. Given a delegate (by default itself) a DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor instance looks for all interfaces implemented by the delegate (other than IntroductionInterceptor), and will support introductions against any of them. It's possible for subclasses such as LockMixin to call the suppressInterflace(Class intf) method to suppress interfaces that should not be exposed. However, no matter how many interfaces an IntroductionInterceptor is prepared to support, the IntroductionAdvisor used will control which interfaces are actually exposed. An introduced interface will conceal any implementation of the same interface by the target. Thus LockMixin subclasses DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor and implements Lockable itself. The superclass automatically picks up that Lockable can be supported for introduction, so we don't need to specify that. We could introduce any number of interfaces in this way. Note the use of the locked instance variable. This effectively adds additional state to that held in the target object.
public class LockMixin extends DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor implements Lockable { private boolean locked; public void lock() { this.locked = true; } public void unlock() { this.locked = false; } public boolean locked() { return this.locked; } public Object invoke(MethodInvocation invocation) throws Throwable { if (locked() && invocation.getMethod().getName().indexOf("set") == 0) throw new LockedException(); return super.invoke(invocation); } }
Often it isn't necessary to override the invoke() method: the DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor implementation--which calls the delegate method if the method is introduced, otherwise proceeds towards the joinpoint--is usually sufficient. In the present case, we need to add a check: no setter method can be invoked if in locked mode. The introduction advisor required is simple. All it needs to do is hold a distinct LockMixin instance, and specify the introduced interfaces--in this case, just Lockable. A more complex example might take a reference to the introduction interceptor (which would be defined as a prototype): in this case, there's no configuration relevant for a LockMixin, so we simply create it using new.
public class LockMixinAdvisor extends DefaultIntroductionAdvisor { public LockMixinAdvisor() { super(new LockMixin(), Lockable.class);
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} }
We can apply this advisor very simply: it requires no configuration. (However, it is necessary: It's impossible to use an IntroductionInterceptor without an IntroductionAdvisor.) As usual with introductions, the advisor must be per-instance, as it is stateful. We need a different instance of LockMixinAdvisor, and hence LockMixin, for each advised object. The advisor comprises part of the advised object's state. We can apply this advisor programmatically, using the Advised.addAdvisor() method, or (the recommended way) in XML configuration, like any other advisor. All proxy creation choices discussed below, including "auto proxy creators," correctly handle introductions and stateful mixins.
5.5.1. Basics
The ProxyFactoryBean, like other Spring FactoryBean implementations, introduces a level of indirection. If you define a ProxyFactoryBean with name foo, what objects referencing foo see is not the ProxyFactoryBean instance itself, but an object created by the ProxyFactoryBean's implementation of the getObject() method. This method will create an AOP proxy wrapping a target object. One of the most important benefits of using a ProxyFactoryBean or other IoC-aware class to create AOP proxies, is that it means that advices and pointcuts can also be managed by IoC. This is a powerful feature, enabling certain approaches that are hard to achieve with other AOP frameworks. For example, an advice may itself reference application objects (besides the target, which should be available in any AOP framework), benefiting from all the pluggability provided by Dependency Injection.
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Some key properties are inherited from org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyConfig: the superclass for all AOP proxy factories. These include:
proxyTargetClass:
true if we should proxy the target class, rather than its interfaces. If this is true we need
to use CGLIB.
optimize:
whether to apply aggressive optimization to created proxies. Don't use this setting unless you understand how the relevant AOP proxy handles optimization. This is currently used only for CGLIB proxies; it has no effect with JDK dynamic proxies (the default).
frozen:
whether advice changes should be disallowed once the proxy factory has been configured. Default
is false.
exposeProxy:
whether the current proxy should be exposed in a ThreadLocal so that it can be accessed by the target. (It's available via the MethodInvocation without the need for a ThreadLocal.) If a target needs to obtain the proxy and exposeProxy is true, the target can use the AopContext.currentProxy() method.
aopProxyFactory:
the implementation of AopProxyFactory to use. Offers a way of customizing whether to use dynamic proxies, CGLIB or any other proxy strategy. The default implementation will choose dynamic proxies or CGLIB appropriately. There should be no need to use this property; it's intended to allow the addition of new proxy types in Spring 1.1.
array of String interface names. If this isn't supplied, a CGLIB proxy for the target class
will be used
interceptorNames:
String array of Advisor, interceptor or other advice names to apply. Ordering is significant. The names are bean names in the current factory, including bean names from ancestor factories. singleton: whether or not the factory should return a single object, no matter how often the getObject() method is called. Several FactoryBean implementations offer such a method. Default value is true. If you want to use stateful advice--for example, for stateful mixins--use prototype advices along with a singleton value of false.
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An AOP proxy bean definition specifying the target object (the personTarget bean) and the interfaces to proxy, along with the advices to apply.
<bean id="personTarget" class="com.mycompany.PersonImpl"> <property name="name"><value>Tony</value></property> <property name="age"><value>51</value></property> </bean> <bean id="myAdvisor" class="com.mycompany.MyAdvisor"> <property name="someProperty"><value>Custom string property value</value></property> </bean> <bean id="debugInterceptor" class="org.springframework.aop.interceptor.DebugInterceptor"> </bean> <bean id="person" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="proxyInterfaces"><value>com.mycompany.Person</value></property> <property name="target"><ref local="personTarget"/></property> <property name="interceptorNames"> <list> <value>myAdvisor</value> <value>debugInterceptor</value> </list> </property> </bean>
Note that the interceptorNames property takes a list of String: the bean names of the interceptor or advisors in the current factory. Advisors, interceptors, before, after returning and throws advice objects can be used. The ordering of advisors is significant. You might be wondering why the list doesn't hold bean references. The reason for this is that if the ProxyFactoryBean's singleton property is set to false, it must be able to return independent proxy instances. If any of the advisors is itself a prototype, an independent instance would need to be returned, so it's necessary to be able to obtain an instance of the prototype from the factory; holding a reference isn't sufficient. The "person" bean definition above can be used in place of a Person implementation, as follows:
Person person = (Person) factory.getBean("person");
Other beans in the same IoC context can express a strongly typed dependency on it, as with an ordinary Java object:
<bean id="personUser" class="com.mycompany.PersonUser"> <property name="person"><ref local="person" /></property> </bean>
The PersonUser class in this example would expose a property of type Person. As far as it's concerned, the AOP proxy can be used transparently in place of a "real" person implementation. However, its class would be a dynamic proxy class. It would be possible to cast it to the Advised interface (discussed below). It's possible to conceal the distinction between target and proxy using an anonymous inner bean, as follows. Only the ProxyFactoryBean definition is different; the advice is included only for completeness:
<bean id="myAdvisor" class="com.mycompany.MyAdvisor"> <property name="someProperty"><value>Custom string property value</value></property> </bean> <bean id="debugInterceptor" class="org.springframework.aop.interceptor.DebugInterceptor"> </bean>
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<bean id="person" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="proxyInterfaces"><value>com.mycompany.Person</value></property> <!-- Use inner bean, not local reference to target --> <property name="target"> <bean class="com.mycompany.PersonImpl"> <property name="name"><value>Tony</value></property> <property name="age"><value>51</value></property> </bean> </property> <property name="interceptorNames"> <list> <value>myAdvisor</value> <value>debugInterceptor</value> </list> </property> </bean>
This has the advantage that there's only one object of type Person: useful if we want to prevent users of the application context obtaining a reference to the un-advised object, or need to avoid any ambiguity with Spring IoC autowiring. There's also arguably an advantage in that the ProxyFactoryBean definition is self-contained. However, there are times when being able to obtain the un-advised target from the factory might actually be an advantage: for example, in certain test scenarios.
You'll need the CGLIB 2 binaries on your classpath; dynamic proxies are available with the JDK
There's little performance difference between CGLIB proxying and dynamic proxies. As of Spring 1.0, dynamic proxies are slightly faster. However, this may change in the future. Performance should not be a decisive consideration in this case.
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Often we don't need the full power of the ProxyFactoryBean, because we're only interested in one aspect: For example, transaction management. There are a number of convenience factories we can use to create AOP proxies when we want to focus on a specific aspect. These are discussed in other chapters, so we'll just provide a quick survey of some of them here.
5.6.1. TransactionProxyFactoryBean
The jPetStore sample application shipped with Spring shows the use of the TransactionProxyFactoryBean. The TransactionProxyFactoryBean is a subclass of ProxyConfig, so basic configuration is shared with ProxyFactoryBean. (See list of ProxyConfig properties above.) The following example from the jPetStore illustrates how this works. As with a ProxyFactoryBean, there is a target bean definition. Dependencies should be expressed on the proxied factory bean definition ("petStore" here), rather than the target POJO ("petStoreTarget"). The TransactionProxyFactoryBean requires a target, and information about "transaction attributes," specifying which methods should be transactional and the required propagation and other settings:
<bean id="petStoreTarget" class="org.springframework.samples.jpetstore.domain.logic.PetStoreImpl"> <property name="accountDao"><ref bean="accountDao"/></property> <!-- Other dependencies omitted --> </bean> <bean id="petStore" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"><ref bean="transactionManager"/></property> <property name="target"><ref local="petStoreTarget"/></property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="insert*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> <prop key="update*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> <prop key="*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,readOnly</prop> </props> </property> </bean>
As with the ProxyFactoryBean, we might choose to use an inner bean to set the value of target property, instead of a reference to a top-level target bean. The TransactionProxyFactoryBean automatically creates a transaction advisor, including a pointcut based on the transaction attributes, so only transactional methods are advised. The TransactionProxyFactoryBean allows the specification of "pre" and "post" advice, using the preInterceptors and postInterceptors properties. These take Object arrays of interceptors, other advice or Advisors to place in the interception chain before or after the transaction interceptor. These can be populated using a <list> element in XML bean definitions, as follows:
<property name="preInterceptors"> <list> <ref local="authorizationInterceptor"/> <ref local="notificationBeforeAdvice"/> </list> </property> <property name="postInterceptors"> <list> <ref local="myAdvisor"/> </list> </property>
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These properties could be added to the "petStore" bean definition above. A common usage is to combine transactionality with declarative security: a similar approach to that offered by EJB. Because of the use of actual instance references, rather than bean names as in ProxyFactoryBean, pre and post interceptors can be used only for shared-instance advice. Thus they are not useful for stateful advice: for example, in mixins. This is consistent with the TransactionProxyFactoryBean's purpose. It provides a simple way of doing common transaction setup. If you need more complex, customized, AOP, consider using the generic ProxyFactoryBean, or an auto proxy creator (see below). Especially if we view Spring AOP as, in many cases, a replacement for EJB, we find that most advice is fairly generic and uses a shared-instance model. Declarative transaction management and security checks are classic examples. The TransactionProxyFactoryBean depends on a PlatformTransactionManager implementation via its transactionManager JavaBean property. This allows for pluggable transaction implementation, based on JTA, JDBC or other strategies. This relates to the Spring transaction abstraction, rather than AOP. We'll discuss the transaction infrastructure in the next chapter. If you're interested only in declarative transaction management, the TransactionProxyFactoryBean is a good solution, and simpler than using a ProxyFactoryBean.
This will never be instantiated itself, so may actually be incomplete. Then each proxy which needs to be created is just a child bean definition, which to wraps the target of the proxy as an inner bean definition, since the target will never be used on its own anyways.
<bean id="myService" parent="txProxyTemplate"> <property name="target"> <bean class="org.springframework.samples.MyServiceImpl"> </bean> </property> </bean>
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It is of course possible to override properties from the parent template, such as in this case, the transaction propagation settings:
<bean id="mySpecialService" parent="txProxyTemplate"> <property name="target"> <bean class="org.springframework.samples.MySpecialServiceImpl"> </bean> </property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="get*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,readOnly</prop> <prop key="find*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,readOnly</prop> <prop key="load*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,readOnly</prop> <prop key="store*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> </props> </property> </bean>
Note that in the example above, we have explicitly marked the parent bean definition as abstract by using the abstract attribute, as described previously, so that it may not actually ever be instantiated. Application contexts (but not simple bean factories) will by default pre-instantiate all singletons. Therefore it is important (at least for singleton beans) that if you have a (parent) bean definition which you intend to use only as a template, and this definition specifies a class, you must make sure to set the abstract attribute to true, otherwise the application context will actually try to pre-instantiate it.
The first step is to construct a object of type org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactory. You can create this with a target object, as in the above example, or specify the interfaces to be proxied in an alternate constructor. You can add interceptors or advisors, and manipulate them for the life of the ProxyFactory. If you add an IntroductionInterceptionAroundAdvisor you can cause the proxy to implement additional interfaces. There are also convenience methods on ProxyFactory (inherited from AdvisedSupport) allowing you to add other advice types such as before and throws advice. AdvisedSupport is the superclass of both ProxyFactory and ProxyFactoryBean. Integrating AOP proxy creation with the IoC framework is best practice in most applications. We recommend that you externalize configuration from Java code with AOP, as in general.
However you create AOP proxies, you can manipulate them using the org.springframework.aop.framework.Advised interface. Any AOP proxy can be cast to this interface, whatever other interfaces it implements. This interface includes the following methods:
Advisor[] getAdvisors(); void addAdvice(Advice advice) throws AopConfigException; void addAdvice(int pos, Advice advice) throws AopConfigException; void addAdvisor(Advisor advisor) throws AopConfigException; void addAdvisor(int pos, Advisor advisor) throws AopConfigException; int indexOf(Advisor advisor); boolean removeAdvisor(Advisor advisor) throws AopConfigException; void removeAdvisor(int index) throws AopConfigException; boolean replaceAdvisor(Advisor a, Advisor b) throws AopConfigException; boolean isFrozen();
The getAdvisors() method will return an Advisor for every advisor, interceptor or other advice type that has been added to the factory. If you added an Advisor, the returned advisor at this index will be the object that you added. If you added an interceptor or other advice type, Spring will have wrapped this in an advisor with a pointcut that always returns true. Thus if you added a MethodInterceptor, the advisor returned for this index will be an DefaultPointcutAdvisor returning your MethodInterceptor and a pointcut that matches all classes and methods. The addAdvisor() methods can be used to add any Advisor. Usually the advisor holding pointcut and advice will be the generic DefaultPointcutAdvisor, which can be used with any advice or pointcut (but not for introduction). By default, it's possible to add or remove advisors or interceptors even once a proxy has been created. The only restriction is that it's impossible to add or remove an introduction advisor, as existing proxies from the factory will not show the interface change. (You can obtain a new proxy from the factory to avoid this problem.) A simple example of casting an AOP proxy to the Advised interface and examining and manipulating its advice:
Advised advised = (Advised) myObject; Advisor[] advisors = advised.getAdvisors(); int oldAdvisorCount = advisors.length; System.out.println(oldAdvisorCount + " advisors"); // Add an advice like an interceptor without a pointcut // Will match all proxied methods // Can use for interceptors, before, after returning or throws advice advised.addAdvice(new DebugInterceptor()); // Add selective advice using a pointcut advised.addAdvisor(new DefaultPointcutAdvisor(mySpecialPointcut, myAdvice)); assertEquals("Added two advisors", oldAdvisorCount + 2, advised.getAdvisors().length);
It's questionable whether it's advisable (no pun intended) to modify advice on a business object in production, although there are no doubt legitimate usage cases. However, it can be very useful in development: for example, in tests. I have sometimes found it very useful to be able to add test code in the form of an interceptor or other advice, getting inside a method invocation I want to test. (For example, the advice can get inside a
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Spring AOP: Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring transaction created for that method: for example, to run SQL to check that a database was correctly updated, before marking the transaction for roll back.) Depending on how you created the proxy, you can usually set a frozen flag, in which case the Advised isFrozen() method will return true, and any attempts to modify advice through addition or removal will result in an AopConfigException. The ability to freeze the state of an advised object is useful in some cases: For example, to prevent calling code removing a security interceptor. It may also be used in Spring 1.1 to allow aggressive optimization if runtime advice modification is known not to be required.
As with ProxyFactoryBean, there is an interceptorNames property rather than a list of interceptor, to allow correct behavior for prototype advisors. Named "interceptors" can be advisors or any advice type. As with auto proxying in general, the main point of using BeanNameAutoProxyCreator is to apply the same configuration consistently to multiple objects, and with minimal volume of configuration. It is a popular choice for applying declarative transactions to multiple objects. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 64
Bean definitions whose names match, such as "jdkMyBean" and "onlyJdk" in the above example, are plain old bean definitions with the target class. An AOP proxy will be created automatically by the BeanNameAutoProxyCreator. The same advice will be applied to all matching beans. Note that if advisors are used (rather than the interceptor in the above example), the pointcuts may apply differently to different beans. 5.10.1.2. DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator A more general and extremely powerful auto proxy creator is DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator. This will automagically apply eligible advisors in the current context, without the need to include specific bean names in the autoproxy advisor's bean definition. It offers the same merit of consistent configuration and avoidance of duplication as BeanNameAutoProxyCreator. Using this mechanism involves: Specifying a DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator bean definition Specifying any number of Advisors in the same or related contexts. Note that these must be Advisors, not just interceptors or other advices. This is necessary because there must be a pointcut to evaluate, to check the eligibility of each advice to candidate bean definitions.
The DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator will automatically evaluate the pointcut contained in each advisor, to see what (if any) advice it should apply to each business object (such as "businessObject1" and "businessObject2" in the example). This means that any number of advisors can be applied automatically to each business object. If no pointcut in any of the advisors matches any method in a business object, the object will not be proxied. As bean definitions are added for new business objects, they will automatically be proxied if necessary. Autoproxying in general has the advantage of making it impossible for callers or dependencies to obtain an un-advised object. Calling getBean("businessObject1") on this ApplicationContext will return an AOP proxy, not the target business object. (The "inner bean" idiom shown earlier also offers this benefit.)
<bean id="autoProxyCreator" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator"> </bean> <bean id="txAdvisor" autowire="constructor" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionAttributeSourceAdvisor"> <property name="order"><value>1</value></property> </bean> <bean id="customAdvisor" class="com.mycompany.MyAdvisor"> </bean> <bean id="businessObject1" class="com.mycompany.BusinessObject1"> <!-- Properties omitted --> </bean> <bean id="businessObject2" class="com.mycompany.BusinessObject2"> </bean>
The DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator is very useful if you want to apply the same advice consistently to many business objects. Once the infrastructure definitions are in place, you can simply add new business objects without including specific proxy configuration. You can also drop in additional aspects very easily--for example, tracing or performance monitoring aspects--with minimal change to configuration. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 65
The DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator offers support for filtering (using a naming convention so that only certain advisors are evaluated, allowing use of multiple, differently configured, AdvisorAutoProxyCreators in the same factory) and ordering. Advisors can implement the org.springframework.core.Ordered interface to ensure correct ordering if this is an issue. The TransactionAttributeSourceAdvisor used in the above example has a configurable order value; default is unordered. 5.10.1.3. AbstractAdvisorAutoProxyCreator This is the superclass of DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator. You can create your own autoproxy creators by subclassing this class, in the unlikely event that advisor definitions offer insufficient customization to the behavior of the framework DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator.
The DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator bean definition--called "autoProxyCreator" in this case, but the name is not significant (it could even be omitted)--will pick up all eligible pointcuts in the current application context. In this case, the "transactionAdvisor" bean definition, of type TransactionAttributeSourceAdvisor, will apply to classes or methods carrying a transaction attribute. The TransactionAttributeSourceAdvisor depends
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Spring AOP: Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring on a TransactionInterceptor, via constructor dependency. The example resolves this via autowiring. The AttributesTransactionAttributeSource depends on an implementation of the org.springframework.metadata.Attributes interface. In this fragment, the "attributes" bean satisfies this, using the Jakarta Commons Attributes API to obtain attribute information. (The application code must have been compiled using the Commons Attributes compilation task.) The TransactionInterceptor defined here depends on a PlatformTransactionManager definition, which is not included in this generic file (although it could be) because it will be specific to the application's transaction requirements (typically JTA, as in this example, or Hibernate, JDO or JDBC):
<bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"/>
If you require only declarative transaction management, using these generic XML definitions will result in Spring automatically proxying all classes or methods with transaction attributes. You won't need to work directly with AOP, and the programming model is similar to that of .NET ServicedComponents. This mechanism is extensible. It's possible to do autoproxying based on custom attributes. You need to: Define your custom attribute. Specify an Advisor with the necessary advice, including a pointcut that is triggered by the presence of the custom attribute on a class or method. You may be able to use an existing advice, merely implementing a static pointcut that picks up the custom attribute.
It's possible for such advisors to be unique to each advised class (for example, mixins): they simply need to be defined as prototype, rather than singleton, bean definitions. For example, the LockMixin introduction interceptor from the Spring test suite, shown above, could be used in conjunction with an attribute-driven pointcut to target a mixin, as shown here. We use the generic DefaultPointcutAdvisor, configured using JavaBean properties:
<bean id="lockMixin" class="org.springframework.aop.LockMixin" singleton="false" /> <bean id="lockableAdvisor" class="org.springframework.aop.support.DefaultPointcutAdvisor" singleton="false" > <property name="pointcut"> <ref local="myAttributeAwarePointcut"/> </property> <property name="advice"> <ref local="lockMixin"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="anyBean" class="anyclass" ...
If the attribute aware pointcut matches any methods in the anyBean or other bean definitions, the mixin will be applied. Note that both lockMixin and lockableAdvisor definitions are prototypes. The myAttributeAwarePointcut pointcut can be a singleton definition, as it doesn't hold state for individual advised objects.
Spring AOP: Aspect Oriented Programming with Spring interface. This interface is responsible for returning the "target object" implementing the joinpoint. The TargetSource implementation is asked for a target instance each time the AOP proxy handles a method invocation. Developers using Spring AOP don't normally need to work directly with TargetSources, but this provides a powerful means of supporting pooling, hot swappable and other sophisticated targets. For example, a pooling TargetSource can return a different target instance for each invocation, using a pool to manage instances. If you do not specify a TargetSource, a default implementation is used that wraps a local object. The same target is returned for each invocation (as you would expect). Let's look at the standard target sources provided with Spring, and how you can use them. When using a custom target source, your target will usually need to be a prototype rather than a singleton bean definition. This allows Spring to create a new target instance when required.
The above swap() call changes the target of the swappable bean. Clients who hold a reference to that bean will be unaware of the change, but will immediately start hitting the new target. Although this example doesn't add any advice--and it's not necessary to add advice to use a TargetSource--of course any TargetSource can be used in conjunction with arbitrary advice.
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A crucial difference between Spring pooling and SLSB pooling is that Spring pooling can be applied to any POJO. As with Spring in general, this service can be applied in a non-invasive way. Spring provides out-of-the-box support for Jakarta Commons Pool 1.1, which provides a fairly efficient pooling implementation. You'll need the commons-pool Jar on your application's classpath to use this feature. It's also possible to subclass org.springframework.aop.target.AbstractPoolingTargetSource to support any other pooling API. Sample configuration is shown below:
<bean id="businessObjectTarget" class="com.mycompany.MyBusinessObject" singleton="false"> ... properties omitted </bean> <bean id="poolTargetSource" class="org.springframework.aop.target.CommonsPoolTargetSource"> <property name="targetBeanName"><value>businessObjectTarget</value></property> <property name="maxSize"><value>25</value></property> </bean> <bean id="businessObject" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean" > <property name="targetSource"><ref local="poolTargetSource"/></property> <property name="interceptorNames"><value>myInterceptor</value></property> </bean>
Note that the target object--"businessObjectTarget" in the example--must be a prototype. This allows the PoolingTargetSource implementation to create new instances of the target to grow the pool as necessary. See the Javadoc for AbstractPoolingTargetSource and the concrete subclass you wish to use for information about it's properties: maxSize is the most basic, and always guaranteed to be present. In this case, "myInterceptor" is the name of an interceptor that would need to be defined in the same IoC context. However, it isn't necessary to specify interceptors to use pooling. If you want only pooling, and no other advice, don't set the interceptorNames property at all. It's possible to configure Spring so as to be able to cast any pooled object to the org.springframework.aop.target.PoolingConfig interface, which exposes information about the configuration and current size of the pool through an introduction. You'll need to define an advisor like this:
<bean id="poolConfigAdvisor" class="org.springframework.beans.factory.config.MethodInvokingFactoryBean"> <property name="targetObject"><ref local="poolTargetSource" /></property> <property name="targetMethod"><value>getPoolingConfigMixin</value></property> </bean>
This advisor is obtained by calling a convenience method on the AbstractPoolingTargetSource class, hence the use of MethodInvokingFactoryBean. This advisor's name ("poolConfigAdvisor" here) must be in the list of interceptors names in the ProxyFactoryBean exposing the pooled object. The cast will look as follows:
PoolingConfig conf = (PoolingConfig) beanFactory.getBean("businessObject"); System.out.println("Max pool size is " + conf.getMaxSize());
Pooling stateless service objects is not usually necessary. We don't believe it should be the default choice, as most stateless objects are naturally thread safe, and instance pooling is problematic if resources are cached. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 69
Simpler pooling is available using autoproxying. It's possible to set the TargetSources used by any autoproxy creator.
There's only one property: the name of the target bean. Inheritance is used in the TargetSource implementations to ensure consistent naming. As with the pooling target source, the target bean must be a prototype bean definition.
If you are interested in more advanced capabilities of Spring AOP, take a look at the test suite. The test coverage is over 90%, and this illustrates advanced features not discussed in this document.
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5.14. Roadmap
Spring AOP, like the rest of Spring, is actively developed. The core API is stable. Like the rest of Spring, the AOP framework is very modular, enabling extension while preserving the fundamental design. Several improvements are planned in the Spring 1.1 time frame, which will preserve backward compatibility. These include: Performance improvements: The creation of AOP proxies is handled by a factory via a Strategy interface. Thus we can support additional AopProxy types without impacting user code or the core implementation. Significant performance optimizations for CGLIB proxying are scheduled for the 1.0.3 release, with further optimizations by Spring 1.1 in cases where advice will not change at runtime. This should produce a significant reduction in the overhead of the AOP framework. Note, however, that the overhead of the AOP framework is not an issue in normal usage. More expressive pointcuts: Spring presently offers an expressive Pointcut interface, but we can add value through adding more Pointcut implementations. We are looking at an integration with AspectJ that will allow AspectJ pointcut expressions to be used in Spring configuration files. And if you wish to contribute a useful Pointcut, please do!
The most significant enhancements are likely to concern integration with AspectJ, which will be done in cooperation with the AspectJ community. We believe that this will provide significant benefits for both Spring and AspectJ users, in the following areas: Allowing AspectJ aspects to be configured using Spring IoC. This has the potential to integrate AspectJ aspects into applications where appropriate, in the same way as Spring aspects are integrated into application IoC contexts. Allowing the use of AspectJ pointcut expressions within Spring configuration to target Spring advice. This has significant benefits over devising our own pointcut expression language; AspectJ is both well thought out and well documented.
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AspectJ aspects can expose JavaBean properties for Setter Injection, and even implement Spring lifecycle interfaces such as BeanFactoryAware. Note that AspectJ aspects cannot use Constructor Injection or Method Injection. This limitation is due to the fact that aspects do not have constructors that can be invoked like constructors of objects.
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AspectJ Integration
public aspect BalanceChangeSecurityAspect { private SecurityManager securityManager; public void setSecurityManager(SecurityManager securityManager) { this.securityManager = securityManager; } private pointcut balanceChanged() : set(int Account.balance); before() : balanceChanged() { this.securityManager.checkAuthorizedToModify(); } }
We configure this aspect in the same way as an ordinary class. Note that the way in which we set the property reference is identical. Note that we must use the factory-method attribute to specify that we want the aspect "created" using the aspectOf() static method. In fact, this is locating, rather than, creating, the aspect, but the Spring container doesn't care:
<bean id="securityAspect" class="org.springframework.samples.aspectj.bank.BalanceChangeSecurityAspect" factory-method="aspectOf" > <property name="securityManager"> <ref local="securityManager"/> </property> </bean>
We don't need to do anything in Spring configuration to target this aspect. It contains the pointcut information in AspectJ code that controls where it applies. Thus it can apply even to objects not managed by the Spring IoC container. 6.2.1.2. Ordering issues to be completed
6.2.3. Gotchas
to be completed - Singleton issue
AspectJ Integration
This feature is scheduled for Spring 1.2. It depends on AspectJ enhancements. This feature replaces our previous plan to create a pointcut expression language for Spring.
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Traditionally, J2EE developers have had two choices for transaction management: to use global or local transactions. Global transactions are managed by the application server, using JTA. Local transactions are resource-specific: for example, a transaction associated with a JDBC connection. This choice had profound implications. Global transactions provide the ability to work with multiple transactional resources. (It's worth noting that most applications use a single transaction resource) With local transactions, the application server is not involved in transaction management, and cannot help ensure correctness across multiple resources. Global transactions have a significant downside. Code needs to use JTA: a cumbersome API to use (partly due to its exception model). Furthermore, a JTA UserTransaction normally needs to be obtained from JNDI: meaning that we need to use both JNDI and JTA to use JTA. Obviously all use of global transactions limits the reusability of application code, as JTA is normally only available in an application server environment. The preferred way to use global transactions was via EJB CMT (Container Managed Transaction): a form of declarative transaction management (as distinguished from programmatic transaction management). EJB CMT removes the need for transaction-related JNDI lookups--although of course the use of EJB itself necessitates the use of JNDI. It removes most--not all--need to write Java code to control transactions. The significant downside is that CMT is (obviously) tied to JTA and an application server environment; and that it's only available if we choose to implement business logic in EJBs, or at least behind a transactional EJB facade. The negatives around EJB in general are so great that this is not an attractive proposition, when there are alternatives for declarative transaction management. Local transactions may be easier to use, but also have significant disadvantages: They cannot work across multiple transactional resources, and tend to invade the programming model. For example, code that manages transactions using a JDBC connection cannot run within a global JTA transaction. Spring resolves these problems. It enables application developers to use a consistent programming model in any environment. You write your code once, and it can benefit from different transaction management strategies in different environments. Spring provides both declarative and programmatic transaction management. Declarative transaction management is preferred by most users, and recommended in most cases. With programmatic transaction management developers work with the Spring transaction abstraction, which can run over any underlying transaction infrastructure. With the preferred declarative model developers typically write little or no code related to transaction management, and hence don't depend on Spring's or any other transaction API.
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This is primarily an SPI interface, although it can be used programmatically. Note that in keeping with Spring's philosophy, this is an interface. Thus it can easily be mocked or stubbed if necessary. Nor is it tied to a lookup strategy such as JNDI: PlatformTransactionManager implementations are defined like any other object in a Spring IoC container. This benefit alone makes this a worthwhile abstraction even when working with JTA: transactional code can be tested much more easily than if it directly used JTA. In keeping with Spring's philosophy, TransactionException is unchecked. Failures of the transaction infrastructure are almost invariably fatal. In rare cases where application code can recover from them, the application developer can still choose to catch and handle TransactionException. The getTransaction() method returns a TransactionStatus object, depending on a TransactionDefinition parameter. The returned TransactionStatus might represent a new or existing transaction (if there was a matching transaction in the current call stack). As with J2EE transaction contexts, a TransactionStatus is associated with a thread of execution. The TransactionDefinition interface specifies: Transaction isolation: The degree of isolation this transaction has from the work of other transactions. For example, can this transaction see uncommitted writes from other transactions? Transaction propagation: Normally all code executed within a transaction scope will run in that transaction. However, there are several options specifying behavior if a transactional method is executed when a transaction context already exists: For example, simply running in the existing transaction (the most common case); or suspending the existing transaction and creating a new transaction. Spring offers the transaction propagation options familiar from EJB CMT. Transaction timeout: How long this transaction may run before timing out (automatically being rolled back by the underlying transaction infrastructure). Read-only status: A read-only transaction does not modify any data. Read-only transactions can be a useful optimization in some cases (such as when using Hibernate).
These settings reflect standard concepts. If necessary, please refer to a resource discussing transaction isolation levels and other core transaction concepts: Understanding such core concepts is essential to using Spring or any other transaction management solution. The TransactionStatus interface provides a simple way for transactional code to control transaction execution Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 76
Transaction management and query transaction status. The concepts should be familiar, as they are common to all transaction APIs:
public interface TransactionStatus { boolean isNewTransaction(); void setRollbackOnly(); boolean isRollbackOnly(); }
However Spring transaction management is used, defining the PlatformTransactionManager implementation is essential. In good Spring fashion, this important definition is made using Inversion of Control. PlatformTransactionManager implementations normally require knowledge of the environment in which they work: JDBC, JTA, Hibernate etc. The following examples from dataAccessContext-local.xml from Spring's jPetStore sample application show how a local PlatformTransactionManager implementation can be defined. This will work with JDBC. We must define a JDBC DataSource, and then use the Spring DataSourceTransactionManager, giving it a reference to the DataSource.
<bean id="dataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close"> <property name="driverClassName"><value>${jdbc.driverClassName}</value></property> <property name="url"><value>${jdbc.url}</value></property> <property name="username"><value>${jdbc.username}</value></property> <property name="password"><value>${jdbc.password}</value></property> </bean>
If we use JTA, as in the dataAccessContext-jta.xml file from the same sample application, we need to use a container DataSource, obtained via JNDI, and a JtaTransactionManager implementation. The JtaTransactionManager doesn't need to know about the DataSource, or any other specific resources, as it will use the container's global transaction management.
<bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean"> <property name="jndiName"><value>jdbc/jpetstore</value></property> </bean> <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"/>
We can use Hibernate local transactions easily, as shown in the following examples from the Spring PetClinic sample application. In this case, we need to define a Hibernate LocalSessionFactory, which application code will use to obtain Hibernate Sessions. The DataSource bean definition will be similar to one of the above examples, and is not shown. (If it's a container DataSource it should be non-transactional as Spring, rather than the container, will manage transactions.) Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 77
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The "transactionManager" bean in this case is of class HibernateTransactionManager. In the same way as the DataSourceTransactionManager needs a reference to the DataSource, the HibernateTransactionManager needs a reference to the session factory.
<bean id="sessionFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.LocalSessionFactoryBean"> <property name="dataSource"><ref local="dataSource"/></property> <property name="mappingResources"> <value>org/springframework/samples/petclinic/hibernate/petclinic.hbm.xml</value> </property> <property name="hibernateProperties"> <props> <prop key="hibernate.dialect">${hibernate.dialect}</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.HibernateTransactionManager"> <property name="sessionFactory"><ref local="sessionFactory"/></property> </bean>
With Hibernate and JTA transactions we could simply use the JtaTransactionManager as with JDBC or any other resource strategy.
<bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"/>
Note that this is identical to JTA configuration for any resource, as these are global transactions, which can enlist any transactional resource. In all these cases, application code won't need to change at all. We can change how transactions are managed merely by changing configuration, even if that change means moving from local to global transactions or vice versa. When not using global transactions, you do need to follow one special coding convention. Fortunately this is very simple. You need to obtain connection or session resources in a special way, to allow the relevant PlatformTransactionManager implementation to track connection usage, and apply transaction management as necessary. For example, if using JDBC, you should not call the getConnection() method on a DataSource, but must use the Spring org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DataSourceUtils class as follows:
Connection conn = DataSourceUtils.getConnection(dataSource);
This has the added advantage that any SQLException will be wrapped in a Spring CannotGetJdbcConnectionException--one of Spring's hierarchy of unchecked DataAccessExceptions. This gives you more information than can easily be obtained from the SQLException, and ensures portability across databases: even across different persistence technologies. This will work fine without Spring transaction management, so you can use it whether or not you are using Spring for transaction management. Of course, once you've used Spring's JDBC support or Hibernate support, you won't want to use DataSourceUtils or the other helper classes, because you'll be much happier working via the Spring abstraction than directly with the relevant APIs. For example, if you use the Spring JdbcTemplate or jdbc.object package to simplify your use of JDBC, correct connection retrieval happens behind the scenes and you won't need to write any special code. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 78
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We generally recommend the first approach. The second approach is similar to using the JTA UserTransaction API (although exception handling is less cumbersome).
Code within the callback can roll the transaction back by calling the setRollbackOnly() method on the TransactionStatus object. Application classes wishing to use the TransactionTemplate must have access to a PlatformTransactionManager: usually exposed as a JavaBean property or as a constructor argument. It's easy to unit test such classes with a mock or stub PlatformTransactionManager. There's no JNDI lookup or static magic here: it's a simple interface. As usual, you can use Spring to simplify your unit testing.
Transaction management
DefaultTransactionDefinition def = new DefaultTransactionDefinition() def.setPropagationBehavior(TransactionDefinition.PROPAGATION_REQUIRED); TransactionStatus status = transactionManager.getTransaction(def); try { // execute your business logic here } catch (MyException ex) { transactionManager.rollback(status); throw ex; } transactionManager.commit(status);
The concept of rollback rules is important: they enable us to specify which exceptions (and throwables) should cause automatic roll back. We specify this declaratively, in configuration, not in Java code. So, while we can still call setRollbackOnly() on the TransactionStatus object to roll the current transaction back programmatically, most often we can specify a rule that MyApplicationException should always result in roll back. This has the significant advantage that business objects don't need to depend on the transaction infrastructure. For example, they typically don't need to import any Spring APIs, transaction or other. While the EJB default behavior is for the EJB container to automatically roll back the transaction on a system exception (usually a runtime exception), EJB CMT does not roll back the transaction automatically on an application exception (checked exception other than java.rmi.RemoteException). While the Spring default behavior for declarative transaction management follows EJB convention (roll back is automatic only on Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 80
Transaction management unchecked exceptions), it's often useful to customize this. On our benchmarks, the performance of Spring declarative transaction management exceeds that of EJB CMT. The usual way of setting up transactional proxying in Spring is via the TransactionProxyFactoryBean. We need a target object to wrap in a transactional proxy. The target object is normally a POJO bean definition. When we define the TransactionProxyFactoryBean, we must supply a reference to the relevant PlatformTransactionManager, and transaction attributes. Transaction attributes contain the transaction definitions, discussed above. Consider the following sample:
<!-- this example is in verbose form, see note later about concise for multiple proxies! --> <!-- the target bean to wrap transactionally --> <bean id="petStoreTarget"> ... </bean> <bean id="petStore" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"><ref bean="transactionManager"/></property> <property name="target"><ref bean="petStoreTarget"/></property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="insert*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,-MyCheckedException</prop> <prop key="update*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> <prop key="*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED,readOnly</prop> </props> </property> </bean>
The transactional proxy will implement the interfaces of the target: in this case, the bean with id petStoreTarget. (Using CGLIB it's possible to transactionally proxy a target class. Set the "proxyTargetClass" property to true for this. It will happen automatically if the target doesn't implement any interfaces. In general, of course, we want to program to interfaces rather than classes.) It's possible (and usually a good idea) to restrict the transactional proxy to proxying only specific target interfaces, using the proxyInterfaces property. It's also possible to customize the behavior of a TransactionProxyFactoryBean via several properties inherited from org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyConfig, and shared with all AOP proxy factories. The transactionAttributes here are set using a Properties format defined in the class. The mapping from method name, including wildcards, should be fairly intuitive. Note that the value for the insert* mapping contains a rollback rule. Adding -MyCheckedException here specifies that if the method throws MyCheckedException or any subclasses, the transaction will automatically be rolled back. Multiple rollback rules can be specified here, comma-separated. A - prefix forces rollback; a + prefix specifies commit. (This allows commit even on unchecked exceptions, if you really know what you're doing!)
org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.NameMatchTransactionAttributeSource
The TransactionProxyFactoryBean allows you to set "pre" and "post" advice, for additional interception behavior, using the "preInterceptors" and "postInterceptors" properties. Any number of pre and post advices can be set, and their type may be Advisor (in which case they can contain a pointcut), MethodInterceptor or any advice type supported by the current Spring configuration (such as ThrowsAdvice, AfterReturningtAdvice or BeforeAdvice, which are supported by default.) These advices must support a shared-instance model. If you need transactional proxying with advanced AOP features such as stateful mixins, it's normally best to use the generic org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean, rather than the TransactionProxyFactoryBean convenience proxy creator. It's also possible to set up autoproxying: that is, to configure the AOP framework so that classes are automatically proxied without needing individual proxy definitions. Please see the chapter on AOP for more information and examples.
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Note: Using TransactionProxyFactoryBean definitions in the form above can seem overly verbose when many almost identical transaction proxies need to be created. You will almost always want to take advantage of parent and child bean definitions, along with inner bean definitions, to significantly reduce the verbosity of your transaction proxy definitions, as described in Section 5.7, Concise proxy definitions. You don't need to be an AOP expert--or indeed, to know much at all about AOP--to use Spring's declarative transaction management effectively. However, if you do want to become a "power user" of Spring AOP, you will find it easy to combine declarative transaction management with powerful AOP capabilities.
To recap, once the ApplicationContext has read its initialization information, it instantiates any beans within it which implement the BeanPostProcessor interface, and gives them a chance to post-process all other beans in the ApplicationContext. So using this mechanism, a properly configured BeanNameAutoProxyCreator can be used to postprocess any other beans in the ApplicationContext (recognizing them by name), and wrap them with a transactional proxy. The actual transaction proxy produced is essentially identical to that produced by the use of TransactionProxyFactoryBean, so will not be discussed further. Let us consider a sample configuration:
<!-- Transaction Interceptor set up to do PROPAGATION_REQUIRED on all methods --> <bean id="matchAllWithPropReq" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.MatchAlwaysTransactionAttributeSource"> <property name="transactionAttribute"><value>PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</value></property> </bean> <bean id="matchAllTxInterceptor" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionInterceptor"> <property name="transactionManager"><ref bean="transactionManager"/></property> <property name="transactionAttributeSource"><ref bean="matchAllWithPropReq"/></property> </bean> <!-- One BeanNameAutoProxyCreator handles all beans where we want all methods to use PROPAGATION_REQUIRED --> <bean id="autoProxyCreator" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.BeanNameAutoProxyCreator"> <property name="interceptorNames"> <list> <idref local="matchAllTxInterceptor"/> <idref bean="hibInterceptor"/> </list> </property> <property name="beanNames"> <list> <idref local="core-services-applicationControllerSevice"/> <idref local="core-services-deviceService"/> <idref local="core-services-authenticationService"/> <idref local="core-services-packagingMessageHandler"/> <idref local="core-services-sendEmail"/> <idref local="core-services-userService"/> </list> </property> </bean>
Assuming that we already have a TransactionManager instance in our ApplicationContext, the first thing we need to do is create a TransactionInterceptor instance to use. The TransactionInterceptor decides which
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Transaction management methods to intercept based on a TransactionAttributeSource implementing object passed to it as a property. In this case, we want to handle the very simple case of matching all methods. This is not necessarily the most efficient approach, but it's very quick to set up, because we can use the special pre-defined MatchAlwaysTransactionAttributeSource, which simply matches all methods. If we wanted to be more specific, we could use other variants such as MethodMapTransactionAttributeSource, NameMatchTransactionAttributeSource, or AttributesTransactionAttributeSource. Now that we have the transaction interceptor, we simply feed it to a BeanNameAutoProxyCreator instance we define, along with the names of 6 beans in the ApplicationContext that we want to wrap in an identical fashion. As you can see, the net result is significantly less verbose than it would have been to wrap 6 beans identically with TransactionProxyFactoryBean. Wrapping a 7th bean would add only one more line of config. You may notice that we are able to apply multiple interceptors. In this case, we are also applying a HibernateInterceptor we have previously defined (bean id=hibInterceptor), which will manage Hibernate Sessions for us. There is one thing to keep in mind, with regards to bean naming, when switching back and forth between the use of TransactionProxyFactoryBean, and BeanNameAutoProxyCreator. For the former, if the target bean is not defined as an inner bean, you normally give the target bean you want to wrap an id similar in form to myServiceTarget, and then give the proxy object an id of myService; then all users of the wrapped object simply refer to the proxy, i.e. myService. (These are just sample naming conventions, the point is that the target object has a different name than the proxy, and both are available from the ApplicationContext). However, when using BeanNameAutoProxyCreator, you name the target object something like myService. Then, when BeanNameAutoProxyCreator postprocesses the target object and create the proxy, it causes the proxy to be inserted into the Application context under the name of the original bean. From that point on, only the proxy (the wrapped object) is available from the ApplicationContext. When using TransactionProxyFactoryBean with the target specified as an inner bean, this naming issue is not a concern, since the inner bean is not normally given a name.
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you have an application server with powerful JTA capabilities, you may well decide that Spring declarative transactions offer more power and a much more productive programming model than EJB CMT. You need an application server's JTA capability only if you need to enlist multiple transactional resources. Many applications don't face this requirement. For example, many high-end applications use a single, highly scalable, database such as Oracle 9i RAC. Of course you may need other application server capabilities such as JMS and JCA. However, if you need only JTA, you could also consider an open source JTA add-on such as JOTM. (Spring integrates with JOTM out of the box.) However, as of early 2004, high-end application servers provide more robust support for XA transactions. The most important point is that with Spring you can choose when to scale your application up to a full-blown application server. Gone are the days when the only alternative to using EJB CMT or JTA was to write coding using local transactions such as those on JDBC connections, and face a hefty rework if you ever needed that code to run within global, container-managed transactions. With Spring only configuration needs to change: your code doesn't.
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Both these examples use Jakarta Commons Attributes syntax. Source-level metadata was introduced to the mainstream with the release of Microsoft's .NET platform, which uses source-level attributes to control transactions, pooling and other behaviour. The value in this approach has been recognized in the J2EE community. For example, it's much less verbose than the traditional XML deployment descriptors exclusively used by EJB. While it is desirable to externalize some things from program source code, some important enterprise settings--notably transaction characteristics--belong in program source. Contrary to the assumptions of the EJB spec, it seldom makes sense to modify the transactional characteristics of a method. Although metadata attributes are typically used mainly by framework infrastructure to describe the services application classes require, it should also be possible for metadata attributes to be queried at runtime. This is a key distinction from solutions such as XDoclet, which primarily view metadata as a way of generating code such as EJB artefacts. There are a number of solutions in this space, including: JSR-175: the standard Java metadata implementation, available in Java 1.5. But we need a solution now and may always want a facade XDoclet: well-established solution, primarily intended for code generation Various open source attribute implementations, pending the release of JSR-175, of which Commons Attributes appears to be the most promising. All these require a special pre- or post-compilation step.
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Thus Spring will support JSR-175 before Java 1.5 reaches GA, but will continue to offer an attribute abstraction API. The Spring Attributes interface looks like this:
public interface Attributes { Collection getAttributes(Class targetClass); Collection getAttributes(Class targetClass, Class filter); Collection getAttributes(Method targetMethod); Collection getAttributes(Method targetMethod, Class filter); Collection getAttributes(Field targetField); Collection getAttributes(Field targetField, Class filter); }
This is a lowest common denominator interface. JSR-175 offers more capabilities than this, such as attributes on method arguments. As of Spring 1.0, Spring aims to provide the subset of metadata required to provide effective declarative enterprise services a la EJB or .NET. Beyond Spring 1.0, it is likely that Spring will provide further metadata methods. Note that this interface offers Object attributes, like .NET. This distinguishes it from attribute systems such as that of Nanning Aspects and JBoss 4 (as of DR2), which offer only String attributes. There is a significant advantage in supporting Object attributes. It enables attributes to participate in class hierarchies and enables attributes to react intelligently to their configuration parameters. In most attribute providers, attribute classes will be configured via constructor arguments or JavaBean
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properties. Commons Attributes supports both. As with all Spring abstraction APIs, Attributes is an interface. This makes it easy to mock attribute implementations for unit tests.
It's possible to combine constructor arguments and JavaBean properties (as in Spring IoC). Because, unlike Java 1.5 attributes, Commons Attributes is not integrated with the Java language, it is necessary to run a special attribute compilation step as part of the build process. To run Commons Attributes as part of the build process, you will need to do the following. 1. Copy the necessary library Jars to $ANT_HOME/lib. Four Jars are required, and all are distributed with Spring: The Commons Attributes compiler Jar and API Jar xjavadoc.jar, from XDoclet commons-collections.jar, from Jakarta Commons
2. Import the Commons Attributes ant tasks into your project build script, as follows:
<taskdef resource="org/apache/commons/attributes/anttasks.properties"/>
3. Next, define an attribute compilation task, which will use the Commons Attributes attribute-compiler task to "compile" the attributes in the source. This process results in the generation of additional sources, to a location specified by the destdir attribute. Here we show the use of a temporary directory: Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 87
<target name="compileAttributes" > <attribute-compiler destdir="${commons.attributes.tempdir}" > <fileset dir="${src.dir}" includes="**/*.java"/> </attribute-compiler> </target>
The compile target that runs Javac over the sources should depend on this attribute compilation task, and must also compile the generated sources, which we output to our destination temporary directory. If there are syntax errors in your attribute definitions, they will normally be caught by the attribute compiler. However, if the attribute definitions are syntactically plausible, but specify invalid types or class names, the compilation of the generated attribute classes may fail. In this case, you can look at the generated classes to establish the cause of the problem. Commons Attributes also provides Maven support. Please refer to Commons Attributes documentation for further information. While this attribute compilation process may look complex, in fact it's a one-off cost. Once set up, attribute compilation is incremental, so it doesn't usually noticeably slow the build process. And once the compilation process is set up, you may find that use of attributes as described in this chapter can save you a lot of time in other areas. If you require attribute indexing support (only currently required by Spring for attribute-targeted web controllers, discussed below), you will need an additional step, which must be performed on a Jar file of your compiled classes. In this, optional, step, Commons Attributes will create an index of all the attributes defined on your sources, for efficient lookup at runtime. This step looks as follows:
<attribute-indexer jarFile="myCompiledSources.jar"> <classpath refid="master-classpath"/> </attribute-indexer>
See the /attributes directory of the Spring jPetStore sample application for an example of this build process. You can take the build script it contains and modify it for your own projects. If your unit tests depend on attributes, try to express the dependency on the Spring Attributes abstraction, rather than Commons Attributes. Not only is this more portable--for example, your tests will still work if you switch to Java 1.5 attributes in future--it simplifies testing. Commons Attributes is a static API, while Spring provides a metadata interface that you can easily mock.
8.4.1. Fundamentals
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This builds on the Spring AOP autoproxy functionality. Configuration might look like this:
<bean id="autoproxy" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator"> </bean> <bean id="transactionAttributeSource" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.AttributesTransactionAttributeSource" autowire="constructor"> </bean> <bean id="transactionInterceptor" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionInterceptor" autowire="byType"> </bean> <bean id="transactionAdvisor" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionAttributeSourceAdvisor" autowire="constructor" > </bean> <bean id="attributes" class="org.springframework.metadata.commons.CommonsAttributes" />
The basic concepts here should be familiar from the discussion of autoproxying in the AOP chapter. The most important bean definitions are those named autoproxy and transactionAdvisor. Note that the actual bean names are not important; what matters is their class. The autoproxy bean definition of class will automatically advise ("autoproxy") all bean instances in the current factory based on matching Advisor implementations. This class knows nothing about attributes, but relies on Advisors' pointcuts matching. The pointcuts do know about attributes.
org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator
Thus we simply need an AOP advisor that will provide declarative transaction management based on attributes. It's possible to add arbitrary custom Advisor implementations as well, and they will also be evaluated and applied automatically. (You can use Advisors whose pointcuts match on criteria besides attributes in the same autoproxy configuration, if necessary.) Finally, the attributes bean is the Commons Attributes Attributes implementation. Replace with another implementation of org.springframework.metadata.Attributes to source attributes from a different source.
8.4.3. Pooling
Again, as with .NET, you can enable pooling behavior via class-level attributes. Spring can apply this behavior
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to any POJO. You simply need to specify a pooling attribute, as follows, in the business object to be pooled:
/** * @@org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.target.PoolingAttribute (10) * * @author Rod Johnson */ public class MyClass {
You'll need the usual autoproxy infrastructure configuration. You then need to specify a pooling TargetSourceCreator, as follows. Because pooling affects the creation of the target, we can't use a regular advice. Note that pooling will apply even if there are no advisors applicable to the class, if that class has a pooling attribute.
<bean id="poolingTargetSourceCreator" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.metadata.AttributesPoolingTargetSourceCreator" autowire="constructor" > </bean>
The relevant autoproxy bean definition needs to specify a list of "custom target source creators", including the Pooling target source creator. We could modify the example shown above to include this property as follows:
<bean id="autoproxy" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy.DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator"> > <property name="customTargetSourceCreators"> <list> <ref local="poolingTargetSourceCreator" /> </list> </property> </bean>
As with the use of metadata in Spring in general, this is a one-off cost: once setup is out of the way, it's very easy to use pooling for additional business objects. It's arguable that the need for pooling is rare, so there's seldom a need to apply pooling to a large number of business objects. Hence this feature does not appear to be used often. Please see the Javadoc for the org.springframework.aop.framework.autoproxy package for more details. It's possible to use a different pooling implementation than Commons Pool with minimal custom coding.
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There are several potential areas you might want to do this, such as custom declarative security, or possibly caching. This is a powerful mechanism which can significantly reduce configuration effort in some projects. However, remember that it does rely on AOP under the covers. The more Advisors you have in play, the more complex your runtime configuration will be. (If you want to see what advice applies to any object, try casting a reference to org.springframework.aop.framework.Advised. This will enable you to examine the Advisors.)
However, this does mean that for each controller we typically need both a handler mapping (normally in a handler mapping XML bean definition) and an XML mapping for the controller itself. Spring offers a simpler approach based on source-level attributes, which is an attractive option in simpler scenarios. The approach described in this section is best suited to relatively simple MVC scenarios. It sacrifices some of the power of Spring MVC, such as the ability to use the same controller with different mappings, and the ability to base mappings on something other than request URL. In this approach, controllers are marked with one or more class-level metadata attributes, each specifying one URL they should be mapped to. The following examples show the approach. In each case, we have a controller that depends on a business object of type Cruncher. As usual, this dependency will be resolved by Dependency Injection. The Cruncher must be available through a bean definition in the relevant DispatcherServlet XML file, or a parent context. We attach an attribute to the controller class specifying the URL that should map to it. We can express the dependency through a JavaBean property or a constructor argument. This dependency must be resolvable by autowiring: that is, there must be exactly one business object of type Cruncher available in the context.
/** * Normal comments here * @author Rod Johnson * @@org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.metadata.PathMap("/bar.cgi") */ public class BarController extends AbstractController {
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private Cruncher cruncher; public void setCruncher(Cruncher cruncher) { this.cruncher = cruncher; } protected ModelAndView handleRequestInternal( HttpServletRequest arg0, HttpServletResponse arg1) throws Exception { System.out.println("Bar Crunching c and d =" + cruncher.concatenate("c", "d")); return new ModelAndView("test"); } }
For this auto-mapping to work, we need to add the following to the relevant xxxx-servlet.xml file, specifying the attributes handler mapping. This special handler mapping can handle any number of controllers with attributes as shown above. The bean id ("commonsAttributesHandlerMapping") is not important. The type is what matters:
<bean id="commonsAttributesHandlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.metadata.CommonsPathMapHandlerMapping" />
We do not currently need an Attributes bean definition, as in the above example, because this class works directly with the Commons Attributes API, not via the Spring metadata abstraction. We now need no XML configuration for each controller. Controllers are automatically mapped to the specified URL(s). Controllers benefit from IoC, using Spring's autowiring capability. For example, the dependency expressed in the "cruncher" bean property of the simple controller shown above is automatically resolved in the current web application context. Both Setter and Constructor Dependency Injection are available, each with zero configuration. An example of Constructor Injection, also showing multiple URL paths:
/** * Normal comments here * @author Rod Johnson * * @@org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.metadata.PathMap("/foo.cgi") * @@org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.metadata.PathMap("/baz.cgi") */ public class FooController extends AbstractController { private Cruncher cruncher; public FooController(Cruncher cruncher) { this.cruncher = cruncher; } protected ModelAndView handleRequestInternal( HttpServletRequest arg0, HttpServletResponse arg1) throws Exception { return new ModelAndView("test"); } }
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Significantly reduced volume of configuration. Each time we add a controller we need add no XML configuration. As with attribute-driven transaction management, once the basic infrastructure is in place, it is very easy to add more application classes. We retain much of the power of Spring IoC to configure controllers.
This approach has the following limitations: One-off cost in more complex build process. We need an attribute compilation step and an attribute indexing step. However, once in place, this should not be an issue. Currently Commons Attributes only, although support for other attribute providers may be added in future. Only "autowiring by type" dependency injection is supported for such controllers. However, this still leaves them far in advance of Struts Actions (with no IoC support from the framework) and, arguably, WebWork Actions (with only rudimentary IoC support) where IoC is concerned. Reliance on automagical IoC resolution may be confusing.
Because autowiring by type means there must be exactly one dependency of the specified type, we need to be careful if we use AOP. In the common case using TransactionProxyFactoryBean, for example, we end up with two implementations of a business interface such as Cruncher: the original POJO definition, and the transactional AOP proxy. This won't work, as the owning application context can't resolve the type dependency unambiguously. The solution is to use AOP autoproxying, setting up the autoproxy infrastructure so that there is only one implementation of Cruncher defined, and that implementation is automatically advised. Thus this approach works well with attribute-targeted declarative services as described above. As the attributes compilation process must be in place to handle the web controller targeting, this is easy to set up. Unlike other metadata functionality, there is currently only a Commons Attributes implementation available: org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.metadata.CommonsPathMapHandlerMapping. This limitation is due to the fact that not only do we need attribute compilation, we need attribute indexing: the ability to ask the attributes API for all classes with the PathMap attribute. Indexing is not currently offered on the org.springframework.metadata.Attributes abstraction interface, although it may be in future. (If you want to add support for another attributes implementation--which must support indexing--you can easily extend the AbstractPathMapHandlerMapping superclass of CommonsPathMapHandlerMapping, implementing the two protected abstract methods to use your preferred attributes API.) Thus we need two additional steps in the build process: attribute compilation and attribute indexing. Use of the attribute indexer task was shown above. Note that Commons Attributes presently requires a Jar file as input to indexing. If you begin with a handler metadata mapping approach, it is possible to switch at any point to a classic Spring XML mapping approach. So you don't close off this option. For this reason, I find that I often start a web application using metadata mapping.
Should you wish to provide support for another metadata API it is easy to do so. Simply implement the org.springframework.metadata.Attributes interface as a facade for your metadata API. You can then include this object in your bean definitions as shown above. All framework services that use metadata, such as AOP metadata-driven autoproxying, will then automatically be able to use your new metadata provider. We expect to add support for Java 1.5 attributes--probably as an add-on to the Spring core--in Q2 2004.
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DAO support
- super class for Hibernate data access objects. Requires a SessionFactory to be set, providing a HibernateTemplate based on it to subclasses. Can alternatively be initialized directly via a HibernateTemplate, to reuse the latter's settings like SessionFactory, flush mode, exception translator, etc.
HibernateDaoSupport
- super class for JDO data access objects. Requires a PersistenceManagerFactory to be set, providing a JdoTemplate based on it to subclasses.
JdoDaoSupport
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10.2. Using the JDBC Core classes to control basic JDBC processing and error handling
10.2.1. JdbcTemplate
This is the central class in the JDBC core package. It simplifies the use of JDBC since it handles the creation and release of resources. This helps to avoid common errors like forgetting to always close the connection. It executes the core JDBC workflow like statement creation and execution, leaving application code to provide SQL and extract results. This class executes SQL queries, update statements or stored procedure calls, imitating iteration over ResultSets and extraction of returned parameter values. It also catches JDBC exceptions and translates them to the generic, more informative, exception hierarchy defined in the org.springframework.dao package. Code using this class only need to implement callback interfaces, giving them a clearly defined contract. The PreparedStatementCreator callback interface creates a prepared statement given a Connection provided by this class, providing SQL and any necessary parameters. The same is true for the CallableStatementCreateor interface which creates callable statement. The RowCallbackHandler interface extracts values from each row of a ResultSet.
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This class can be used within a service implementation via direct instantiation with a DataSource reference, or get prepared in an application context and given to services as bean reference. Note: The DataSource should always be configured as a bean in the application context, in the first case given to the service directly, in the second case to the prepared template. Because this class is parameterizable by the callback interfaces and the SQLExceptionTranslator interface, it isn't necessary to subclass it. All SQL issued by this class is logged.
10.2.2. DataSource
In order to work with data from a database, we need to obtain a connection to the database. The way Spring does this is through a DataSource. A DataSource is part of the JDBC specification and can be seen as a generalized connection factory. It allows a container or a framework to hide connection pooling and transaction management issues from the application code. As a developer, you don't need to know any details about how to connect to the database, that is the responsibility for the administrator that sets up the datasource. You will most likely have to fulfill both roles while you are developing and testing you code though, but you will not necessarily have to know how the production data source is configured. When using Spring's JDBC layer, you can either obtain a data source from JNDI or you can configure your own, using an implementation that is provided in the Spring distribution. The latter comes in handy for unit testing outside of a web container. We will use the DriverManagerDataSource implementation for this section but there are several additional implementations that will be covered later on. The DriverManagerDataSource works the same way that you probably are used to work when you obtain a JDBC connection. You have to specify the fully qualified class name of the JDBC driver that you are using so that the DriverManager can load the driver class. Then you have to provide a url that varies between JDBC drivers. You have to consult the documentation for your driver for the correct value to use here. Finally you must provide a username and a password that will be used to connect to the database. Here is an example of how to configure a
DriverManagerDataSource:
DriverManagerDataSource dataSource = new DriverManagerDataSource(); dataSource.setDriverClassName( "org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver"); dataSource.setUrl( "jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://localhost:"); dataSource.setUsername( "sa"); dataSource.setPassword( "");
10.2.3. SQLExceptionTranslator
is an interface to be implemented by classes that can translate between SQLExceptions and our data access strategy-agnostic org.springframework.dao.DataAccessException.
SQLExceptionTranslator
Implementations can be generic (for example, using SQLState codes for JDBC) or proprietary (for example, using Oracle error codes) for greater precision. is the implementation of SQLExceptionTranslator that is used by default. This implementation uses specific vendor codes. More precise than SQLState implementation, but vendor specific. The error code translations are based on codes held in a JavaBean type class named SQLErrorCodes. This class is created and populated by an SQLErrorCodesFactory which as the name suggests is a factory for creating SQLErrorCodes based on the contents of a configuration file named "sql-error-codes.xml". This file is populated with vendor codes and based on the DatabaseProductName taken from the DatabaseMetaData, the codes for the current database are used.
SQLErrorCodeSQLExceptionTranslator
The SQLErrorCodeSQLExceptionTranslator applies the following matching rules: Try custom translation implemented by any subclass. Note that this class is concrete and is typically used itself, in which case this rule doesn't apply. 98
Data Access using JDBC Apply error code matching. Error codes are obtained from the SQLErrorCodesFactory by default. This looks up error codes from the classpath and keys into them from the database name from the database metadata. Use the fallback translator. SQLStateSQLExceptionTranslator is the default fallback translator. can be extended the following way:
SQLErrorCodeSQLExceptionTranslator
public class MySQLErrorCodesTranslator extends SQLErrorCodeSQLExceptionTranslator { protected DataAccessException customTranslate(String task, String sql, SQLException sqlex) { if (sqlex.getErrorCode() == -12345) return new DeadlockLoserDataAccessException(task, sqlex); return null; } }
In this example the specific error code '-12345' is translated and any other errors are simply left to be translated by the default translator implementation. To use this custom translator, it is necessary to pass it to the JdbcTemplate using the method setExceptionTranslator and to use this JdbcTemplate for all of the data access processing where this translator is needed. Here is an example of how this custom translator can be used:
// create a JdbcTemplate and set data source JdbcTemplate jt = new JdbcTemplate(); jt.setDataSource(dataSource); // create a custom translator and set the datasource for the default translation lookup MySQLErrorCodesTransalator tr = new MySQLErrorCodesTransalator(); tr.setDataSource(dataSource); jt.setExceptionTranslator(tr); // use the JdbcTemplate for this SqlUpdate SqlUpdate su = new SqlUpdate(); su.setJdbcTemplate(jt); su.setSql("update orders set shipping_charge = shipping_charge * 1.05"); su.compile(); su.update();
The custom translator is passed a data source because we still want the default translation to look up the error codes in sql-error-codes.xml.
intended to be used for queries that return a single value. Maybe you want to retrieve a count or a specific value from one row. If that is the case then you can use queryForInt,queryForLong or queryForObject. The latter will convert the returned JDBC Type to the Java class that is passed in as an argument. If the type conversion is invalid, then an InvalidDataAccessApiUsageException will be thrown. Here is an example that contains two query methods, one for an int and one that queries for a String.
import javax.sql.DataSource; import org.springframework.jdbc.core.JdbcTemplate; public class RunAQuery { private JdbcTemplate jt; private DataSource dataSource; public int getCount() { jt = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource); int count = jt.queryForInt("select count(*) from mytable"); return count; } public String getName() { jt = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource); String name = (String) jt.queryForObject("select name from mytable", java.lang.String.class); return name; } public void setDataSource(DataSource dataSource) { this.dataSource = dataSource; } }
In addition to the singe results query methods there are several methods that return a List with an entry for each row that the query returned. The most generic one is queryForList which returns a List where each entry is a Map with each entry in the map representing the column value for that row. If we add a method to the above example to retrieve a list of all the rows, it would look like this:
public List getList() { jt = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource); List rows = jt.queryForList("select * from mytable"); return rows; }
The list returned would look something like this: [{name=Bob, id=1}, {name=Mary, id=2}].
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} }
10.3.2. SmartDataSource
Interface to be implemented by classes that can provide a connection to a relational database. Extends the javax.sql.DataSource interface to allow classes using it to query whether or not the connection should be closed after a given operation. This can sometimes be useful for efficiency, if we know that we want to reuse a connection.
10.3.3. AbstractDataSource
Abstract base class for Spring's DataSource implementations, taking care of the "uninteresting" glue. This is the class you would extend if you are writing your own DataSource implementation.
10.3.4. SingleConnectionDataSource
Implementation of SmartDataSource that wraps a single connection which is not closed after use. Obviously, this is not multi-threading capable. If client code will call close in the assumption of a pooled connection, like when using persistence tools, set suppressClose to true. This will return a close-suppressing proxy instead of the physical connection. Be aware that you will not be able to cast this to a native Oracle Connection or the like anymore. This is primarily a test class. For example, it enables easy testing of code outside an application server, in conjunction with a simple JNDI environment. In contrast to DriverManagerDataSource, it reuses the same connection all the time, avoiding excessive creation of physical connections.
10.3.5. DriverManagerDataSource
Implementation of SmartDataSource that configures a plain old JDBC Driver via bean properties, and returns a new connection every time. Useful for test or standalone environments outside of a J2EE container, either as a DataSource bean in a respective ApplicationContext, or in conjunction with a simple JNDI environment. Pool-assuming Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 101
calls will simply close the connection, so any DataSource-aware persistence code should
work.
10.3.6. DataSourceTransactionManager
PlatformTransactionManager implementation for single JDBC data sources. Binds a JDBC connection from the specified data source to the thread, potentially allowing for one thread connection per data source. Application code is required to retrieve the JDBC connection via DataSourceUtils.getConnection(DataSource) instead of J2EE's standard DataSource.getConnection. This is recommended anyway, as it throws unchecked org.springframework.dao exceptions instead of checked SQLException. All framework classes like JdbcTemplate use this strategy implicitly. If not used with this transaction manager, the lookup strategy behaves exactly like the common one - it can thus be used in any case. Supports custom isolation levels, and timeouts that get applied as appropriate JDBC statement query timeouts. To support the latter, application code must either use JdbcTemplate or call DataSourceUtils.applyTransactionTimeout method for each created statement. This implementation can be used instead of JtaTransactionManager in the single resource case, as it does not require the container to support JTA. Switching between both is just a matter of configuration, if you stick to the required connection lookup pattern. Note that JTA does not support custom isolation levels!
10.4.1. SqlQuery
Reusable thread safe object to represent an SQL query. Subclasses must implement the newResultReader() method to provide an object that can save the results while iterating over the ResultSet. This class is rarely used directly since the MappingSqlQuery, that extends this class, provides a much more convenient implementation for mapping rows to Java classes. Other implementations that extend SqlQuery are MappingSqlQueryWithParameters and UpdatableSqlQuery.
10.4.2. MappingSqlQuery
MappingSqlQuery mapRow(ResultSet, int)
is a reusable query in which concrete subclasses must implement the abstract method to convert each row of the JDBC ResultSet into an object.
Of all the SqlQuery implementations, this is the one used most often and it is also the one that is the easiest to use. Here is a brief example of a custom query that maps the data from the customer table to a Java object called Customer.
private class CustomerMappingQuery extends MappingSqlQuery { public CustomerMappingQuery(DataSource ds) { super(ds, "SELECT id, name FROM customer WHERE id = ?"); super.declareParameter(new SqlParameter("id", Types.INTEGER)); compile();
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} public Object mapRow(ResultSet rs, int rowNumber) throws SQLException { Customer cust = new Customer(); cust.setId((Integer) rs.getObject("id")); cust.setName(rs.getString("name")); return cust; } }
We provide a constructor for this customer query that takes the DataSource as the only parameter. In this constructor we call the constructor on the superclass with the DataSource and the SQL that should be executed to retrieve the rows for this query. This SQL will be used to create a PreparedStatement so it may contain place holders for any parameters to be passed in during execution. Each parameter must be declared using the declareParameter method passing in an SqlParameter. The SqlParameter takes a name and the JDBC type as defined in java.sql.Types. After all parameters have been defined we call the compile method so the statement can be prepared and later be executed. Let's take a look at the code where this custom query is instantiated and executed:
public Customer getCustomer(Integer id) { CustomerMappingQuery custQry = new CustomerMappingQuery(dataSource); Object[] parms = new Object[1]; parms[0] = id; List customers = custQry.execute(parms); if (customers.size() > 0) return (Customer) customers.get(0); else return null; }
The method in this example retrieves the customer with the id that is passed in as the only parameter. After creating an instance of the CustomerMappingQuery class we create an array of objects that will contain all parameters that are passed in. In this case there is only one parameter and it is passed in as an Integer. Now we are ready to execute the query using this array of parameters and we get a List that contains a Customer object for each row that was returned for our query. In this case it will only be one entry if there was a match.
10.4.3. SqlUpdate
RdbmsOperation subclass representing a SQL update. Like a query, an update object is reusable. Like all RdbmsOperation objects, an update can have parameters and is defined in SQL. This class provides a number of update() methods analogous to the execute() methods of query objects. This class is concrete. Although it can be subclassed (for example to add a custom update method) it can easily be parameterized by setting SQL and declaring parameters.
import java.sql.Types; import javax.sql.DataSource; import org.springframework.jdbc.core.SqlParameter; import org.springframework.jdbc.object.SqlUpdate; public class UpdateCreditRating extends SqlUpdate { public UpdateCreditRating(DataSource ds) { setDataSource(ds); setSql("update customer set credit_rating = ? where id = ?"); declareParameter(new SqlParameter(Types.NUMERIC)); declareParameter(new SqlParameter(Types.NUMERIC)); compile(); } /**
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* @param id for the Customer to be updated * @param rating the new value for credit rating * @return number of rows updated */ public int run(int id, int rating) { Object[] params = new Object[] { new Integer(rating), new Integer(id)}; return update(params); } }
10.4.4. StoredProcedure
Superclass for object abstractions of RDBMS stored procedures. This class is abstract and its execute methods are protected, preventing use other than through a subclass that offers tighter typing. The inherited sql property is the name of the stored procedure in the RDBMS. Note that JDBC 3.0 introduces named parameters, although the other features provided by this class are still necessary in JDBC 3.0. Here is an example of a program that calls a function sysdate() that comes with any Oracle database. To use the stored procedure functionality you have to create a class that extends StoredProcedure. There are no input parameters, but there is an output parameter that is declared as a date using the class SqlOutParameter. The execute() method returns a map with an entry for each declared output parameter using the parameter name as the key.
import import import import java.sql.Types; java.util.HashMap; java.util.Iterator; java.util.Map;
import javax.sql.DataSource; import org.springframework.jdbc.core.SqlOutParameter; import org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.*; import org.springframework.jdbc.object.StoredProcedure; public class TestStoredProcedure { public static void main(String[] args) { TestStoredProcedure t = new TestStoredProcedure(); t.test(); System.out.println("Done!"); } void test() { DriverManagerDataSource ds = new DriverManagerDataSource(); ds.setDriverClassName("oracle.jdbc.driver.OracleDriver"); ds.setUrl("jdbc:oracle:thin:@localhost:1521:mydb"); ds.setUsername("scott"); ds.setPassword("tiger"); MyStoredProcedure sproc = new MyStoredProcedure(ds); Map res = sproc.execute(); printMap(res); } private class MyStoredProcedure extends StoredProcedure { public static final String SQL = "sysdate"; public MyStoredProcedure(DataSource ds) { setDataSource(ds); setFunction(true); setSql(SQL); declareParameter(new SqlOutParameter("date", Types.DATE)); compile(); } public Map execute() {
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Map out = execute(new HashMap()); return out; } } private static void printMap(Map r) { Iterator i = r.entrySet().iterator(); while (i.hasNext()) { System.out.println((String) i.next().toString()); } } }
10.4.5. SqlFunction
SQL "function" wrapper for a query that returns a single row of results. The default behavior is to return an int, but that can be overridden by using the methods with an extra return type parameter. This is similar to using the queryForXxx methods of the JdbcTemplate. The advantage with SqlFunction is that you don't have to create the JdbcTemplate, it is done behind the scenes. This class is intended to use to call SQL functions that return a single result using a query like "select user()" or "select sysdate from dual". It is not intended for calling more complex stored functions or for using a CallableStatement to invoke a stored procedure or stored function. Use StoredProcedure or SqlCall for this type of processing. This is a concrete class, which there is normally no need to subclass. Code using this package can create an object of this type, declaring SQL and parameters, and then invoke the appropriate run method repeatedly to execute the function. Here is an example of retrieving the count of rows from a table:
public int countRows() { SqlFunction sf = new SqlFunction(dataSource, "select count(*) from mytable"); sf.compile(); return sf.run(); }
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from proprietary, checked exceptions, to a set of abstracted runtime exceptions. This allows you to handle most persistence exceptions, which are non-recoverable, only in the appropriate layers, without annoying boilerplate catches/throws, and exception declarations. You can still trap and handle exceptions anywhere you need to. Remember that JDBC exceptions (including DB specific dialects) are also converted to the same hierarchy, meaning that you can perform some operations with JDBC within a consistent programming model. Integrated transaction management. Spring allows you to wrap your O/R mapping code with either a declarative, AOP style method interceptor, or an explicit 'template' wrapper class at the Java code level. In either case, transaction semantics are handled for you, and proper transaction handling (rollback, etc.) in case of exceptions is taken care of. As discussed below, you also get the benefit of being able to use and swap various transaction managers, without your Hibernate related code being affected. As an added benefit, JDBC-related code can fully integrate transactionally with the code you use to do O/R mapping. This is useful for handling functionality not implemented in, for example, Hibernate or iBatis.
11.2. Hibernate
11.2.1. Resource Management
Typical business applications are often cluttered with repetitive resource management code. Many projects try to invent their own solutions for this issue, sometimes sacrificing proper handling of failures for programming convenience. Spring advocates strikingly simple solutions for proper resource handling: Inversion of control via templating, i.e. infrastructure classes with callback interfaces, or applying AOP interceptors. The infrastructure cares for proper resource handling, and for appropriate conversion of specific API exceptions to an unchecked infrastructure exception hierarchy. Spring introduces a DAO exception hierarchy, applicable to any data access strategy. For direct JDBC, the JdbcTemplate class mentioned in a previous section cares for connection handling, and for proper conversion of SQLException to the DataAccessException hierarchy, including translation of database-specific SQL error codes to meaningful exception classes. It supports both JTA and JDBC transactions, via respective Spring transaction managers. Spring also offers Hibernate and JDO support, consisting of a HibernateTemplate / JdoTemplate analogous to JdbcTemplate, a HibernateInterceptor / JdoInterceptor, and a Hibernate / JDO transaction manager. The major goal is to allow for clear application layering, with any data access and transaction technology, and for loose coupling of application objects. No more business object dependencies on the data access or transaction strategy, no more hard-coded resource lookups, no more hard-to-replace singletons, no more custom service registries. One simple and consistent approach to wiring up application objects, keeping them as reusable and free from container dependencies as possible. All the individual data access features are usable on their own but integrate nicely with Spring's application context concept, providing XML-based configuration and cross-referencing of plain JavaBean instances that don't need to be Spring-aware. In a typical Spring app, many important objects are JavaBeans: data access templates, data access objects (that use the templates), transaction managers, business objects (that use the data access objects and transaction managers), web view resolvers, web controllers (that use the business objects), etc.
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<beans> <bean id="myDataSource" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean"> <property name="jndiName"> <value>java:comp/env/jdbc/myds</value> </property> </bean> <bean id="mySessionFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.LocalSessionFactoryBean"> <property name="mappingResources"> <list> <value>product.hbm.xml</value> </list> </property> <property name="hibernateProperties"> <props> <prop key="hibernate.dialect">net.sf.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect</prop> </props> </property> <property name="dataSource"> <ref bean="myDataSource"/> </property> </bean> ... </beans>
Note that switching from a JNDI-located DataSource to a locally defined one like a Jakarta Commons DBCP BasicDataSource is just a matter of configuration:
<bean id="myDataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close"> <property name="driverClassName"> <value>org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver</value> </property> <property name="url"> <value>jdbc:hsqldb:hsql://localhost:9001</value> </property> <property name="username"> <value>sa</value> </property> <property name="password"> <value></value> </property> </bean>
You can also use a JNDI-located SessionFactory, but that's typically not necessary outside an EJB context (see the "container resources vs local resources" section for a discussion).
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</beans>
public class ProductDaoImpl implements ProductDao { private SessionFactory sessionFactory; public void setSessionFactory(SessionFactory sessionFactory) { this.sessionFactory = sessionFactory; } public List loadProductsByCategory(final String category) { HibernateTemplate hibernateTemplate = new HibernateTemplate(this.sessionFactory); return (List) hibernateTemplate.execute( new HibernateCallback() { public Object doInHibernate(Session session) throws HibernateException { List result = session.find( "from test.Product product where product.category=?", category, Hibernate.STRING); // do some further stuff with the result list return result; } } ); } }
A callback implementation can effectively be used for any Hibernate data access. HibernateTemplate will ensure that Sessions are properly opened and closed, and automatically participate in transactions. The template instances are thread-safe and reusable, they can thus be kept as instance variables of the surrounding class. For simple single step actions like a single find, load, saveOrUpdate, or delete call, HibernateTemplate offers alternative convenience methods that can replace such one line callback implementations. Furthermore, Spring provides a convenient HibernateDaoSupport base class that provides a setSessionFactory method for receiving a SessionFactory, and getSessionFactory and getHibernateTemplate for use by subclasses. In combination, this allows for very simple DAO implementations for typical requirements:
public class ProductDaoImpl extends HibernateDaoSupport implements ProductDao { public List loadProductsByCategory(String category) { return getHibernateTemplate().find( "from test.Product product where product.category=?", category, Hibernate.STRING); } }
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<property name="sessionFactory"> <ref bean="mySessionFactory"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductDao" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="proxyInterfaces"> <value>product.ProductDao</value> </property> <property name="interceptorNames"> <list> <value>myHibernateInterceptor</value> <value>myProductDaoTarget</value> </list> </property> </bean> ... </beans>
public class ProductDaoImpl extends HibernateDaoSupport implements ProductDao { public List loadProductsByCategory(final String category) throws MyException { Session session = SessionFactoryUtils.getSession(getSessionFactory(), false); try { List result = session.find( "from test.Product product where product.category=?", category, Hibernate.STRING); if (result == null) { throw new MyException("invalid search result"); } return result; } catch (HibernateException ex) { throw SessionFactoryUtils.convertHibernateAccessException(ex); } } }
This method will only work with a HibernateInterceptor for it, caring for opening a thread-bound Session before and closing it after the method call. The "false" flag on getSession makes sure that the Session must already exist; otherwise SessionFactoryUtils would create a new one if none was found. If there is already a SessionHolder bound to the thread, e.g. by a HibernateTransactionManager transaction, SessionFactoryUtils automatically takes part in it in any case. HibernateTemplate uses SessionFactoryUtils internally - it's all the same infrastructure. The major advantage of HibernateInterceptor is that it allows any checked application exception to be thrown within the data access code, while HibernateTemplate is restricted to unchecked exceptions within the callback. Note that one can often defer the respective checks and throwing of application exceptions to after the callback, though. The interceptor's major drawback is that it requires special setup in the context. HibernateTemplate's convenience methods offers simpler means for many scenarios.
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... <bean id="myTransactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.HibernateTransactionManager"> <property name="sessionFactory"> <ref bean="mySessionFactory"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductService" class="product.ProductServiceImpl"> <property name="transactionManager"> <ref bean="myTransactionManager"/> </property> <property name="productDao"> <ref bean="myProductDao"/> </property> </bean> </beans>
public class ProductServiceImpl implements ProductService { private PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager; private ProductDao productDao; public void setTransactionManager(PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) { this.transactionManager = transactionManager; } public void setProductDao(ProductDao productDao) { this.productDao = productDao; } public void increasePriceOfAllProductsInCategory(final String category) { TransactionTemplate transactionTemplate = new TransactionTemplate(this.transactionManager); transactionTemplate.setPropagationBehavior(TransactionDefinition.PROPAGATION_REQUIRED); transactionTemplate.execute( new TransactionCallbackWithoutResult() { public void doInTransactionWithoutResult(TransactionStatus status) { List productsToChange = productDAO.loadProductsByCategory(category); ... } } ); } }
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<ref bean="myTransactionManager"/> </property> <property name="transactionAttributeSource"> <value> product.ProductService.increasePrice*=PROPAGATION_REQUIRED product.ProductService.someOtherBusinessMethod=PROPAGATION_MANDATORY </value> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductServiceTarget" class="product.ProductServiceImpl"> <property name="productDao"> <ref bean="myProductDao"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductService" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="proxyInterfaces"> <value>product.ProductService</value> </property> <property name="interceptorNames"> <list> <value>myTransactionInterceptor</value> <value>myProductServiceTarget</value> </list> </property> </bean> </beans>
public class ProductServiceImpl implements ProductService { private ProductDao productDao; public void setProductDao(ProductDao productDao) { this.productDao = productDao; } public void increasePriceOfAllProductsInCategory(final String category) { List productsToChange = this.productDAO.loadProductsByCategory(category); ... } ... }
As with HibernateInterceptor, TransactionInterceptor allows any checked application exception to be thrown with the callback code, while TransactionTemplate is restricted to unchecked exceptions within the callback. TransactionTemplate will trigger a rollback in case of an unchecked application exception, or if the transaction has been marked rollback-only by the application (via TransactionStatus). TransactionInterceptor behaves the same way by default but allows configurable rollback policies per method. A convenient alternative way of setting up declarative transactions is TransactionProxyFactoryBean, particularly if there are no other AOP interceptors involved. TransactionProxyFactoryBean combines the proxy definition itself with transaction configuration for a particular target bean. This reduces the configuration effort to one target bean plus one proxy bean. Furthermore, you do not need to specify which interfaces or classes the transactional methods are defined in.
<beans> ... <bean id="myTransactionManager" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.HibernateTransactionManager"> <property name="sessionFactory"> <ref bean="mySessionFactory"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductServiceTarget" class="product.ProductServiceImpl">
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<property name="productDao"> <ref bean="myProductDao"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductService" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"> <ref bean="myTransactionManager"/> </property> <property name="target"> <ref bean="myProductServiceTarget"/> </property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="increasePrice*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> <prop key="someOtherBusinessMethod">PROPAGATION_MANDATORY</prop> </props> </property> </bean> </beans>
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</property> </bean> <bean id="mySessionFactory2" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.LocalSessionFactoryBean"> <property name="mappingResources"> <list> <value>inventory.hbm.xml</value> </list> </property> <property name="hibernateProperties"> <props> <prop key="hibernate.dialect">net.sf.hibernate.dialect.OracleDialect</prop> </props> </property> <property name="dataSource"> <ref bean="myDataSource2"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myTransactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"/> <bean id="myProductDao" class="product.ProductDaoImpl"> <property name="sessionFactory"> <ref bean="mySessionFactory1"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myInventoryDao" class="product.InventoryDaoImpl"> <property name="sessionFactory"> <ref bean="mySessionFactory2"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductServiceTarget" class="product.ProductServiceImpl"> <property name="productDao"> <ref bean="myProductDao"/> </property> <property name="inventoryDao"> <ref bean="myInventoryDao"/> </property> </bean> <bean id="myProductService" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"> <ref bean="myTransactionManager"/> </property> <property name="target"> <ref bean="myProductServiceTarget"/> </property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="increasePrice*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> <prop key="someOtherBusinessMethod">PROPAGATION_MANDATORY</prop> </props> </property> </bean> </beans>
Both HibernateTransactionManager and JtaTransactionManager allow for proper JVM-level cache handling with Hibernate - without container-specific transaction manager lookup or JCA connector (as long as not using EJB to initiate transactions). Additionally, HibernateTransactionManager can export the JDBC Connection used by Hibernate to plain JDBC access code. This allows for high level transaction demarcation with mixed Hibernate/JDBC data access completely without JTA, as long as just accessing one database! Note, for an alternative approach to using TransactionProxyFactoryBean to declaratively demarcate transactions, please see Section 7.4.1, BeanNameAutoProxyCreator, another declarative approach.
Spring's resource management allows for simple switching between a JNDI SessionFactory and a local one, same for a JNDI DataSource, without having to change a single line of application code. Whether to keep the resource definitions in the container or locally within the application, is mainly a matter of the transaction strategy being used. Compared to a Spring-defined local SessionFactory, a manually registered JNDI SessionFactory does not provide any benefits. If registered via Hibernate's JCA connector, there is the added value of transparently taking part in JTA transactions, especially within EJBs. An important benefit of Spring's transaction support is that it isn't bound to a container at all. Configured to any other strategy than JTA, it will work in a standalone or test environment too. Especially for the typical case of single-database transactions, this is a very lightweight and powerful alternative to JTA. When using local EJB Stateless Session Beans to drive transactions, you depend both on an EJB container and JTA - even if you just access a single database anyway, and just use SLSBs for declarative transactions via CMT. The alternative of using JTA programmatically requires a J2EE environment too. JTA does not just involve container dependencies in terms of JTA itself and of JNDI DataSources. For non-Spring JTA-driven Hibernate transactions, you have to use the Hibernate JCA connector, or extra Hibernate transaction code with JTATransaction being configured, for proper JVM-level caching. Spring-driven transactions can work with a locally defined Hibernate SessionFactory nicely, just like with a local JDBC DataSource - if accessing a single database, of course. Therefore you just have to fall back to Spring's JTA transaction strategy when actually facing distributed transaction requirements. Note that a JCA connector needs container-specific deployment steps, and obviously JCA support in the first place. This is far more hassle than deploying a simple web app with local resource definitions and Spring-driven transactions. And you often need the Enterprise Edition of your container, as e.g. WebLogic Express does not provide JCA. A Spring app with local resources and transactions spanning one single database will work in any J2EE web container (without JTA, JCA, or EJB) - like Tomcat, Resin, or even plain Jetty. Additionally, such a middle tier can be reused in desktop applications or test suites easily. All things considered: If you do not use EJB, stick with local SessionFactory setup and Spring's HibernateTransactionManager or JtaTransactionManager. You will get all benefits including proper transactional JVM-level caching and distributed transactions, without any container deployment hassle. JNDI registration of a Hibernate SessionFactory via the JCA connector only adds value for use within EJBs.
11.2.9. Samples
The Petclinic sample in the Spring distribution offers alternative DAO implementations and application context configurations for Hibernate, JDBC, and Apache OJB. Petclinic can therefore serve as working sample app that illustrates the use of Hibernate in a Spring web app. It also leverages declarative transaction demarcation with different transaction strategies.
11.3. JDO
ToDo
11.4. iBATIS
Through the org.springframework.orm.ibatis package, Spring supports iBATIS SqlMaps 1.3.x and 2.0. The iBATIS support much resembles Hibernate support in that it supports the same template style programming and just as with Hibernate, iBatis support works with Spring's exception hierarchy and let's you enjoy the all IoC features Spring has.
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Spring supports both iBATIS SqlMaps 1.3 and 2.0. First let's have a look at the differences between the two. Table 11.1. iBATIS SqlMaps supporting classes for 1.3 and 2.0 Feature Creation of SqlMap Template-style helper class Callback to use MappedStatement Super class for DAOs 1.3.x
SqlMapFactoryBean SqlMapTemplate SqlMapCallback SqlMapDaoSupport
2.0
SqlMapClientFactoryBean SqlMapClientTemplate SqlMapClientCallback SqlMapClientDaoSupport
public class Account { private String name; private String email; public String getName() { return this.name; } public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; } public String getEmail() { return this.email; } public void setEmail(String email) { this.email = email; } }
Suppose we would want to map this class. We'd have to create the following SqlMap. Using the query, we can later on retrieve users through their email addresses. Account.xml:
<sql-map name="Account"> <result-map name="result" class="examples.Account"> <property name="name" column="NAME" columnIndex="1"/> <property name="email" column="EMAIL" columnIndex="2"/> </result-map> <mapped-statement name="getAccountByEmail" result-map="result"> select ACCOUNT.NAME, ACCOUNT.EMAIL from ACCOUNT where ACCOUNT.EMAIL = #value# </mapped-statement> <mapped-statement name="insertAccount"> insert into ACCOUNT (NAME, EMAIL) values (#name#, #email#) </mapped-statement> </sql-map>
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Data Access using O/R Mappers After having defined the Sql Map, we have to create a configuration file for iBATIS (sqlmap-config.xml):
<sql-map-config> <sql-map resource="example/Account.xml"/> </sql-map-config>
iBATIS loads resources from the classpath so be sure to add the Account.xml file to the classpath somewhere. Using Spring, we can now very easily set up the SqlMap, using the SqlMapFactoryBean:
<bean id="sqlMap" class="org.springframework.orm.ibatis.SqlMapFactoryBean"> <property name="configLocation"><value>WEB-INF/sqlmap-config.xml</value></property> </bean>
As you can see, we're using the SqlMapTemplate to execute the query. Spring has initialized the SqlMap for us using the SqlMapFactoryBean and when setting up the SqlMapAccountDao as follows, you're all set to go:
<!-- for more information about using datasource, have a look at the JDBC chapter --> <bean id="dataSource" class="org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource" destroy-method="close"> <property name="driverClassName"><value>${jdbc.driverClassName}</value></property> <property name="url"><value>${jdbc.url}</value></property> <property name="username"><value>${jdbc.username}</value></property> <property name="password"><value>${jdbc.password}</value></property> </bean> <bean id="accountDao" class="example.SqlMapAccountDao"> <property name="dataSource"><ref local="dataSource"/></property> <property name="sqlMap"><ref local="sqlMap"/></property> </bean>
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the root application context instance as entry point. All your registered beans and all of Spring's services can be at your fingertips even without Spring's web MVC. Spring doesn't compete with Struts or WebWork in this usage, it just addresses the many areas that the pure web frameworks don't, from bean configuration to data access and transaction handling. So you are able to enrich your application with a Spring middle tier and/or data access tier, even if you just want to use e.g. the transaction abstraction with JDBC or Hibernate.
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In the example above, all requests ending with .form will be handled by the DispatcherServlet. Then, the DispatcherServlet needs to be configured. As illustrated in Section 3.10, Introduction to the ApplicationContext, ApplicationContexts in Spring can be scoped. In the web framework, each DispatcherServlet has its own WebApplicationContext, which contains the DispatcherServlet configuration beans. The default BeanFactory used by the DispatcherServlet is the XmlBeanFactory and the DispatcherServlet will on initialization look for a file named [servlet-name]-servlet.xml in the WEB-INF directory of your web application. The default values used by the DispatcherServlet can be modified by using the servlet initialization parameters (see below for more information). The WebApplicationContext is just an ordinary ApplicationContext that has some extra features necessary for web applications. It differs from a normal ApplicationContext in that it is capable of resolving themes (see Section 12.7, Using themes), and that is knows to which servlet it is associated (by having a link to the ServletContext). The WebApplicationContext is bound in the ServletContext, and using RequestContextUtils you can always lookup the WebApplicationContext in case you need it. The Spring DispatcherServlet has a couple of special beans it uses, in order to be able to process requests and render the appropriate views. Those beans are included in the Spring framework and (optionally) have to be configured in the WebApplicationContext, just as any other bean would have to be configured. Each of those beans, is described in more detail below. Right now, we'll just mention them, just to let you know they exist and to enable us to go on talking about the DispatcherServlet. For most of the beans, defaults are provided so you don't have to worry about those. Table 12.1. Special beans in the WebApplicationContext Expression handler mapping(s) Explanation (Section 12.4, Handler mappings) a list of pre- and postprocessors and controllers that will be executed if they match certain criteria (for instance a matching URL specified with the controller) (Section 12.3, Controllers) the beans providing the actual functionality (or at least, access to the functionality) as part of the MVC triad (Section 12.5, Views and resolving them) capable of resolving view names and needed by the DispatcherServlet to resolves those views with (Section 12.6, Using locales) capable of resolves the locale a client is using, in order to be able to offer internationalized views (Section 12.7, Using themes) capable of resolving themes your web application can use e.g. to offer personalized layouts (Section 12.8, Spring's multipart (fileupload) support) offers functionality to process file uploads from HTML forms (Section 12.9, Handling exceptions) offers functionality to map exceptions to views or implement other more complex exception handling code
controller(s) view resolver locale resolver theme resolver multipart resolver handlerexception resolver
When a DispatcherServlet is setup for use and a request comes in for that specific DispatcherServlet it starts processing it. The list below describes the complete process a request goes through if a DispatcherServlet is supposed to handle it: 1. The WebApplicationContext is searched for and bound in the request as an attribute in order for controller and other elements in the chain of process to use it. It is bound by default under the key
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DispatcherServlet.WEB_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_ATTRIBUTE
2.
3. 4.
5. 6.
The locale resolver is bound to the request to let elements in the chain resolve the locale to use when processing the request (rendering the view, preparing data, etcetera). If you don't use the resolver, it won't affect anything, so if you don't need locale resolving, just don't bother The theme resolver is bound to the request to let e.g. views determine which theme to use (if you don't needs themes, don't bother, the resolver is just bound and does not affect anything if you don't use it) If a multipart resolver is specified, the request is inspected for multiparts and if so, it is wrapped in a MultipartHttpServletRequest for further processing by other elements in the chain (more information about multipart handling is provided below) An appropriate handler is searched for. If a handler is found, it execution chain associated to the handler (preprocessors, postprocessors, controllers) will be executed in order to prepare a model If a model is returned, the view is rendered, using the view resolver that has been configured with the WebApplicationContext. If no model was returned (which could be the result of a pre- or postprocessor intercepting the request because of for instance security reasons), no view is rendered as well, since the request could already have been fulfilled
Exceptions that might be thrown during processing of the request get picked up by any of the handlerexception resolvers that are declared in the WebApplicationContext. Using those exception resolvers you can define custom behavior in case such exceptions get thrown. The Spring DispatcherServlet also has support for returning the last-modification-date, as specified by the Servlet API. The process of determining the last modification date for a specific request, is simple. The DispatcherServlet will first of all lookup an appropriate handler mapping and test if the handler that matched implements the interface LastModified and if so, the value the of long getLastModified(request) is returned to the client. You can customize Spring's DispatcherServlet by adding context parameters in the web.xml file or servlet init parameters. The possibilities are listed below. Table 12.2. DispatcherServlet initialization parameters Parameter
contextClass
Explanation Class that implements WebApplicationContext, which will be used to instantiate the context used by this servlet. If this parameter isn't specified, the XmlWebApplicationContext will be used which is passed to the context instance (specified by contextClass) to indicate where context(s) can be found. The String is potentially split up into multiple strings (using a comma as a delimiter) to support multiple contexts (in case of multiple context locations, of beans that are defined twice, the latest takes precedence) the namespace of the WebApplicationContext. Defaults to [server-name]-servlet
contextConfigLocation String
namespace
12.3. Controllers
The notion of controller is part of the MVC design pattern. Controllers define application behavior, or at least provide users with access to the application behavior. Controllers interpret user input and transform the user input into a sensible model which will be represented to the user by the view. Spring has implemented the notion of a controller in a very abstract way enabling a wide variety of different kinds of controllers to be created. Spring contains formcontroller, commandcontroller, controllers that execute wizard-style logic and more. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 121
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Spring's basis for the controller architecture is the org.springframework.mvc.Controller interface, which is listed below.
public interface Controller { /** * Process the request and return a ModelAndView object which the DispatcherServlet * will render. */ ModelAndView handleRequest( HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws Exception; }
As you can see, the Controller interface just states one single method that should be capable of handling a request and return an appropriate model and view. Those three concepts are the basis for the Spring MVC implementation; ModelAndView and Controller. While the Controller interface is quite abstract, Spring offers a lot of controllers that already contain a lot of functionality you might need. The controller interface just define the most commons functionality offered by every controller: the functionality of handling a request and returning a model and a view.
Explanation indicates what methods this controller should accept. Usually this is set to both GET and POST, but you can modify this to reflect the method you want to support. If a request is received with a method that is not supported by the controller, the client will be informed of this (using a ServletException)) indicates whether or not this controller requires a session to do its work. This feature is offered to all controllers. If a session is not present when such a controller receives a request, the user is informed using a ServletException use this if you want handling by this controller to be synchronized on the user's session. To be more specific, extending controller will override the handleRequestInternal method, which will be synchronized if you specify this variable when you want a controller to generate caching directive in the HTTP response, specify a positive integer here. By default it is set to -1 so no caching directives will be included tweaking of your controllers specifying the HTTP 1.0 compatible "Expires" header. By default it's set to true, so you won't have to touch it tweaking of your controllers specifying the HTTP 1.1 compatible "Cache-Control" header. By default this is set to true so you won't really have to touch it
requiresSession
synchronizeSession
cacheSeconds
useExpiresHeader
useCacheHeader
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AbstractController
When using the AbstractController as a baseclass for your controllers (which is not recommended since there are a lot of other controller that might already do the job for your) you only have to override the handleRequestInternal(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse)-method and implement your logic code and return a ModelAndView object there. A short example consisting of a class and a declaration in the web application context.
package samples; public class SampleController extends AbstractController { public ModelAndView handleRequestInternal( HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws Exception { ModelAndView mav = new ModelAndView("foo", new HashMap()); } }
The class above and the declaration in the web application context is all you need to do besides setting up a handler mapping (see Section 12.4, Handler mappings) to get this very simple controller working. This controller will generates caching directives telling the client to cache things for 2 minutes before rechecking. This controller furthermore returns an hard-coded view (hmm, not so nice), named index (see Section 12.5, Views and resolving them for more information about views).
Explanation there's two usage-scenarios for the MultiActionController. Either you subclass the MultiActionController and specify the methods that will be resolved by the 123
Web framework Feature Explanation MethodNameResolver on the subclass (in case you don't need this configuration parameter), or you define a delegate object, on which methods resolved by the Resolver will be invoked. If you choose to enter this scenario, you will have to define the delegate using this configuration parameter as a collaborator
methodNameResolver
somehow, the MultiActionController will need to resolve the method it has to invoke, based on the request that came in. You can define a resolver that is capable of doing that using this configuration parameter
Methods defined for a multi-action controller will need to conform to the following signature:
// actionName can be replaced by any methodname ModelAndView actionName(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse);
Method overloading is not allowed since it'll confuse the MultiActionController. Furthermore, you can define exception handlers capable of handling exception that will be thrown form a method you specify. Exception handler methods need to return a ModelAndView object, just as any other action method and will need to conform to the following signature:
// anyMeaningfulName can be replaced by any methodname ModelAndView anyMeaningfulName(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse, ExceptionClass);
The ExceptionClass can be any exception, as long as it's a subclass of java.lang.Exception or java.lang.RuntimeException. The MethodNameResolver is supposed to resolve method names based on the request coming in. There are three resolver to your disposal, but of course you can implement more of them yourself if you want. - capable of resolving a request parameter and using that as the method name (http://www.sf.net/index.view?testParam=testIt will result in a method testIt(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) being called). Use the paramName configuration parameter to tweak the parameter that's inspected) InternalPathMethodNameResolver - retrieves the filename from the path and uses that as the method name (http://www.sf.net/testing.view will result in a method testing(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) being called) PropertiesMethodNameResolver - uses a user-defined properties object with request URLs mapped to methodnames. When the properties contain /index/welcome.html=doIt and a request to /index/welcome.html comes in, the doIt(HttpServletRequest, HttpServletResponse) method is called. This method name resolver works with the PathMatcher (see ???) so if the properties contained /**/welcom?.html it would also have worked!
ParameterMethodNameResolver
A couple of examples. First of all one showing the ParameterMethodNameResolver and the delegate property, which will accept requests to urls with the parameter method included and set to retrieveIndex:
<bean id="paramResolver" class="org....mvc.multiaction.ParameterMethodNameResolver"> <property name="paramName"><value>method</value></property> </bean> <bean id="paramMultiController" class="org....mvc.multiaction.MultiActionController"> <property name="methodNameResolver"><ref bean="paramResolver"/></property> <property name="delegate"><ref bean="sampleDelegate"/> </bean> <bean id="sampleDelegate" class="samples.SampleDelegate"/> ## together with public class SampleDelegate {
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public ModelAndView retrieveIndex( HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) { return new ModelAndView("index", "date", new Long(System.currentTimeMillis())); } }
When using the delegates shown above, we could also use the PropertiesMethodNameResolver to match a couple of URLs to the method we defined:
<bean id="propsResolver" class="org....mvc.multiaction.PropertiesMethodNameResolver"> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="/index/welcome.html">retrieveIndex</prop> <prop key="/**/notwelcome.html">retrieveIndex</prop> <prop key="/*/user?.html">retrieveIndex</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="paramMultiController" class="org....mvc.multiaction.MultiActionController"> <property name="methodNameResolver"><ref bean="propsResolver"/></property> <property name="delegate"><ref bean="sampleDelegate"/> </bean>
12.3.4. CommandControllers
Spring's CommandControllers are a fundamental part of the Spring MVC package. Command controllers provide a way to interact with data objects and dynamically bind parameters from the HttpServletRequest to the data object you're specifying. This compares to Struts's actionforms, where in Spring, you don't have to implement any interface of superclasses to do data binding. First, let's examine what command controllers available, just to get clear picture of what you can do with them: - a command controller you can use to create your own command controller, capable of binding request parameters to a data object you're specifying. This class does not offer form functionality, it does however, offer validation features and lets you specify in the controller itself what to do with the data object that has been filled with the parameters from the request. AbstractFormController - an abstract controller offering form submission support. Using this controller you can model forms and populate them using a data object you're retrieving in the controller. After a user has filled the form, the AbstractFormController binds the fields, validates and hands the object back to you - the controller - to take appropriate action. Supported features are invalid form submission (resubmission), validation, and the right workflow a form always has. What views you tie to your AbstractFormController you decide yourself. Use this controller if you need forms, but don't want to specify what views you're going to show the user in the applicationcontext SimpleFormController - an even more concrete FormController that helps you creating a form with corresponding data object even more. The SimpleFormController let's you specify a command object, a viewname for the form, a viewname for page you want to show the user when formsubmission has succeeded, and more AbstractWizardFormController - as the class name suggests, this is an abstract class--your WizardController should extend it. This means you have to implement both the validatePage(), processFinish as well as processCancel methods.
AbstractCommandController
Probably you also want to write a contractor, which should at the very least call setPages() and setCommandName(). The former takes as its argument an array of type String. This array is the list of views which comprise your wizard. The latter takes as its argument a String, which will be used to refer to your Command object from within your views.
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As with any instance of AbstractFormController, you are required to use a Command object - a JavaBean which will be populated with the data from your forms. You can do this in one of two ways: either call setCommandClass() from the constructor with the class of your command object, or implement the formBackingObject() method. AbstractWizardFormController has a number of concrete methods that you may wish to override. Of these, the ones you are likely to find most useful are: referenceData which you can use to pass model data to your view in the form of a Map; getTargetPage if your wizard needs to change page order or omit pages dynamically; and onBindAndValidate if you want to override the built-in binding and validation workflow. Finally, it is worth pointing out the setAllowDirtyBack and setAllowDirtyForward, which you can call from getTargetPage to allow users to move backwards and forwards in the wizard even if validation fails for the current page. For a full list of methods, see the JavaDoc for AbstractWizardFormController. There is an implemented example of this wizard in the jPetStore included in the Spring distribution: org.springframework.samples.jpetstore.web.spring.OrderFormController.java
the list of interceptors to use. HandlerInterceptors are discussed further ahead the default handler to use, when this handler mapping does not result in a matching
handler order: based on the value of the order property (see the org.springframework.core.Ordered interface), Spring will sort all handler mapping available in the context and apply them in them one after the other. alwaysUseFullPath: based on this setting, Spring will either use the full path within the current servlet context (if set to true) or the path within the current servlet mapping (false, the default value). If for example a servlet is mapped using /testing/* and you've set the alwaysUseFullPath property to true, /testing/viewPage.html will match, whereas /viewPage.html will only match if you leave the default value (false) in place (Note: this property is only available for the org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.AbstractUrlHandlerMapping and its subclasses) urlPathHelper: using this property, you can tweak the UrlPathHelper used when inspecting URLs. Normally, you shouldn't have to change the default value. (Note: this property is only available for the
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Web framework and its subclasses) the default value for this property is false. The HttpServletRequest returns request URLs and URIs that are not decoded. If you do want them to be decoded before a HandlerMapping will use them to find an appropriate handler, you have to set this to true (this requires JDK 1.4 however). Uses either the encoding specified by the request or the default ISO-8859-1 encoding scheme. (Note: this property is only available for the org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.AbstractUrlHandlerMapping and its subclasses) lazyInitHandlers: allows for lazy initialization of singleton handlers (prototype handlers are always lazily initialized). Default value is false (Note: this property is only available for the org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.AbstractUrlHandlerMapping and its subclasses)
org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.AbstractUrlHandlerMapping urlDecode:
12.4.1. BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping
A very simple, but very powerful handler mapping is the BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping, which maps incoming HTTP requests to names of beans, defined in the web application context. Let's say we want to enable a user to insert an account and we've already provided an appropriate FormController (see Section 12.3.4, CommandControllers for more information on Command- and FormControllers) and a JSP view (or Velocity template) that renders the form. When using the BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping, we could map the HTTP request with URL http://samples.com/editaccount.form to the appropriate FormController as follows:
<beans> <bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping"/> <bean name="/editaccount.form" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.SimpleFormController"> <property name="formView"><value>account</value></property> <property name="successView"><value>account-created</value></property> <property name="commandName"><value>Account</value></property> <property name="commandClass"><value>samples.Account</value></property> </bean> <beans>
All incoming requests for the URL /editaccount.form will now be handled by the FormController in the source listing above. Of course we have to define a servlet-mapping in web.xml as well, to let through all the requests ending with .form.
<web-app> ... <servlet> <servlet-name>sample</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup> </servlet> <!-- Maps the sample dispatcher to /*.form --> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>sample</servlet-name> <url-pattern>*.form</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> ... </web-app>
NOTE: if you want to use the BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping, you don't necessarily have to define it in the web application context (as indicated above). By default, if no handler mapping can be found in the context, the DispatcherServlet creates a BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping for you!
12.4.2. SimpleUrlHandlerMapping
A further - and much more powerful handler mapping - is the SimpleUrlHandlerMapping. This mapping is
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Web framework configurable in the application context and has Ant-style path matching capabilities (see ???). A couple of example will probably makes thing clear enough:
<web-app> ... <servlet> <servlet-name>sample</servlet-name> <servlet-class>org.springframework.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet</servlet-class> <load-on-startup>1</load-on-startup> </servlet> <!-- Maps the sample dispatcher to /*.form --> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>sample</servlet-name> <url-pattern>*.form</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> <servlet-mapping> <servlet-name>sample</servlet-name> <url-pattern>*.html</url-pattern> </servlet-mapping> ... </web-app>
Allows all requests ending with .html and .form to be handled by the sample dispatcher servlet.
<beans> <bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="/*/account.form">editAccountFormController</prop> <prop key="/*/editaccount.form">editAccountFormController</prop> <prop key="/ex/view*.html">someViewController</prop> <prop key="/**/help.html">helpController</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="someViewController" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.UrlFilenameViewController"/> <bean id="editAccountFormController" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.mvc.SimpleFormController"> <property name="formView"><value>account</value></property> <property name="successView"><value>account-created</value></property> <property name="commandName"><value>Account</value></property> <property name="commandClass"><value>samples.Account</value></property> </bean> <beans>
This handler mapping first of all reroutes all requests in all directories for a file named help.html to the someViewController, which is a UrlFilenameViewController (more about that can be found in Section 12.3, Controllers). Also, all requests for a resource beginning with view, ending with .html, in the directory ex, will be rerouted to that specific controller. Furthermore, two mappings have been defined that will match with the editAccountFormController.
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The preHandle method has a boolean return value. Using this value, you can tweak the behavior of the execution chain. When returning true, the handler execution chain will continue, when returning false, the DispatcherServlet assumes the interceptor itself has taken care of requests (and for instance rendered an appropriate view) and does not continue with executing the other interceptors and the actual handler in the execution chain. The following example provides an interceptor that intercepts all requests and reroutes the user to a specific page if the time is not between 9 a.m. and 6 p.m.
<beans> <bean id="handlerMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="interceptors"> <list> <ref bean="officeHoursInterceptor"/> </list> </property> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="/*.form">editAccountFormController</prop> <prop key="/*.view">editAccountFormController</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="officeHoursInterceptor" class="samples.TimeBasedAccessInterceptor"> <property name="openingTime"><value>9</value></property> <property name="closingTime"><value>18</value></property> </bean> <beans>
package samples; public class TimeBasedAccessInterceptor extends HandlerInterceptorAdapter { private int openingTime; private int closingTime; public void setOpeningTime(int openingTime) { this.openingTime = openingTime; } public void setClosingTime(int closingTime) { this.closingTime = closingTime; } public boolean preHandle( HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Object handler) throws Exception { Calendar cal = Calendar.getInstance(); int hour = cal.get(HOUR_OF_DAY); if (openingTime <= hour < closingTime) { return true; } else { response.sendRedirect("http://host.com/outsideOfficeHours.html"); return false; } } }
Any request coming in, will be intercepted by the TimeBasedAccessInterceptor, and if the current time is outside office hours, the user will be redirect to a static html file, saying for instance he can only access the website during office hours. As you can see, Spring has an adapter to make it easy for you to extend the HandlerInterceptor.
Web framework
No MVC framework for web applications is without a way to address views. Spring provides view resolvers, which enable you to render models in a browser without tying yourself to a specific view technology. Out-of-the-box, Spring enables you to use Java Server Pages, Velocity templates and XSLT views, for example. Chapter 13, Integrating view technologies has details of integrating various view technologies. The two classes which are important to the way Spring handles views are the ViewResolver and the View. The View interface addresses the preparation of the request and hands the request over to one of the view technologies. The ViewResolver provides a mapping between view names and actual views.
12.5.1. ViewResolvers
As discussed before, all controllers in the Spring web framework, return a ModelAndView instance. Views in Spring are addressed by a view name and are resolved by a viewresolver. Spring comes with quite a few view resolvers. We'll list most of them and then provide a couple of examples. Table 12.5. View resolvers ViewResolver AbstractCachingViewResolver Description Abstract view resolver taking care of caching views. Lots of views need preparation before they can be used, extending from this viewresolver enables caching of views Implementation of ViewResolver that accepts a config file written in XML to the same DTD as Spring's bean factories Implementation of ViewResolver that uses bean definitions in a ResourceBundle, specified by the bundle basename. The bundle is typically defined in a properties file, located in the classpath Simple implementation of ViewResolver that allows for direct resolution of symbolic view names to URLs, without an explicit mapping definition. This is appropriate if your symbolic names match the names of your view resources in a straightforward manner, without the need for arbitrary mappings Convenience subclass of UrlBasedViewResolver that supports InternalResourceView (i.e. Servlets and JSPs), and subclasses like JstlView and TilesView. The view class for all views generated by this resolver can be specified via setViewClass. See UrlBasedViewResolver's javadocs for details Convenience subclass of UrlBasedViewResolver that supports VelocityView (i.e. Velocity templates) or FreeMarkerView respectively and custom subclasses of them
XmlViewResolver ResourceBundleViewResolver
UrlBasedViewResolver
InternalResourceViewResolver
VelocityViewResolver / FreeMarkerViewResolver
As an example, when using JSP for a view technology you can use the the UrlBasedViewResolver. This view resolver translates view names to a URL and hands the request over the RequestDispatcher to render the view.
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.UrlBasedViewResolver"> <property name="prefix"><value>/WEB-INF/jsp/</value></property> <property name="suffix"><value>.jsp</value></property> </bean>
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Web framework When returning test as a viewname, this view resolver will hand the request over to the RequestDispatcher that'll send the request to /WEB-INF/jsp/test.jsp. When mixing different view technologies in a web application, you can use the ResourceBundleViewResolver:
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.ResourceBundleViewResolver"> <property name="basename"><value>views</value></property> <property name="defaultParentView"><value>parentView</value></property> </bean>
The ResourceBundleViewResolver inspects the ResourceBundle identified by the basename and for each view it is supposed to resolve, it uses the value of the property [viewname].class as the view class and the value of the property [viewname].url as the view url. As you can see, you can identify a parent view, from which all view in the properties file sort of extend. This way you can specify a default view class for instance. A note on caching: subclasses of AbstractCachingViewResolver cache view instances they've resolved. This greatly improves performance when using certain view technology. It's possible to turn off the cache, by setting the cache property to false. Furthermore, if you have the requirement to be able to refresh a certain view at runtime (for example when a Velocity template has been modified), you can use the removeFromCache(String viewName, Locale loc) method.
If a specific view resolver does not result in a view, Spring will inspect the context to see if other view resolvers are configured. If not, it'll throw an Exception. If there are additional view resolvers, it'll continue to inspect those. You have to keep something else in mind: the contract of a view resolver mentions that a view resolver can Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 131
Web framework return null to indicate the view could not be found. Not all view resolvers do this however! This is because the InternalResourceViewResolver for example simply cannot detect whether or not the view exists (it uses the RequestDispatcher internally, and dispatching is the only way to figure out if for example a JSP exists--this can only be done once). The same holds for the VelocityViewResolver and some others. Check the JavaDoc for the view resolver to see if you're dealing with a view resolver that does not report non-existing views. As a result of this, putting an InternalResourceViewResolver in the chain on a place other than the last, will result in the chain not being fully inspected, since the InternalResourceViewResolver will always return a view!
12.6.1. AcceptHeaderLocaleResolver
This locale resolver inspects the accept-language header in the request that was sent by the browser of the client. Usually this header field contains the locale of the client's operating system.
12.6.2. CookieLocaleResolver
This locale resolver inspects a Cookie that might exist on the client, to see if there's a locale specified. If so, it uses that specific locale. Using the properties of this locale resolver, you can specify the name of the cookie, as well as the maximum age.
<bean id="localeResolver"> <property name="cookieName"><value>clientlanguage</value></property> <!-- in seconds. If set to -1, the cookie is not persisted (deleted when browser shuts down) --> <property name="cookieMaxAge"><value>100000</value></property> </bean>
This is an example of defining a CookieLocaleResolver. Table 12.6. Special beans in the WebApplicationContext Property cookieName cookieMaxAge Default classname + LOCALE Integer.MAX_INT Description The name of the cookie The maximum time a cookie will stay persistent on the client. If -1 is specified, the cookie will not be persisted, at least, only 132
Web framework Property Default Description until the client shuts down his or her browser cookiePath / Using this parameter, you can limit the visibility of the cookie to a certain part of your site. When cookiePath is specified, the cookie will only be visible to that path, and the paths below
12.6.3. SessionLocaleResolver
The SessionLocaleResolver allows you to retrieve locales from the session that might be associated to the user's request.
12.6.4. LocaleChangeInterceptor
You can build in changing of locales using the LocaleChangeInterceptor. This interceptor needs to be added to one of the handler mappings (see Section 12.4, Handler mappings) and it will detect a parameter in the request and change the locale (it calls setLocale() on the LocaleResolver that also exists in the context).
<bean id="localeChangeInterceptor" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.LocaleChangeInterceptor"> <property name="paramName"><value>siteLanguage</value></property> </bean> <bean id="localeResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.i18n.CookieLocaleResolver"/> <bean id="urlMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="interceptors"> <list> <ref local="localeChangeInterceptor"/> </list> </property> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="/**/*.view">someController</prop> </props> </property> </bean>
All calls to all *.view resources containing a parameter named siteLanguage will now change the locale. So a call to http://www.sf.net/home.view?siteLanguage=nl will change the site language to Dutch.
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Web framework with Commons FileUpload (http://jakarta.apache.org/commons/fileupload) and COS FileUpload (http://www.servlets.com/cos). How uploading files is supported will be described in the rest of this chapter. By default, no multipart handling will be done by Spring, as some developers will want to handle multiparts themselves. You'll have to enable it yourself by adding a multipart resolver to the web application's context. After you've done that, each request will be inspected for a multipart that it might contain. If no such multipart is found, the request will continue as expected. However, if a multipart is found in the request, the MultipartResolver that has been declared in your context will resolve. After that, the multipart attribute in your request will be treated as any other attributes.
Of course you need to stick the appropriate jars in your classpath for the multipart resolver to work. In the case of the CommonsMultipartResolver, you need to use commons-fileupload.jar, while in the case of the CosMultipartResolver, use cos.jar. Now that you have seen how to set Spring up to handle multipart requests, let's talk about how to actually use it. When the Spring DispatcherServlet detects a Multipart request, it activates the resolver that has been declared in your context and hands over the request. What it basically does is wrap the current HttpServletRequest into a MultipartHttpServletRequest that has support for multiparts. Using the MultipartHttpServletRequest you can get information about the multiparts contained by this request and actually get the multiparts themselves in your controllers.
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<beans> ... <bean id="multipartResolver" class="org.springframework.web.multipart.commons.CommonsMultipartResolver"/> <bean id="urlMapping" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.SimpleUrlHandlerMapping"> <property name="mappings"> <props> <prop key="/upload.form">fileUploadController</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <bean id="fileUploadController" class="examples.FileUploadController"> <property name="commandClass"><value>examples.FileUploadBean</value></property> <property name="formView"><value>fileuploadform</value></property> <property name="successView"><value>confirmation</value></property> </bean> </beans>
After that, create the controller and the actual bean holding the file property
// snippet from FileUploadController public class FileUploadController extends SimpleFormController { protected ModelAndView onSubmit( HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response, Object command, BindException errors) throws ServletException, IOException { // cast the bean FileUploadBean bean = (FileUploadBean)command; // let's see if there's content there byte[] file = bean.getFile(); if (file == null) { // hmm, that's strange, the user did not upload anything } // well, let's do nothing with the bean for now and return: return super.onSubmit(request, response, command, errors); } protected void initBinder( HttpServletRequest request, ServletRequestDataBinder binder) throws ServletException { // to actually be able to convert Multipart instance to byte[] // we have to register a custom editor (in this case the // ByteArrayMultipartEditor binder.registerCustomEditor(byte[].class, new ByteArrayMultipartFileEditor()); // now Spring knows how to handle multipart object and convert them } } // snippet from FileUploadBean public class FileUploadBean { private byte[] file; public void setFile(byte[] file) { this.file = file; } public byte[] getFile() { return file; } }
As you can see, the FileUploadBean has a property typed byte[] that holds the file. The controller registers a Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 135
Web framework custom editor to let Spring know how to actually convert the multipart objects the resolver has found to properties specified by the bean. In these examples, nothing is done with the byte[] property of the bean itself, but in practice you can do whatever you want (save it in a database, mail it to somebody, etcetera). But we're still not finished. To actually let the user upload something, we have to create a form:
<html> <head> <title>Upload a file please</title> </head> <body> <h1>Please upload a file</h1> <form method="post" action="upload.form" enctype="multipart/form-data"> <input type="file" name="file"/> <input type="submit"/> </form> </body> </html>
As you can see, we've created a field named after the property of the bean that holds the byte[]. Furthermore we've added the encoding attribute which is necessary to let the browser know how to encode the multipart fields (do not forget this!). Right now everything should work.
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As you can see, the ResourceBundleViewResolver needs a properties file defining the view names mapped to 1) a class and 2) a URL. With a ResourceBundleViewResolver you can mix different types of views using only one resolver.
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> <property name="viewClass"><value>org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView</value></property> <property name="prefix"><value>/WEB-INF/jsp/</value></property> <property name="suffix"><value>.jsp</value></property> </bean>
The InternalResourceBundleViewResolver can be configured for using JSPs as described above. As a best practice, we strongly encourage placing your JSP files in a a directory under the WEB-INF directory, so there can be no direct access by clients.
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When using Java Standard Tag Library you must use a special view class, the JstlView, as JSTL needs some preparation before things such as the i18N features will work.
13.3. Tiles
It is possible to integrate Tiles - just as any other view technology - in web applications using Spring. The following describes in a broad way how to do this.
13.3.1. Dependencies
To be able to use Tiles you have to have a couple of additional dependencies included in your project. The following is the list of dependencies you need.
struts version 1.1 commons-beanutils commons-digester commons-logging commons-lang
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As you can see, there are five files containing definitions, which are all located in the WEB-INF/defs directory. At initialization of the WebApplicationContext, the files will be loaded and the definitionsfactory defined by the factoryClass-property is initialized. After that has been done, the tiles includes in the definition files can be used as views within your Spring web application. To be able to use the views you have to have a ViewResolver just as with any other view technology used with Spring. Below you can find two possibilities, the InternalResourceViewResolver and the ResourceBundleViewResolver. 13.3.2.1. InternalResourceViewResolver The InternalResourceViewResolver instantiates the given viewClass for each view it has to resolve.
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.InternalResourceViewResolver"> <property name="requestContextAttribute"><value>requestContext</value></property> <property name="viewClass"> <value>org.springframework.web.servlet.view.tiles.TilesView</value> </property> </bean>
13.3.2.2. ResourceBundleViewResolver The ResourceBundleViewResolver has to be provided with a property file containing viewnames and viewclasses the resolver can use:
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.ResourceBundleViewResolver"> <property name="basename"><value>views</value></property> </bean>
... welcomeView.class=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.tiles.TilesView welcomeView.url=welcome (<b>this is the name of a definition</b>) vetsView.class=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.tiles.TilesView vetsView.url=vetsView (<b>again, this is the name of a definition</b>) findOwnersForm.class=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.JstlView findOwnersForm.url=/WEB-INF/jsp/findOwners.jsp ...
As you can see, when using the ResourceBundleViewResolver, you can mix view using different view technologies.
13.4.1. Dependencies
Your web application will need to include velocity-1.x.x.jar or freemarker-2.x.jar in order to work with Velocity or FreeMarker respectively and commons-collections.jar needs also to be available for Velocity. Typically they are included in the WEB-INF/lib folder where they are guaranteed to be found by a J2EE server and added to the classpath for your application. It is of course assumed that you already have the spring.jar in your WEB-INF/lib folder too! The latest stable velocity, freemarker and commons collections jars are supplied Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 139
Integrating view technologies with the Spring framework and can be copied from the relevant /lib/ sub-directories. If you make use of Spring's dateToolAttribute or numberToolAttribute in your Velocity views, you will also need to include the
velocity-tools-generic-1.x.jar
<!-- freemarker config --> <bean id="freemarkerConfig" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.freemarker.FreeMarkerConfigurer"> <property name="templateLoaderPath"><value>/WEB-INF/freemarker/</value></property> </bean> <!-View resolvers can also be configured with ResourceBundles or XML files. If you need different view resolving based on Locale, you have to use the resource bundle resolver. --> <bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.freemarker.FreeMarkerViewResolver"> <property name="cache"><value>true</value></property> <property name="prefix"><value></value></property> <property name="suffix"><value>.ftl</value></property> </bean>
NB: For non web-apps add a VelocityConfigurationFactoryBean or a FreeMarkerConfigurationFactoryBean to your application context definition file.
Alternatively, you can specify velocity properties directly in the bean definition for the Velocity config bean by replacing the "configLocation" property with the following inline properties.
<bean id="velocityConfig" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.velocity.VelocityConfigurer"> <property name="velocityProperties"> <props> <prop key="resource.loader">file</prop> <prop key="file.resource.loader.class"> org.apache.velocity.runtime.resource.loader.FileResourceLoader </prop> <prop key="file.resource.loader.path">${webapp.root}/WEB-INF/velocity</prop> <prop key="file.resource.loader.cache">false</prop> </props> </property> </bean>
Refer to the API documentation [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/ui/velocity/VelocityEngineFactory.html] for Spring configuration of Velocity, or the Velocity documentation for examples and definitions of the velocity.properties file itself. 13.4.4.2. FreeMarker FreeMarker 'Settings' and 'SharedVariables' can be passed directly to the FreeMarker Configuration object managed by Spring by setting the appropriate bean properties on the FreeMarkerConfigurer bean. The freemarkerSettings property requires a java.util.Properties object and the freemarkerVariables property requires a java.util.Map.
<bean id="freemarkerConfig" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.freemarker.FreeMarkerConfigurer"> <property name="templateLoaderPath"><value>/WEB-INF/freemarker/</value></property> <property name="freemarkerVariables"> <map> <entry key="xml_escape"><ref local="fmXmlEscape"/></entry> </map> </property> </bean> <bean id="fmXmlEscape" class="freemarker.template.utility.XmlEscape"/>
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See the FreeMarker documentation for details of settings and variables as they apply to the Configuration object.
Some of the macros defined in the Spring libraries are considered internal (private) but no such scoping exists in the macro definitions making all macros visible to calling code and user templates. The following sections concentrate only on the macros you need to be directly calling from within your templates. If you wish to view the macro code directly, the files are called spring.vm / spring.ftl and are in the packages org.springframework.web.servlet.view.velocity or org.springframework.web.servlet.view.freemarker respectively. 13.4.5.2. simple binding In your html forms (vm / ftl templates) that act as the 'formView' for a Spring form controller, you can use code similar to the following to bind to field values and display error messages for each input field in similar fashion to the JSP equivalent. Note that the name of the command object is "command" by default, but can be overridden in your MVC configuration by setting the 'commandName' bean property on your form controller. Example code is shown below for the personFormV and personFormF views configured earlier;
<!-- velocity macros are automatically available --> <html> ... <form action="" method="POST"> Name: #springBind( "command.name" ) <input type="text" name="${status.expression}" value="$!status.value" /><br> #foreach($error in $status.errorMessages) <b>$error</b> <br> #end <br> ... <input type="submit" value="submit"/>
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<!-- freemarker macros have to be imported into a namespace. We strongly recommend sticking to 'spring' --> <#import "spring.ftl" as spring /> <html> ... <form action="" method="POST"> Name: <@spring.bind "command.name" /> <input type="text" name="${spring.status.expression}" value="${spring.status.value?default("")}" /><br> <#list spring.status.errorMessages as error> <b>${error}</b> <br> </#list> <br> ... <input type="submit" value="submit"/> </form> ... </html>
#springBind / <@spring.bind>
requires a 'path' argument which consists of the name of your command object (it will be 'command' unless you changed it in your FormController properties) followed by a period and the name of the field on the command object you wish to bind to. Nested fields can be used too such as "command.address.street". The bind macro assumes the default HTML escaping behavior specified by the ServletContext parameter defaultHtmlEscape in web.xml The optional form of the macro called #springBindEscaped / <@spring.bindEscaped> takes a second argument and explicitly specifies whether HTML escaping should be used in the status error messages or values. Set to true or false as required. Additional form handling macros simplify the use of HTML escaping and these macros should be used wherever possible. They are explained in the next section. 13.4.5.3. form input generation macros Additional convenience macros for both languages simplify both binding and form generation (including validation error display). It is never necessary to use these macros to generate form input fields, and they can be mixed and matched with simple HTML or calls direct to the spring bind macros highlighted previously. The following table of available macros show the VTL and FTL definitions and the parameter list that each takes. Table 13.1. table of macro definitions macro message (output a string from a resource bundle based on the code parameter) VTL definition
#springMessage($code)
FTL definition
<@spring.message code/>
messageText (output a string from #springMessageText($code a resource bundle based on the $default) code parameter, falling back to the value of the default parameter) url (prefix a relative URL with the application's context root) formInput (standard input field Spring Framework Version 1.1.5
#springUrl($relativeUrl)
<@spring.url relativeUrl/>
#springFormInput($path
<@spring.formInput path,
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$attributes)
FTL definition
attributes, fieldType/> <@spring.formHiddenInput path, attributes/>
formHiddenInput * (hidden input #springFormHiddenInput($path field for submitting non-user input) $attributes) formPasswordInput * (standard input field for gathering passwords. Note that no value will ever be populated in fields of this type)
formTextarea (large text field for #springFormTextarea($path gathering long, freeform text input) $attributes) formSingleSelect (drop down box of options allowing a single required value to be selected) formMultiSelect (a list box of options allowing the user to select 0 or more values) formRadioButtons (a set of radio buttons allowing a single selection to be made from the available choices) formCheckboxes (a set of checkboxes allowing 0 or more values to be selected) showErrors (simplify display of validation errors for the bound field)
#springFormSingleSelect( $path $options $attributes)
* In FTL (FreeMarker), these two macros are not actually required as you can use the normal formInput macro, specifying 'hidden' or 'password' as the value for the fieldType parameter. The parameters to any of the above macros have consistent meanings: path: the name of the field to bind to (ie "command.name") options: a Map of all the available values that can be selected from in the input field. The keys to the map represent the values that will be POSTed back from the form and bound to the command object. Map objects stored against the keys are the labels displayed on the form to the user and may be different from the corresponding values posted back by the form. Usually such a map is supplied as reference data by the controller. Any Map implementation can be used depending on required behavior. For strictly sorted maps, a SortedMap such as a TreeMap with a suitable Comparator may be used and for arbitrary Maps that should return values in insertion order, use a LinkedHashMap or a LinkedMap from commons-collections. separator: where multiple options are available as discreet elements (radio buttons or checkboxes), the sequence of characters used to separate each one in the list (ie "<br>"). attributes: an additional string of arbitrary tags or text to be included within the HTML tag itself. This string 144
is echoed literally by the macro. For example, in a textarea field you may supply attributes as 'rows="5" cols="60"' or you could pass style information such as 'style="border:1px solid silver"'. classOrStyle: for the showErrors macro, the name of the CSS class that the span tag wrapping each error will use. If no information is supplied (or the value is empty) then the errors will be wrapped in <b></b> tags.
Examples of the macros are outlined below some in FTL and some in VTL. Where usage differences exist between the two languages, they are explained in the notes.
The formInput macro takes the path parameter (command.name) and an additional attributes parameter which is empty in the example above. The macro, along with all other form generation macros, performs an implicit spring bind on the path parameter. The binding remains valid until a new bind occurs so the showErrors macro doesn't need to pass the path parameter again - it simply operates on whichever field a bind was last created for. The showErrors macro takes a separator parameter (the characters that will be used to separate multiple errors on a given field) and also accepts a second parameter, this time a class name or style attribute. Note that FreeMarker is able to specify default values for the attributes parameter, unlike Velocity, and the two macro calls above could be expressed as follows in FTL:
<@spring.formInput "command.name"/> <@spring.showErrors "<br>"/>
Output is shown below of the form fragment generating the name field, and displaying a validation error after the form was submitted with no value in the field. Validation occurs through Spring's Validation framework. The generated HTML looks like this:
Name: <input type="text" name="name" value="" > <br> <b>required</b> <br> <br>
The formTextarea macro works the same way as the formInput macro and accepts the same parameter list. Commonly, the second parameter (attributes) will be used to pass style information or rows and cols attributes for the textarea.
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formRadioButtons formCheckboxes
Each of the four macros accepts a Map of options containing the value for the form field, and the label corresponding to that value. The value and the label can be the same. An example of radio buttons in FTL is below. The form backing object specifies a default value of 'London' for this field and so no validation is necessary. When the form is rendered, the entire list of cities to choose from is supplied as reference data in the model under the name 'cityMap'.
... Town: <@spring.formRadioButtons "command.address.town", cityMap, "" /><br><br>
This renders a line of radio buttons, one for each value in cityMap using the separator "". No additional attributes are supplied (the last parameter to the macro is missing). The cityMap uses the same String for each key-value pair in the map. The map's keys are what the form actually submits as POSTed request parameters, map values are the labels that the user sees. In the example above, given a list of three well known cities and a default value in the form backing object, the HTML would be
Town: <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="London" > London <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="Paris" checked="checked" > Paris <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="New York" > New York
If your application expects to handle cities by internal codes for example, the map of codes would be created with suitable keys like the example below.
protected Map referenceData(HttpServletRequest request) throws Exception { Map cityMap = new LinkedHashMap(); cityMap.put("LDN", "London"); cityMap.put("PRS", "Paris"); cityMap.put("NYC", "New York"); Map m = new HashMap(); m.put("cityMap", cityMap); return m; }
The code would now produce output where the radio values are the relevant codes but the user still sees the more user friendly city names.
Town: <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="LDN" > London <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="PRS" checked="checked" > Paris <input type="radio" name="address.town" value="NYC" >
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New York
13.4.5.4. overriding HTML escaping and making tags XHTML compliant Default usage of the form macros above will result in HTML tags that are HTML 4.01 compliant and that use the default value for HTML escaping defined in your web.xml as used by Spring's bind support. In order to make the tags XHTML compliant or to override the default HTML escaping value, you can specify two variables in your template (or in your model where they will be visible to your templates). The advantage of specifying them in the templates is that they can be changed to different values later in the template processing to provide different behavior for different fields in your form. To switch to XHTML compliance for your tags, specify a value of 'true' for a model/context variable named xhtmlCompliant:
## for Velocity.. #set($springXhtmlCompliant = true) <#-- for FreeMarker --> <#assign xhtmlCompliant = true in spring>
Any tags generated by the Spring macros will now be XHTML compliant after processing this directive. In similar fashion, HTML escaping can be specified per field:
<#-- until this point, default HTML escaping is used --> <#assign htmlEscape = true in spring> <#-- next field will use HTML escaping --> <@spring.formInput "command.name" /> <#assign htmlEscape = false in spring> <#-- all future fields will be bound with HTML escaping off -->
13.5. XSLT
XSLT is a transformation language for XML and is popular as a view technology within web applications. XSLT can be a good choice as a view technology if your application naturally deals with XML, or if your model can easily be converted to XML. The following section shows how to produce an XML document as model data and have it transformed with XSLT in a Spring application.
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Integrating view technologies ..that implements our word generation 'logic'. 13.5.1.2. Standard MVC controller code The controller logic is encapsulated in a subclass of AbstractController, with the handler method being defined like so..
protected ModelAndView handleRequestInternal( HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws Exception { Map map = new HashMap(); List wordList = new ArrayList(); wordList.add("hello"); wordList.add("world"); map.put("wordList", wordList); return new ModelAndView("home", map); }
So far we've done nothing that's XSLT specific. The model data has been created in the same way as you would for any other Spring MVC application. Depending on the configuration of the application now, that list of words could be rendered by JSP/JSTL by having them added as request attributes, or they could be handled by Velocity by adding the object to the VelocityContext. In order to have XSLT render them, they of course have to be converted into an XML document somehow. There are software packages available that will automatically 'domify' an object graph, but within Spring, you have complete flexibility to create the DOM from your model in any way you choose. This prevents the transformation of XML playing too great a part in the structure of your model data which is a danger when using tools to manage the domification process. 13.5.1.3. Convert the model data to XML In order to create a DOM document from our list of words or any other model data, we subclass org.springframework.web.servlet.view.xslt.AbstractXsltView. In doing so, we must implement the abstract method createDomNode(). The first parameter passed to this method is our model Map. Here's the complete listing of the HomePage class in our trivial word application - it uses JDOM to build the XML document before converting it to the required W3C Node, but this is simply because I find JDOM (and Dom4J) easier API's to handle than the W3C API.
package xslt; // imports omitted for brevity public class HomePage extends AbstractXsltView { protected Node createDomNode( Map model, String rootName, HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse res ) throws Exception { org.jdom.Document doc = new org.jdom.Document(); Element root = new Element(rootName); doc.setRootElement(root); List words = (List) model.get("wordList"); for (Iterator it = words.iterator(); it.hasNext();) { String nextWord = (String) it.next(); Element e = new Element("word"); e.setText(nextWord); root.addContent(e); } // convert JDOM doc to a W3C Node and return return new DOMOutputter().output( doc );
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} }
13.5.1.4. Defining the view properties The views.properties file (or equivalent xml definition if you're using an XML based view resolver as we did in the Velocity examples above) looks like this for the one-view application that is 'My First Words'..
home.class=xslt.HomePage home.stylesheetLocation=/WEB-INF/xsl/home.xslt home.root=words
Here, you can see how the view is tied in with the HomePage class just written which handles the model domification in the first property '.class'. The stylesheetLocation property obviously points to the XSLT file which will handle the XML transformation into HTML for us and the final property '.root' is the name that will be used as the root of the XML document. This gets passed to the HomePage class above in the second parameter to the createDomNode method. 13.5.1.5. Document transformation Finally, we have the XSLT code used for transforming the above document. As highlighted in the views.properties file, it is called home.xslt and it lives in the war file under WEB-INF/xsl.
<?xml version="1.0"?> <xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform"> <xsl:output method="text/html" omit-xml-declaration="yes"/> <xsl:template match="/"> <html> <head><title>Hello!</title></head> <body> <h1>My First Words</h1> <xsl:for-each select="wordList/word"> <xsl:value-of select="."/><br /> </xsl:for-each> </body> </html> </xsl:template> </xsl:stylesheet>
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13.5.2. Summary
A summary of the files discussed and their location in the WAR file is shown in the simplified WAR structure below.
ProjectRoot | +- WebContent | +- WEB-INF | +- classes | | | +- xslt | | | | | +- HomePageController.class | | +- HomePage.class | | | +- views.properties | +- lib | | | +- spring.jar | +- xsl | | | +- home.xslt | +- frontcontroller-servlet.xml
You will also need to ensure that an XML parser and an XSLT engine are available on the classpath. JDK 1.4 provides them by default, and most J2EE containers will also make them available by default, but it's a possible source of errors to be aware of.
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If you want to start with a template spreadsheet to add your model data to, specify the location as the 'url' property in the view definition 13.6.2.2. Controller code The controller code we'll use remains exactly the same from the XSLT example earlier other than to change the name of the view to use. Of course, you could be clever and have this selected based on a URL parameter or some other logic - proof that Spring really is very good at decoupling the views from the controllers! 13.6.2.3. Subclassing for Excel views Exactly as we did for the XSLT example, we'll subclass suitable abstract classes in order to implement custom behavior in generating our output documents. For Excel, this involves writing a subclass of org.springframework.web.servlet.view.document.AbstractExcelView and implementing the
buildExcelDocument
Here's the complete listing for our Excel view which displays the word list from the model map in consecutive rows of the first column of a new spreadsheet..
package excel; // imports omitted for brevity public class HomePage extends AbstractExcelView { protected void buildExcelDocument( Map model, HSSFWorkbook wb, HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws Exception { HSSFSheet sheet; HSSFRow sheetRow; HSSFCell cell; // Go to the first sheet // getSheetAt: only if wb is created from an existing document //sheet = wb.getSheetAt( 0 ); sheet = wb.createSheet("Spring"); sheet.setDefaultColumnWidth((short)12); // write a text at A1 cell = getCell( sheet, 0, 0 ); setText(cell,"Spring-Excel test"); List words = (List ) model.get("wordList"); for (int i=0; i < words.size(); i++) { cell = getCell( sheet, 2+i, 0 ); setText(cell, (String) words.get(i)); } } }
If you now amend the controller such that it returns xl as the name of the view (return new ModelAndView("xl", map);) and run your application again, you should find that the Excel spreadsheet is created and downloaded automagically when you request the same page as before.
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package pdf; // imports omitted for brevity public class PDFPage extends AbstractPdfView { protected void buildPdfDocument( Map model, Document doc, PdfWriter writer, HttpServletRequest req, HttpServletResponse resp) throws Exception { List words = (List) model.get("wordList"); for (int i=0; i<words.size(); i++) doc.add( new Paragraph((String) words.get(i))); } }
Once again, amend the controller to return the pdf view with a return new ModelAndView("pdf", map); and reload the URL in your application. This time a PDF document should appear listing each of the words in the model map.
13.7. JasperReports
JasperReports (http://jasperreports.sourceforge.net) is a powerful, open-source reporting engine that supports the creation of report designs using an easily understood XML file formats. JasperReports is capable of rendering reports output into four different formats: CSV, Excel, HTML and PDF.
13.7.1. Dependencies
Your application will need to include the latest release of JasperReports, which at the time of writing was 0.6.1. JasperReports itself depends on the following projects: BeanShell Commons BeanUtils Commons Collections Commons Digester Commons Logging iText POI
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13.7.2. Configuration
To configure JasperReports views in your ApplicationContext you have to define a ViewResolver to map view names to the appropriate view class depending on which format you want your report rendered in. 13.7.2.1. Configuring the ViewResolver Typically, you will use the ResourceBundleViewResolver to map view names to view classes and files in a properties file
<bean id="viewResolver" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.view.ResourceBundleViewResolver"> <property name="basename"> <value>views</value> </property> </bean>
Here we've configured an instance of ResourceBundleViewResolver which will look for view mappings in the resource bundle with base name views. The exact contents of this file is described in the next section. 13.7.2.2. Configuring the Views Spring contains five different View implementations for JasperReports four of which corresponds to one of the four output formats supported by JasperReports and one that allows for the format to be determined at runtime: Table 13.2. JasperReports View Classes Class Name
JasperReportsCsvView JasperReportsHtmlView JasperReportsPdfView JasperReportsXlsView JasperReportsMultiFormatView
Render Format CSV HTML PDF Microsoft Excel Decided at runtime (see Section 13.7.2.4, Using JasperReportsMultiFormatView)
Mapping one of these classes to a view name and a report file is simply a matter of adding the appropriate entries into the resource bundle configured in the previous section as shown here:
simpleReport.class=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.jasperreports.JasperReportsPdfView simpleReport.url=/WEB-INF/reports/DataSourceReport.jasper
Here you can see that the view with name, simpleReport, is mapped to the JasperReportsPdfView class. This will cause the output of this report to be rendered in PDF format. The url property of the view is set to the location of the underlying report file. 13.7.2.3. About Report Files JasperReports has two distinct types of report file: the design file, which has a .jrxml extension, and the compiled report file, which has a .jasper extension. Typically, you use the JasperReports Ant task to compile
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Integrating view technologies your .jrxml design file into a .jasper file before deploying it into your application. With Spring you can map either of these files to your report file and Spring will take care of compiling the .jrxml file on the fly for you. You should note that after a .jrxml file is compiled by Spring, the compiled report is cached for the life of the application. To make changes to the file you will need to restart your application. 13.7.2.4. Using JasperReportsMultiFormatView The JasperReportsMultiFormatView allows for report format to be specified at runtime. The actual rendering of the report is delegated to one of the other JasperReports view classes - the JasperReportsMultiFormatView class simply adds a wrapper layer that allows for the exact implementation to be specified at runtime. The JasperReportsMultiFormatView class introduces two concepts: the format key and the discriminator key. The JasperReportsMultiFormatView class uses the mapping key to lookup the actual view implementation class and uses the format key to lookup up the mapping key. From a coding perspective you add an entry to your model with the formay key as the key and the mapping key as the value, for example:
public ModelAndView handleSimpleReportMulti(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws Exception { String uri = request.getRequestURI(); String format = uri.substring(uri.lastIndexOf(".") + 1); Map model = getModel(); model.put("format", format); return new ModelAndView("simpleReportMulti", model); }
In this example, the mapping key is determined from the extension of the request URI and is added to the model under the default format key: format. If you wish to use a different format key then you can configure this using the formatKey property of the JasperReportsMultiFormatView class. By default the following mapping key mappings are configured in JasperReportsMultiFormatView: Table 13.3. JasperReportsMultiFormatView Default Mapping Key Mappings Mapping Key csv html pdf xls View Class
JasperReportsCsvView JasperReportsHtmlView JasperReportsPdfView JasperReportsXlsView
So in the example above a request to URI /foo/myReport.pdf would be mapped to the JasperReportsPdfView class. You can override the mapping key to view class mappings using the formatMappings property of JasperReportsMultiFormatView.
When adding the datasource to the model you have two approaches to choose from. The first approach is to add an instance of JRDataSource or Collection to the model Map under any arbitrary key. Spring will then locate this object in the model and treat it as the report datasource. For example, you may populate your model like this:
private Map getModel() { Map model = new HashMap(); Collection beanData = getBeanData(); model.put("myBeanData", beanData); return model; }
The second approach is to add the instance of JRDataSource or Collection under a specific key and then configure this key using the reportDataKey property of the view class. In both cases Spring will instances of Collection in a JRBeanCollectionDataSource instance. For example:
private Map getModel() { Map model = new HashMap(); Collection beanData = getBeanData(); Collection someData = getSomeData(); model.put("myBeanData", beanData); model.put("someData", someData); return model; }
Here you can see that two Collection instances are being added to the model. To ensure that the correct one is used, we simply modify our view configuration as appropriate:
simpleReport.class=org.springframework.web.servlet.view.jasperreports.JasperReportsPdfView simpleReport.url=/WEB-INF/reports/DataSourceReport.jasper simpleReport.reportDataKey=myBeanData
Be aware that when using the first approach, Spring will use the first instance of JRDataSource or Collection that it encounters. If you need to place multiple instances of JRDataSource or Collection into the model then you need to use the second approach.
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This defines a master report file that expects the sub-report to be passed in as an instance of net.sf.jasperreports.engine.JasperReports under the parameter ProductsSubReport. When configuring your Jasper view class, you can instruct Spring to load a report file and pass into the JasperReports engine as a sub-report using the subReportUrls property:
<property name="subReportUrls"> <map> <entry key="ProductsSubReport"> <value>/WEB-INF/reports/subReportChild.jrxml</value> </entry> </map> </property>
Here, the key of the Map corresponds to the name of the sub-report parameter in th report design file, and the entry is the URL of the report file. Spring will load this report file, compiling it if necessary, and will pass into the JasperReports engine under the given key. 13.7.4.2. Configuring Sub-Report Data Sources This step is entirely optional when using Spring configure your sub-reports. If you wish, you can still configure the data source for your sub-reports using static queries. However, if you want Spring to convert data returned in your ModelAndView into instances of JRDataSource then you need to specify which of the parameters in your ModelAndView Spring should convert. To do this configure the list of parameter names using the subReportDataKeys property of the your chosen view class:
<property name="subReportDataKeys"> <value>SubReportData</value> </property>
Here, the key you supply MUST correspond to both the key used in your ModelAndView and the key used in your report design file.
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</property> </bean>
Here you can see that the JasperReportsHtmlView is being configured with an exporter parameter for net.sf.jasperreports.engine.export.JRHtmlExporterParameter.HTML_FOOTER which will output a footer in the resulting HTML.
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[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/context/ContextLoaderListener.html] in your web.xml and use a contextConfigLocation <context-param> to set which context files to load. The <context-param>:
<context-param> <param-name>contextConfigLocation</param-name> <param-value>/WEB-INF/applicationContext*.xml</param-value> </context-param>
The <listener>:
<listener> <listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class> </listener>
NOTE: Listeners were added to the Servlet API in version 2.3. If you have a Servlet 2.2 container, you can use the ContextLoaderServlet [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/context/ContextLoaderServlet.html] to achieve this same functionality. If you don't specify the contextConfigLocation context parameter, the ContextLoaderListener will look for a /WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml file to load. Once the context files are loaded, Spring creates a
WebApplicationContext
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/context/WebApplicationContext.html] object based on the bean definitions and puts it into the ServletContext. All Java web frameworks are built on top of the Servlet API, so you can use the following code to get the ApplicationContext that Spring created.
WebApplicationContext ctx = WebApplicationContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext(servletContext);
The WebApplicationContextUtils [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/context/support/WebApplicationContextUtils.html] class is for convenience, so you don't have to remember the name of the ServletContext attribute. Its getWebApplicationContext() method will return null if an object doesn't exist under the WebApplicationContext.ROOT_WEB_APPLICATION_CONTEXT_ATTRIBUTE key. Rather than risk getting NullPointerExceptions in your application, it's better to use the getRequiredWebApplicationContext() method. This method throws an Exception when the ApplicationContext is missing. Once you have a reference to the WebApplicationContext, you can retrieve beans by their name or type. Most developers retrieve beans by name, then cast them to one of their implemented interfaces. Fortunately, most of the frameworks in this section have simpler ways of looking up beans. Not only do they make it easy to get beans from the BeanFactory, but they also allow you to use dependency injection on their controllers. Each framework section has more detail on its specific integration strategies.
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14.2.1. DelegatingVariableResolver
The easiest way to integrate your Spring middle-tier with your JSF web layer is to use the
DelegatingVariableResolver
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/jsf/DelegatingVariableResolver.html] class. To configure this variable resolver in your application, you'll need to edit your faces-context.xml. After the opening <faces-config> element, add an <application> element and a <variable-resolver> element within it. The value of the variable resolver should reference Spring's DelegatingVariableResolver:
<faces-config> <application> <variable-resolver>org.springframework.web.jsf.DelegatingVariableResolver</variable-resolver> <locale-config> <default-locale>en</default-locale> <supported-locale>en</supported-locale> <supported-locale>es</supported-locale> </locale-config> <message-bundle>messages</message-bundle> </application>
By specifying Spring's variable resolver, you can configure Spring beans as managed properties of your managed beans. The DelegatingVariableResolver will first delegate value lookups to the default resolver of the underlying JSF implementation, and then to Spring's root WebApplicationContext. This allows you to easily inject dependencies into your JSF-managed beans. Managed beans are defined in your faces-config.xml file. Below is an example where #{userManager} is a bean that's retrieved from Spring's BeanFactory.
<managed-bean> <managed-bean-name>userList</managed-bean-name> <managed-bean-class>com.whatever.jsf.UserList</managed-bean-class> <managed-bean-scope>request</managed-bean-scope> <managed-property> <property-name>userManager</property-name> <value>#{userManager}</value> </managed-property> </managed-bean>
The DelegatingVariableResolver is the recommended strategy for integrating JSF and Spring. If you're looking for more robust integration features, you might take a look at the JSF-Spring [http://jsf-spring.sourceforge.net/] project.
14.2.2. FacesContextUtils
A custom VariableResolver works well when mapping your properties to beans in faces-config.xml, but at times you may need to grab a bean explicitly. The FacesContextUtils Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 159
Integrating with other web frameworks [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/jsf/FacesContextUtils.html] class makes this easy. It's similar to WebApplicationContextUtils, except that it takes a FacesContext parameter rather than a ServletContext parameter.
ApplicationContext ctx = FacesContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext(FacesContext.getCurrentInstance());
14.3. Struts
Struts [http://struts.apache.org] is the de facto web framework for Java applications, mainly because it was one of the first to be released (June 2001). Invented by Craig McClanahan, Struts is an open source project hosted by the Apache Software Foundation. At the time, it greatly simplified the JSP/Servlet programming paradigm and won over many developers who were using proprietary frameworks. It simplified the programming model, it was open source, and it had a large community, which allowed the project to grow and become popular among Java web developers. To integrate your Struts application with Spring, you have two options: Configure Spring to manage your Actions as beans, using the ContextLoaderPlugin, and set their dependencies in a Spring context file. Subclass Spring's ActionSupport classes and grab your Spring-managed beans explicitly using a getWebApplicationContext() method.
14.3.1. ContextLoaderPlugin
The ContextLoaderPlugin [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/ContextLoaderPlugIn.html] is a Struts 1.1+ plug-in that loads a Spring context file for the Struts ActionServlet. This context refers to the root WebApplicationContext (loaded by the ContextLoaderListener) as its parent. The default name of the context file is the name of the mapped servlet, plus -servlet.xml. If ActionServlet is defined in web.xml as <servlet-name>action</servlet-name>, the default is /WEB-INF/action-servlet.xml. To configure this plug-in, add the following XML to the plug-ins section near the bottom of your struts-config.xml file:
<plug-in className="org.springframework.web.struts.ContextLoaderPlugIn"/>
The location of the context configuration files can be customized using the "contextConfigLocation" property.
<plug-in className="org.springframework.web.struts.ContextLoaderPlugIn"> <set-property property="contextConfigLocation" value="/WEB-INF/action-servlet.xml.xml, /WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml"/> </plug-in>
It is possible to use this plugin to load all your context files, which can be useful when using testing tools like StrutsTestCase. StrutsTestCase's MockStrutsTestCase won't initialize Listeners on startup so putting all your context files in the plugin is a workaround. A bug has been filed [http://sourceforge.net/tracker/index.php?func=detail&aid=1088866&group_id=39190&atid=424562] for this issue. After configuring this plug-in in struts-config.xml, you can configure your Action to be managed by Spring. Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 160
Integrating with other web frameworks Spring 1.1.3 provides two ways to do this: Override Struts' default RequestProcessor with Spring's DelegatingRequestProcessor. Use the DelegatingActionProxy class in the type attribute of your <action-mapping>.
Both of these methods allow you to manage your Actions and their dependencies in the action-context.xml file. The bridge between the Action in struts-config.xml and action-servlet.xml is built with the action-mapping's "path" and the bean's "name". If you have the following in your struts-config.xml file:
<action path="/users" .../>
You must define that Action's bean with the "/users" name in action-servlet.xml:
<bean name="/users" .../>
14.3.1.1. DelegatingRequestProcessor To configure the DelegatingRequestProcessor [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/DelegatingRequestProcessor.html] in your struts-config.xml file, override the "processorClass" property in the <controller> element. These lines follow the <action-mapping> element.
<controller> <set-property property="processorClass" value="org.springframework.web.struts.DelegatingRequestProcessor"/> </controller>
After adding this setting, your Action will automatically be looked up in Spring's context file, no matter what the type. In fact, you don't even need to specify a type. Both of the following snippets will work:
<action path="/user" type="com.whatever.struts.UserAction"/> <action path="/user" type="com.whatever.struts.UserAction"/>
If you're using Struts' modules feature, your bean names must contain the module prefix. For example, an action defined as <action path="/user"/> with module prefix "admin" requires a bean name with <bean name="/admin/user"/>. NOTE: If you're using Tiles in your Struts application, you must configure your <controller> with the
DelegatingTilesRequestProcessor
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/DelegatingTilesRequestProcessor.html]. 14.3.1.2. DelegatingActionProxy If you have a custom RequestProcessor and can't use the DelegatingTilesRequestProcessor, you can use the DelegatingActionProxy [http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/DelegatingActionProxy.html] as the type in your action-mapping.
<action path="/user" type="org.springframework.web.struts.DelegatingActionProxy" name="userForm" scope="request" validate="false" parameter="method"> <forward name="list" path="/userList.jsp"/> <forward name="edit" path="/userForm.jsp"/> </action>
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The bean definition in action-servlet.xml remains the same, whether you use a custom RequestProcessor or the DelegatingActionProxy. Defining your Action in a context file enables you to use Spring's IoC features, as well as instantiate new Actions for ach request. To use this feature, add singleton="false" to your action's bean definition.
<bean name="/user" singleton="false" autowire="byName" class="org.appfuse.web.UserAction"/>
Spring includes subclasses for all of the standard Struts Actions - the Spring versions merely have Support appended to the name:
ActionSupport
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/ActionSupport.html],
DispatchActionSupport
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/DispatchActionSupport.html],
LookupDispatchActionSupport
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/LookupDispatchActionSupport.html] and
MappingDispatchActionSupport
[http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/web/struts/MappingDispatchActionSupport.html]. The recommended strategy is to use the approach that best suits your project. Subclassing makes your code more readable, and you know exactly how your dependencies are resolved. However, using the ContextLoaderPlugin allow you to easily add new dependencies in your context XML file. Either way, Spring provides some nice options for integrating the two frameworks.
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14.4. Tapestry
Tapestry is a powerful, component-oriented web application framework from Apache's Jakarta project (http://jakarta.apache.org/tapestry). While Spring has its own powerful web ui layer, there are a number of unique advantages to building a J2EE application using a combination of Tapestry for the web ui, and the Spring container for the lower layers. This document attempts to detail a few best practices for combining these two frameworks. It is expected that you are relatively familiar with both Tapestry and Spring Framework basics, so they will not be explained here. General introductory documentation for both Tapestry and Spring Framework are available on their respective web sites.
14.4.1. Architecture
A typical layered J2EE application built with Tapestry and Spring will consist of a top UI layer built with Tapestry, and a number of lower layers, hosted out of one or more Spring Application Contexts. User Interface Layer: - concerned with the user interface - contains some application logic - provided by Tapestry - aside from providing UI via Tapestry, code in this layer does its work via objects which implement interfaces from the Service Layer. The actual objects which implement these service layer interfaces are obtained from a Spring Application Context. Service Layer: - application specific 'service' code - works with domain objects, and uses the Mapper API to get those domain objects into and out of some sort of repository (database) - hosted in one or more Spring contexts - code in this layer manipulates objects in the domain model, in an application specific fashion. It does its work via other code in this layer, and via the Mapper API. An object in this layer is given the specific mapper implementations it needs to work with, via the Spring context. - since code in this layer is hosted in the Spring context, it may be transactionally wrapped by the Spring context, as opposed to managing its own transactions Domain Model: - domain specific object hierarchy, which deals with data and logic specific to this domain - although the domain object hierarchy is built with the idea that it is persisted somehow and makes some general concessions to this (for example, bidirectional relationships), it generally has no knowledge of other layers. As such, it may be tested in isolation, and used with different mapping implementations for production vs. testing. - these objects may be standalone, or used in conjunction with a Spring application context to take
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advantage of some of the benefits of the context, e.g., isolation, inversion of control, different strategy implementations, etc. Data Source Layer: - Mapper API (also called Data Access Objects): an API used to persist the domain model to a repository of some sort (generally a DB, but could be the filesystem, memory, etc.) - Mapper API implementations: one or more specific implementations of the Mapper API, for example, a Hibernate-specific mapper, a JDO-specific mapper, JDBC-specific mapper, or a memory mapper. - mapper implementations live in one or more Spring Application Contexts. A service layer object is given the mapper objects it needs to work with via the context. Database, filesystem, or other repositories: - objects in the domain model are stored into one or more repositories via one or more mapper implementations - a repository may be very simple (e.g. filesystem), or may have its own representation of the data from the domain model (i.e. a schema in a db). It does not know about other layers howerver.
14.4.2. Implementation
The only real question (which needs to be addressed by this document), is how Tapestry pages get access to service implementations, which are simply beans defined in an instance of the Spring Application Context. 14.4.2.1. Sample application context Assume we have the following simple Application Context definition, in xml form:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE beans PUBLIC "-//SPRING//DTD BEAN//EN" "http://www.springframework.org/dtd/spring-beans.dtd"> <beans> <!-- ========================= GENERAL DEFINITIONS ========================= --> <!-- ========================= PERSISTENCE DEFINITIONS ========================= --> <!-- the DataSource --> <bean id="dataSource" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean"> <property name="jndiName"><value>java:DefaultDS</value></property> <property name="resourceRef"><value>false</value></property> </bean> <!-- define a Hibernate Session factory via a Spring LocalSessionFactoryBean --> <bean id="hibSessionFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate.LocalSessionFactoryBean"> <property name="dataSource"><ref bean="dataSource"/></property> </bean> <!-- Defines a transaction manager for usage in business or data access objects. - No special treatment by the context, just a bean instance available as reference - for business objects that want to handle transactions, e.g. via TransactionTemplate. --> <bean id="transactionManager" class="org.springframework.transaction.jta.JtaTransactionManager"> </bean> <bean id="mapper"
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class="com.whatever.dataaccess.mapper.hibernate.MapperImpl"> <property name="sessionFactory"><ref bean="hibSessionFactory"/></property> </bean> <!-- ========================= BUSINESS DEFINITIONS ========================= --> <!-- AuthenticationService, including tx interceptor --> <bean id="authenticationServiceTarget" class="com.whatever.services.service.user.AuthenticationServiceImpl"> <property name="mapper"><ref bean="mapper"/></property> </bean> <bean id="authenticationService" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"><ref bean="transactionManager"/></property> <property name="target"><ref bean="authenticationServiceTarget"/></property> <property name="proxyInterfacesOnly"><value>true</value></property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> </props> </property> </bean> <!-- UserService, including tx interceptor --> <bean id="userServiceTarget" class="com.whatever.services.service.user.UserServiceImpl"> <property name="mapper"><ref bean="mapper"/></property> </bean> <bean id="userService" class="org.springframework.transaction.interceptor.TransactionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="transactionManager"><ref bean="transactionManager"/></property> <property name="target"><ref bean="userServiceTarget"/></property> <property name="proxyInterfacesOnly"><value>true</value></property> <property name="transactionAttributes"> <props> <prop key="*">PROPAGATION_REQUIRED</prop> </props> </property> </bean> </beans>
Inside the Tapestry application, we need to load this application context, and allow Tapestry pages to get the authenticationService and userService beans, which implement the AuthenticationService and UserService interfaces, respectively. 14.4.2.2. Obtaining beans in Tapestry pages At this point, the application context is available to a web application by calling Spring's static utility function WebApplicationContextUtils.getApplicationContext(servletContext), where servletContext is the standard ServletContext from the J2EE Servlet specification. As such, one simple mechanism for a page to get an instance of the UserService, for example, would be with code such as:
WebApplicationContext appContext = WebApplicationContextUtils.getApplicationContext( getRequestCycle().getRequestContext().getServlet().getServletContext()); UserService userService = (UserService) appContext.getBean("userService"); ... some code which uses UserService
This mechanism does work. It can be made a lot less verbose by encapsulating most of the functionality in a method in the base class for the page or component. However, in some respects it goes against the Inversion of Control approach which Spring encourages, which is being used in other layers of this app, in that ideally you would like the page to not have to ask the context for a specific bean by name, and in fact, the page would ideally not know about the context at all. Luckily, there is a mechanism to allow this. We rely upon the fact that Tapestry already has a mechanism to declaratively add properties to a page, and it is in fact the preferred approach to manage all properties on a page in this declarative fashion, so that Tapestry can properly manage their lifecycle as part of the page and
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component lifecycle. 14.4.2.3. Exposing the application context to Tapestry First we need to make the ApplicationContext available to the Tapestry page or Component without having to have the ServletContext; this is because at the stage in the page's/component's lifecycle when we need to access the ApplicationContext, the ServletContext won't be easily available to the page, so we can't use WebApplicationContextUtils.getApplicationContext(servletContext) directly. One way is by defining a custom version of the Tapestry IEngine which exposes this for us:
package com.whatever.web.xportal; ... import ... ... public class MyEngine extends org.apache.tapestry.engine.BaseEngine { public static final String APPLICATION_CONTEXT_KEY = "appContext";
/** * @see org.apache.tapestry.engine.AbstractEngine#setupForRequest(org.apache.tapestry.request.RequestContext */ protected void setupForRequest(RequestContext context) { super.setupForRequest(context); // insert ApplicationContext in global, if not there Map global = (Map) getGlobal(); ApplicationContext ac = (ApplicationContext) global.get(APPLICATION_CONTEXT_KEY); if (ac == null) { ac = WebApplicationContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext( context.getServlet().getServletContext() ); global.put(APPLICATION_CONTEXT_KEY, ac); } } }
This engine class places the Spring Application Context as an attribute called "appContext" in this Tapestry app's 'Global' object. Make sure to register the fact that this special IEngine instance should be used for this Tapestry application, with an entry in the Tapestry application definition file. For example:
file: xportal.application: <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE application PUBLIC "-//Apache Software Foundation//Tapestry Specification 3.0//EN" "http://jakarta.apache.org/tapestry/dtd/Tapestry_3_0.dtd"> <application name="Whatever xPortal" engine-class="com.whatever.web.xportal.MyEngine"> </application>
14.4.2.4. Component definition files Now in our page or component definition file (*.page or *.jwc), we simply add property-specification elements to grab the beans we need out of the ApplicationContext, and create page or component properties for them. For example:
<property-specification name="userService" type="com.whatever.services.service.user.UserService"> global.appContext.getBean("userService") </property-specification> <property-specification name="authenticationService" type="com.whatever.services.service.user.AuthenticationService"> global.appContext.getBean("authenticationService") </property-specification>
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Integrating with other web frameworks The OGNL expression inside the property-specification specifies the initial value for the property, as a bean obtained from the context. The entire page definition might look like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <!DOCTYPE page-specification PUBLIC "-//Apache Software Foundation//Tapestry Specification 3.0//EN" "http://jakarta.apache.org/tapestry/dtd/Tapestry_3_0.dtd"> <page-specification class="com.whatever.web.xportal.pages.Login"> <property-specification <property-specification <property-specification <property-specification <property-specification name="username" type="java.lang.String"/> name="password" type="java.lang.String"/> name="error" type="java.lang.String"/> name="callback" type="org.apache.tapestry.callback.ICallback" persistent="yes"/> name="userService" type="com.whatever.services.service.user.UserService"> global.appContext.getBean("userService") </property-specification> <property-specification name="authenticationService" type="com.whatever.services.service.user.AuthenticationService"> global.appContext.getBean("authenticationService") </property-specification> <bean name="delegate" class="com.whatever.web.xportal.PortalValidationDelegate"/> <bean name="validator" class="org.apache.tapestry.valid.StringValidator" lifecycle="page"> <set-property name="required" expression="true"/> <set-property name="clientScriptingEnabled" expression="true"/> </bean> <component id="inputUsername" type="ValidField"> <static-binding name="displayName" value="Username"/> <binding name="value" expression="username"/> <binding name="validator" expression="beans.validator"/> </component> <component id="inputPassword" type="ValidField"> <binding name="value" expression="password"/> <binding name="validator" expression="beans.validator"/> <static-binding name="displayName" value="Password"/> <binding name="hidden" expression="true"/> </component> </page-specification>
14.4.2.5. Adding abstract accessors Now in the Java class definition for the page or component itself, all we need to do is add an abstract getter method for the properties we have defined, to access them. When the page or component is actually loaded by Tapestry, it performs runtime code instrumentation on the classfile to add the properties which have been defined, and hook up the abstract getter methods to the newly created fields. For example:
// our public // our public UserService implementation; will come from page definition abstract UserService getUserService(); AuthenticationService implementation; will come from page definition abstract AuthenticationService getAuthenticationService();
For completeness, the entire Java class, for a login page in this example, might look like this:
package com.whatever.web.xportal.pages; /** * Allows the user to login, by providing username and password. * After successfully logging in, a cookie is placed on the client browser * that provides the default username for future logins (the cookie * persists for a week). */ public abstract class Login extends BasePage implements ErrorProperty, PageRenderListener { /** the key under which the authenticated user object is stored in the visit as */ public static final String USER_KEY = "user";
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/** * The name of a cookie to store on the user's machine that will identify * them next time they log in. **/ private static final String COOKIE_NAME = Login.class.getName() + ".username"; private final static int ONE_WEEK = 7 * 24 * 60 * 60; // --- attributes public abstract String getUsername(); public abstract void setUsername(String username); public abstract String getPassword(); public abstract void setPassword(String password); public abstract ICallback getCallback(); public abstract void setCallback(ICallback value); public abstract UserService getUserService(); public abstract AuthenticationService getAuthenticationService(); // --- methods protected IValidationDelegate getValidationDelegate() { return (IValidationDelegate) getBeans().getBean("delegate"); } protected void setErrorField(String componentId, String message) { IFormComponent field = (IFormComponent) getComponent(componentId); IValidationDelegate delegate = getValidationDelegate(); delegate.setFormComponent(field); delegate.record(new ValidatorException(message)); } /** * Attempts to login. * * <p>If the user name is not known, or the password is invalid, then an error * message is displayed. * **/ public void attemptLogin(IRequestCycle cycle) { String password = getPassword(); // Do a little extra work to clear out the password. setPassword(null); IValidationDelegate delegate = getValidationDelegate(); delegate.setFormComponent((IFormComponent) getComponent("inputPassword")); delegate.recordFieldInputValue(null); // An error, from a validation field, may already have occurred. if (delegate.getHasErrors()) return; try { User user = getAuthenticationService().login(getUsername(), getPassword()); loginUser(user, cycle); } catch (FailedLoginException ex) { this.setError("Login failed: " + ex.getMessage()); return; } } /** * Sets up the {@link User} as the logged in user, creates * a cookie for their username (for subsequent logins), * and redirects to the appropriate page, or * a specified page). * **/ public void loginUser(User user, IRequestCycle cycle) {
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String username = user.getUsername(); // Get the visit object; this will likely force the // creation of the visit object and an HttpSession. Map visit = (Map) getVisit(); visit.put(USER_KEY, user); // After logging in, go to the MyLibrary page, unless otherwise // specified. ICallback callback = getCallback(); if (callback == null) cycle.activate("Home"); else callback.performCallback(cycle); // I've found that failing to set a maximum age and a path means that // the browser (IE 5.0 anyway) quietly drops the cookie. IEngine engine = getEngine(); Cookie cookie = new Cookie(COOKIE_NAME, username); cookie.setPath(engine.getServletPath()); cookie.setMaxAge(ONE_WEEK); // Record the user's username in a cookie cycle.getRequestContext().addCookie(cookie); engine.forgetPage(getPageName()); } public void pageBeginRender(PageEvent event) { if (getUsername() == null) setUsername(getRequestCycle().getRequestContext().getCookieValue(COOKIE_NAME)); } }
14.4.3. Summary
In this example, we've managed to allow service beans defined in the Spring ApplicationContext to be provided to the page in a declarative fashion. The page class does not know where the service implementations are coming from, and in fact it is easy to slip in another implementation, for example, during testing. This inversion of control is one of the prime goals and benefits of the Spring Framework, and we have managed to extend it all the way up the J2EE stack in this Tapestry application.
14.5. WebWork
WebWork [http://www.opensymphony.com/webwork] is a web framework designed with simplicity in mind. It's built on top of XWork [http://www.opensymphony.com/xwork], which is a generic command framework. XWork also has an IoC container, but it isn't as full-featured as Spring and won't be covered in this section. WebWork controllers are called Actions, mainly because they must implement the Action [http://www.opensymphony.com/xwork/api/com/opensymphony/xwork/Action.html] interface. The ActionSupport [http://www.opensymphony.com/xwork/api/com/opensymphony/xwork/ActionSupport.html] class implements this interface, and it is most common parent class for WebWork actions. WebWork maintains its own Spring integration project, located on java.net in the xwork-optional [https://xwork-optional.dev.java.net/] project. Currently, three options are available for integrating WebWork with Spring: SpringObjectFactory: override XWork's default ObjectFactory 169
[http://www.opensymphony.com/xwork/api/com/opensymphony/xwork/ObjectFactory.html] so XWork will look for Spring beans in the root WebApplicationContext. ActionAutowiringInterceptor: use an interceptor to automatically wire an Action's dependencies as they're created. SpringExternalReferenceResolver: look up Spring beans based on the name defined in an <external-ref> element of an <action> element.
All of these strategies are explained in further detail in WebWork's Documentation [http://wiki.opensymphony.com/display/WW/WebWork+2+Spring+Integration].
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15.3. JmsTemplate
Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 171
JMS Two implementations of the JmsTemplate are provided. The class JmsTemplate uses the JMS 1.1 API and the subclass JmsTemplate102 uses the JMS 1.0.2 API. Code that uses the JmsTemplate only needs to implement callback interfaces giving them a clearly defined contract. The MessageCreator callback interface creates a message given a Session provided by the calling code in JmsTemplate. In order to allow for more complex usage of the JMS API, the callback SessionCallback provides the user with the JMS session and the callback ProducerCallback exposes a Session and MessageProducer pair. The JMS API exposes two types of send methods, one that takes delivery mode, priority, and time-to-live as quality of service (QOS) parameters and one that takes no QOS parameters which uses default values. Since there are many send methods in JmsTemplate, the setting of the QOS parameters have been exposed as bean properties to avoid duplication in the number of send methods. Similarly, the timeout value for synchronous receive calls is set using the property setReceiveTimeout. Some JMS providers allow the setting of default QOS values administratively through the configuration of the ConnectionFactory. This has the effect that a call to MessageProducer's send method send(Destination destination, Message message) will use QOS different default values than those specified in the JMS specification. Therefore, in order to provide consistent management of QOS values, the JmsTemplate must be specifically enabled to use its own QOS values by setting the boolean property isExplicitQosEnabled to true.
15.3.1. ConnectionFactory
The JmsTemplate requires a reference to a ConnectionFactory. The ConnectionFactory is part of the JMS specification and serves as the entry point for working with JMS. It is used by the client application as a factory to create connections with the JMS provider and encapsulates various configuration parameters, many of which are vendor specific such as SSL configuration options. When using JMS inside an EJB the vendor provides implementations the JMS interfaces so that they can participate in declarative transaction management and perform pooling of connections and session. In order to use this implementation, J2EE containers typically require that you declare a JMS connection factory as a resource-ref inside the EJB or servlet deployment descriptors. To ensure the use of these features with the JmsTemplate inside an EJB, the client application should ensure that it references the managed implementation of the ConnectionFactory. Spring provides an implementation of the ConnectionFactory interface, SingleConnectionFactory, that will return the same Connection on all createConnection calls and ignore calls to close. This is useful for testing and standalone environments so that the same connection can be used for multiple JmsTemplate calls that may span any number of transactions. SingleConnectionFactory takes a reference to a standard ConnectionFactory that would typically comes from JNDI.
JMS
API to create a Session from a Connection. This is because the JMS API only has only one factory method to create a Session and it requires values for the transaction and acknowledgement modes. In a managed environment, setting these values in the responsibility of the environments transactional infrastructure, so these values are ignored by the vendor's wrapper to the JMS Connection. When using the JmsTemplate in an unmanaged environment you can specify these values though the use of the properties SessionTransacted and SessionAcknowledgeMode. When using a PlatformTransactionManager with JmsTemplate, the template will always be given a transactional JMS Session.
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JMS
import org.springframework.jms.core.JmsTemplate; import org.springframework.jms.core.JmsTemplate102; import org.springframework.jms.core.MessageCreator; public class JmsQueueSender { private JmsTemplate jt; private ConnectionFactory connFactory; private Queue queue; public void simpleSend() { jt = new JmsTemplate102(connFactory, false); jt.send(queue, new MessageCreator() { public Message createMessage(Session session) throws JMSException { return session.createTextMessage("hello queue world"); } }); } public void setConnectionFactory(ConnectionFactory cf) { connFactory = cf; } public void setQueue(Queue q) { queue = q; } }
This example uses the MessageCreator callback to create a text message from the supplied Session object and the JmsTemplate is constructed by passing a reference to a ConnectionFactory and a boolean specifying the messaging domain. A zero argument constructor and a setConnectionFactory/Queue method are also provided and can be used for constructing the instance using a BeanFactory. The method simpleSend modified to send to a topic instead of a queue is shown below
public void simpleSend() { jt = new JmsTemplate102(connFactory, true); jt.send(topic, new MessageCreator() { public Message createMessage(Session session) throws JMSException { return session.createTextMessage("hello topic world"); } }); }
When configuring the 1.0.2 in an application context it is important to remember setting the value of the boolean property PubSubDomain property in order to indicate if you want to send to Queues or Topics. The method send(String destinationName, MessageCreator c) lets you send to a message using the string name of the destination. If these names are registered in JNDI, you should set the DestinationResolver Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 174
JMS property of the template to an instance of JndiDestinationResolver. If you created the JmsTemplate and specified a default destination, the send(MessageCreator c) sends a message to that destination.
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JMS
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The Spring approach is to allow the creation and use of proxy objects, normally configured inside a Spring ApplicationContext or BeanFactory, which act as code-less business delegates. You do not need to write another Service Locator, another JNDI lookup, or duplicate methods in a hand-coded Business Delegate unless youre adding real value.
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(One of the main reasons to the Business Methods Interface pattern is to ensure that synchronization between method signatures in local interface and bean implementation class is automatic. Another reason is that it later makes it much easier for us to switch to a POJO (plain java object) implementation of the service if it makes sense to do so) Of course well also need to implement the local home interface and provide a bean implementation class that implements SessionBean and the MyComponent business methods interface. Now the only Java coding well need to do to hook up our web tier controller to the EJB implementation is to expose a setter method of type MyComponent on the controller. This will save the reference as an instance variable in the controller:
private MyComponent myComponent; public void setMyComponent(MyComponent myComponent) { this.myComponent = myComponent; }
We can subsequently use this instance variable in any business method in the controller. Now assuming we are obtaining our controller object out of a Spring ApplicationContext or BeanFactory, we can in the same context configure a LocalStatelessSessionProxyFactoryBean instance, which will be EJB proxy object. The configuration of the proxy, and setting of the myComponent property of the controller is done with a configuration entry such as:
<bean id="myComponent" class="org.springframework.ejb.access.LocalStatelessSessionProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="jndiName"><value>myComponent</value></property> <property name="businessInterface"><value>com.mycom.MyComponent</value></property> </bean> <bean id="myController" class = "com.mycom.myController"> <property name="myComponent"><ref bean="myComponent"/></property> </bean>
Theres a lot of magic happening behind the scenes, courtesy of the Spring AOP framework, although you arent forced to work with AOP concepts to enjoy the results. The myComponent bean definition creates a proxy for the EJB, which implements the business method interface. The EJB local home is cached on startup, so theres only a single JNDI lookup. Each time the EJB is invoked, the proxy invokes the create() method on the local EJB and invokes the corresponding business method on the EJB. The myController bean definition sets the myController property of the controller class to this proxy. This EJB access mechanism delivers huge simplification of application code: The web tier code (or other EJB client code) has no dependence on the use of EJB. If we want to replace this EJB reference with a POJO or a mock object or other test stub, we could simply change the myComponent bean definition without changing a line of Java code. Additionally, we havent had to write a single line of JNDI lookup or other EJB plumbing code as part of our application. Benchmarks and experience in real applications indicate that the performance overhead of this approach (which involves reflective invocation of the target EJB) is minimal, and undetectable in typical use. Remember that we dont want to make fine-grained calls to EJBs anyway, as theres a cost associated with the EJB infrastructure in the application server. There is one caveat with regards to the JNDI lookup. In a bean container, this class is normally best used as a singleton (there simply is no reason to make it a prototype). However, if that bean container pre-instantiates singletons (as do the XML ApplicationContext variants) you may have a problem if the bean container is loaded before the EJB container loads the target EJB. That is because the JNDI lookup will be performed in the Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 178
init method of this class and cached, but the EJB will not have been bound at the target location yet. The solution is to not pre-instantiate this factory object, but allow it to be created on first use. In the XML containers, this is controlled via the lazy-init attribute. Although this will not be of interest to the majority of Spring users, those doing programmatic AOP work with EJBs may want to look at LocalSlsbInvokerInterceptor.
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... }
The Spring EJB support base classes will by default create and load a BeanFactory (or in this case, its ApplicationContext subclass) as part of their lifecycle, which is then available to the EJB (for example, as used in the code above to obtain the POJO service object). The loading is done via a strategy object which is a subclass of BeanFactoryLocator. The actual implementation of BeanFactoryLocator used by default is ContextJndiBeanFactoryLocator, which creates the ApplicationContext from a resource locations specified as a JNDI environment variable (in the case of the EJB classes, at java:comp/env/ejb/BeanFactoryPath). If there is a need to change the BeanFactory/ApplicationContext loading strategy, the default BeanFactoryLocator implementation used may be overridden by calling the setBeanFactoryLocator() method, either in setSessionContext(), or in the actual constructor of the EJB. Please see the JavaDocs for more details. As described in the JavaDocs, Stateful Session beans expecting to be passivated and reactivated as part of their lifecycle, and which use a non-serializable BeanFactory/ApplicationContext instance (which is the normal case) will have to manually call unloadBeanFactory() and loadBeanFactory from ejbPassivate and ejbActivate, respectively, to unload and reload the BeanFactory on passivation and activation, since it can not be saved by the EJB container. The default usage of ContextJndiBeanFactoryLocator to load an ApplicationContext for the use of the EJB is adequate for some situations. However, it is problematic when the ApplicationContext is loading a number of beans, or the initialization of those beans is time consuming or memory intensive (such as a Hibernate SessionFactory initialization, for example), since every EJB will have their own copy. In this case, the user may want to override the default ContextJndiBeanFactoryLocator usage and use another BeanFactoryLocator variant, such as ContextSingletonBeanFactoryLocatore, which can load and use a shared BeanFactory or ApplicationContext to be used by multiple EJBs or other clients. Doing this is relatively simple, by adding code similar to this to the EJB:
/** * Override default BeanFactoryLocator implementation * * @see javax.ejb.SessionBean#setSessionContext(javax.ejb.SessionContext) */ public void setSessionContext(SessionContext sessionContext) { super.setSessionContext(sessionContext); setBeanFactoryLocator(ContextSingletonBeanFactoryLocator.getInstance()); setBeanFactoryLocatorKey(ServicesConstants.PRIMARY_CONTEXT_ID); }
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Please see the respective JavaDocs for BeanFactoryLocator and ContextSingletonBeanFactoryLocatore for more information on their usage.
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While discussing the remoting capabilities of Spring, we'll use the following domain model and corresponding services:
// Account domain object public class Account implements Serializable{ private String name; public String getName(); public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; } }
// Account service public interface AccountService { public void insertAccount(Account acc); public List getAccounts(String name); }
// Remote Account service public interface RemoteAccountService extends Remote { public void insertAccount(Account acc) throws RemoteException; public List getAccounts(String name) throws RemoteException; }
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// ... and corresponding implement doing nothing at the moment public class AccountServiceImpl implements AccountService { public void insertAccount(Account acc) { // do something } public List getAccounts(String name) { // do something } }
We will start exposing the service to a remote client by using RMI and talk a bit about the drawbacks of using RMI. We'll then continue to show an example for Hessian.
As you can see, we're overriding the port for the RMI registry. Often, your application server also maintains an RMI registry and it is wise to not interfere with that one. Furthermore, the service name is used to bind the service under. So right now, the service will be bound at rmi://HOST:1199/AccountService. We'll use the URL later on to link in the service at the client side. Note: We've left out one property, i.e. the servicePort property, which is 0 by default. This means an anonymous port will be used to communicate with the service. You can specify a different port if you like.
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To link in the service on the client, we'll create a separate bean factory, containing the simple object and the service linking configuration bits:
<bean class="example.SimpleObject"> <property name="accountService"><ref bean="accountService"/></bean> </bean> <bean id="accountService" class="org.springframework.remoting.rmi.RmiProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="serviceUrl"><value>rmi://HOST:1199/AccountService</value></property> <property name="serviceInterface"><value>example.AccountService</value></property> </bean>
That's all we need to do to support the remote account service on the client. Spring will transparently create an invoker and remotely enable the account service through the RmiServiceExporter. At the client we're linking it in using the RmiProxyFactoryBean.
You're probably familiar with Spring's DispatcherServlet principles and if so, you know that know you'll have to create an application context named remote-servlet.xml (after the name of your servlet) in the WEB-INF directory. The application context will be used in the next section.
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In the newly created application context called remote-servlet.xml we'll create a HessianServiceExporter exporting your services:
<bean id="accountService" class="example.AccountServiceImpl"> <!-- any additional properties, maybe a DAO? --> </bean> <bean name="/AccountService" class="org.springframework.remoting.caucho.HessianServiceExporter"> <property name="service"><ref bean="accountService"/></property> <property name="serviceInterface"> <value>example.AccountService</value> </property> </bean>
Now we're ready to link in the service at the client. No handler mapping is specified mapping requests (urls) onto services and that's why the BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping will be used, hence the service will be exported at the URL http://HOST:8080/AccountService.
17.3.5. Applying HTTP basic authentication to a service exposed through Hessian or Burlap
One of the advantages of Hessian and Burlap is that we can easily apply HTTP basic authentication, because both protocols are HTTP-based. Your normal HTTP server security mechanism can easily be applied through using the web.xml security features, for example. Usually, you don't use per-user security credentials here, but rather shared credentials defined at the Hessian/BurlapProxyFactoryBean level (similar to a JDBC DataSource).
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</property> </bean> <bean id="authorizationInterceptor" class="org.springframework.web.servlet.handler.UserRoleAuthorizationInterceptor"> <property name="authorizedRoles"> <list> <value>administrator</value> <value>operator</value> </list> </property> </bean>
This an example where we explicitly mention the BeanNameUrlHandlerMapping and set an interceptor allowing only administrators and operators to call the beans mentioned in this application context. Note: Of course, this example doesn't show a flexible kind of security infrastructure. For more options as far as security is concerned, have a look at the Acegi Security System for Spring, to be found at http://acegisecurity.sourceforge.net.
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As mentioned before, you can choose what HTTP client you want to use. By default, the HttpInvokerProxy uses the J2SE HTTP functionality, but you can also use the Commons HttpClient by setting the httpInvokerRequestExecutor property:
<property name="httpInvokerRequestExecutor"> <bean class="org.springframework.remoting.httpinvoker.CommonsHttpInvokerRequestExecutor"/> </property>
Our AccountServletEndpoint needs to run in the same web application as the Spring context to allow for access to Spring's facilities. In case of Axis, copy the AxisServlet definition into your web.xml, and set up the endpoint in "server-config.wsdd" (or use the deploy tool). See the sample application JPetStore where the
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Remoting and web services using Spring OrderService is exposed as a Web Service using Axis.
Where serviceInterface is our remote business interface the clients will use. wsdlDocumentUrl is the URL for the WSDL file. Spring needs this a startup time to create the JAX-RPC Service. namespaceUri corresponds to the targetNamespace in the .wsdl file. serviceName corresponds to the serivce name in the .wsdl file. portName corresponds to the port name in the .wsdl file. Accessing the Web Service is now very easy as we have a bean factory for it that will expose it as RemoteAccountService interface. We can wire this up in Spring:
<bean id="client" class="example.AccountClientImpl"> ... <property name="service"> <ref bean="accountWebService"/> </property> </bean>
And from the client code we can access the Web Service just as if it was a normal class, except that it throws RemoteException.
public class AccountClientImpl { private RemoteAccountService service; public void setService(RemoteAccountService service) { this.service = service; } public void foo() { try { service.insertAccount(...); } catch (RemoteException e) { // ouch ... } } }
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We can get rid of the checked RemoteException since Spring supports automatic conversion to its corresponding unchecked RemoteAccessException. This requires that we provide a non RMI interface also. Our configuration is now:
<bean id="accountWebService" class="org.springframework.remoting.jaxrpc.JaxRpcPortProxyFactoryBean"> <property name="serviceInterface"> <value>example.AccountService</value> </property> <property name="portInterface"> <value>example.RemoteAccountService</value> </property> ... </bean>
Where serviceInterface is changed to our non RMI interface. Our RMI interface is now defined using the property portInterface. Our client code can now avoid handling java.rmi.RemoteException:
public class AccountClientImpl { private AccountService service; public void setService(AccountService service) { this.service = service; } public void foo() { service.insertAccount(...); } }
Note
On the server side using Axis registering bean mappings is usually done in server-config.wsdd. We will use Axis to register bean mappings on the client side. To do this we need to subclass Spring Bean factory and register the bean mappings programmatic:
public class AxisPortProxyFactoryBean extends JaxRpcPortProxyFactoryBean { protected void postProcessJaxRpcService(Service service) { TypeMappingRegistry registry = service.getTypeMappingRegistry(); TypeMapping mapping = registry.createTypeMapping(); registerBeanMapping(mapping, Account.class, "Account"); registry.register("http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/", mapping); } protected void registerBeanMapping(TypeMapping mapping, Class type, String name) { QName qName = new QName("http://localhost:8080/account/services/accountService", name); mapping.register(type, qName, new BeanSerializerFactory(type, qName), new BeanDeserializerFactory(type, qName)); } }
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What we need to do now is to register our AccountHandler to JAX-RPC Service so it would invoke handleRequest before the message is sent over the wire. Spring has at this time of writing no declarative support for registering handlers. So we must use the programmatic approach. However Spring has made it very easy for us to do this as we can extend its bean factory and override its postProcessJaxRpcService method that is designed for this:
public class AccountHandlerJaxRpcPortProxyFactoryBean extends JaxRpcPortProxyFactoryBean { protected void postProcessJaxRpcService(Service service) { QName port = new QName(this.getNamespaceUri(), this.getPortName()); List list = service.getHandlerRegistry().getHandlerChain(port); list.add(new HandlerInfo(AccountHandler.class, null, null)); logger.info("Registered JAX-RPC Handler [" + AccountHandler.class.getName() + "] on port " + port); } }
And the last thing we must remember to do is to change the Spring configuration to use our factory bean:
<bean id="accountWebService" class="example.AccountHandlerJaxRpcPortProxyFactoryBean"> ... </bean>
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Offering a proxy with all interfaces implemented by the target usually does not matter in the local case. But when exporting a remote service, you should expose a specific service interface, with specific operations intended for remote usage. Besides internal callback interfaces, the target might implement multiple business interfaces, with just one of them intended for remote exposure. For these reasons, we require such a service interface to be specified. This is a trade-off between configuration convenience and the risk of accidental exposure of internal methods. Always specifying a service interface is not too much effort, and puts you on the safe side regarding controlled exposure of specific methods.
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MailSender:
public interface MailSender { /** * Send the given simple mail message. * @param simpleMessage message to send * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors */ public void send(SimpleMailMessage simpleMessage) throws MailException; /** * Send the given array of simple mail messages in batch. * @param simpleMessages messages to send * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors */ public void send(SimpleMailMessage[] simpleMessages) throws MailException; }
JavaMailSender:
public interface JavaMailSender extends MailSender { /** * Create a new JavaMail MimeMessage for the underlying JavaMail Session * of this sender. Needs to be called to create MimeMessage instances * that can be prepared by the client and passed to send(MimeMessage). * @return the new MimeMessage instance * @see #send(MimeMessage) * @see #send(MimeMessage[]) */ public MimeMessage createMimeMessage(); /** * Send the given JavaMail MIME message. * The message needs to have been created with createMimeMessage.
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* @param mimeMessage message to send * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors * @see #createMimeMessage */ public void send(MimeMessage mimeMessage) throws MailException; /** * Send the given array of JavaMail MIME messages in batch. * The messages need to have been created with createMimeMessage. * @param mimeMessages messages to send * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors * @see #createMimeMessage */ public void send(MimeMessage[] mimeMessages) throws MailException; /** * Send the JavaMail MIME message prepared by the given MimeMessagePreparator. * Alternative way to prepare MimeMessage instances, instead of createMimeMessage * and send(MimeMessage) calls. Takes care of proper exception conversion. * @param mimeMessagePreparator the preparator to use * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors */ public void send(MimeMessagePreparator mimeMessagePreparator) throws MailException; /** * Send the JavaMail MIME messages prepared by the given MimeMessagePreparators. * Alternative way to prepare MimeMessage instances, instead of createMimeMessage * and send(MimeMessage[]) calls. Takes care of proper exception conversion. * @param mimeMessagePreparators the preparator to use * @throws MailException in case of message, authentication, or send errors */ public void send(MimeMessagePreparator[] mimeMessagePreparators) throws MailException; }
MimeMessagePreparator:
public interface MimeMessagePreparator { /** * Prepare the given new MimeMessage instance. * @param mimeMessage the message to prepare * @throws MessagingException passing any exceptions thrown by MimeMessage * methods through for automatic conversion to the MailException hierarchy */ void prepare(MimeMessage mimeMessage) throws MessagingException; }
and there is a use case that says that an email message with order number would need to be generated and sent to a customer placing that order. So for this purpose we want to use MailSender and SimpleMailMessage Please note that as usual, we work with interfaces in the business code and let Spring IoC container take care of wiring of all the collaborators for us. Here is the implementation of OrderManager
import org.springframework.mail.MailException; import org.springframework.mail.MailSender; import org.springframework.mail.SimpleMailMessage;
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public class OrderManagerImpl implements OrderManager { private MailSender mailSender; private SimpleMailMessage message; public void setMailSender(MailSender mailSender) { this.mailSender = mailSender; } public void setMessage(SimpleMailMessage message) { this.message = message; } public void placeOrder(Order order) { //... * Do the business calculations.... //... * Call the collaborators to persist the order //Create a thread safe "sandbox" of the message SimpleMailMessage msg = new SimpleMailMessage(this.message); msg.setTo(order.getCustomer().getEmailAddress()); msg.setText( "Dear " + order.getCustomer().getFirstName() + order.getCustomer().getLastName() + ", thank you for placing order. Your order number is " + order.getOrderNumber()); try{ mailSender.send(msg); } catch(MailException ex) { //log it and go on System.err.println(ex.getMessage()); } } }
Here is what the bean definitions for the code above would look like:
<bean id="mailSender" class="org.springframework.mail.javamail.JavaMailSenderImpl"> <property name="host"><value>mail.mycompany.com</value></property> </bean> <bean id="mailMessage" class="org.springframework.mail.SimpleMailMessage"> <property name="from"><value>[email protected]</value></property> <property name="subject"><value>Your order</value></property> </bean> <bean id="orderManager" class="com.mycompany.businessapp.support.OrderManagerImpl"> <property name="mailSender"><ref bean="mailSender"/></property> <property name="message"><ref bean="mailMessage"/></property> </bean>
Here is the implementation of OrderManager using MimeMessagePreparator callback interface. Please note that the mailSender property is of type JavaMailSender in this case in order to be able to use JavaMail MimeMessage:
import import import import import import import import javax.mail.Message; javax.mail.MessagingException; javax.mail.internet.InternetAddress; javax.mail.internet.MimeMessage; javax.mail.internet.MimeMessage; org.springframework.mail.MailException; org.springframework.mail.javamail.JavaMailSender; org.springframework.mail.javamail.MimeMessagePreparator;
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public void setMailSender(JavaMailSender mailSender) { this.mailSender = mailSender; } public void placeOrder(final Order order) { //... * Do the business calculations.... //... * Call the collaborators to persist the order
MimeMessagePreparator preparator = new MimeMessagePreparator() { public void prepare(MimeMessage mimeMessage) throws MessagingException { mimeMessage.setRecipient(Message.RecipientType.TO, new InternetAddress(order.getCustomer().getEmailAddress())); mimeMessage.setFrom(new InternetAddress("[email protected]")); mimeMessage.setText( "Dear " + order.getCustomer().getFirstName() + order.getCustomer().getLastName() + ", thank you for placing order. Your order number is " + order.getOrderNumber()); } }; try{ mailSender.send(preparator); } catch(MailException ex) { //log it and go on System.err.println(ex.getMessage()); } } }
If you want to use JavaMail MimeMessage to the full power, the MimeMessagePreparator is available at your fingertips. Please note that the mail code is a crosscutting concern and is a perfect candidate for refactoring into a custom Spring AOP advice, which then could easily be applied to OrderManager target. Please see the AOP chapter.
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Inline resources are added to the mime message using the Content-ID specified as you've seen just now (identifier1234 in this case). The order in which you're adding the text and the resource are VERY important. First add the text and after that the resources. If you're doing it the other way around, it won't work!
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The job detail bean has all information it needs to run the job (ExampleJob). The timeout is specified as the job data map. The job data map is available through the JobExecutionContext (passed to you at execution time), but the JobDetailBean also maps the properties from the job data map to properties of the actual job. So in this case, if the ExampleJob contains a property named timeout, the JobDetailBean will automatically apply it:
package example; public class ExampleJob extends QuartzJobBean { private int timeout; /** * Setter called after the ExampleJob is instantiated * with the value from the JobDetailBean (5) */ public void setTimeout(int timeout) { this.timeout = timeout; } protected void executeInternal(JobExecutionContext ctx) throws JobExecutionException { // do the actual work } }
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Scheduling jobs using Quartz or Timer All additional settings from the job detail bean are of course available to you as well. Note: Using the name and group properties, you can modify the name and the group of the job, respectively. By default the name of the job equals the bean name of the job detail bean (in the example above, this is exampleJob).
The above example will result in the doIt being called on the exampleBusinessObject (see below):
public class BusinessObject { // properties and collaborators public void doIt() { // do the actual work } }
Using the MethodInvokingJobDetailFactoryBean you don't need to create one-line jobs that just invoke a method, and you only need to create the actual business object and wire up the detail object. By default, Quartz Jobs are stateless, resulting in the possibility of jobs interfering with each other. If you specify two triggers for the same JobDetail, it might be possible that before the first job has finished, the second one will start. If JobDetail objects implement the Stateful interface, this won't happen. The second job will not start before the first one has finished. To make jobs resulting from the MethodInvokingJobDetailFactoryBean non-concurrent, set the concurrent flag to false.
<bean id="methodInvokingJobDetail" class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.MethodInvokingJobDetailFactoryBean"> <property name="targetObject"><ref bean="exampleBusinessObject"/></property> <property name="targetMethod"><value>doIt</value></property> <property name="concurrent"><value>false</value></property> </bean>
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Triggers need to be scheduled. Spring offers a SchedulerFactoryBean exposing properties to set the triggers. SchedulerFactoryBean schedules the actual jobs with those triggers. A couple of examples:
<bean id="simpleTrigger" class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.SimpleTriggerBean"> <property name="jobDetail"> <!-- see the example of method invoking job above --> <ref bean="methodInvokingJobDetail"/> </property> <property name="startDelay"> <!-- 10 seconds --> <value>10000</value> </property> <property name="repeatInterval"> <!-- repeat every 50 seconds --> <value>50000</value> </property> </bean> <bean id="cronTrigger" class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.CronTriggerBean"> <property name="jobDetail"> <ref bean="exampleJob"/> </property> <property name="cronExpression"> <!-- run every morning at 6 AM --> <value>0 0 6 * * ?</value> </property> </bean>
OK, now we've set up two triggers, one running every 50 seconds with a starting delay of 10 seconds and one every morning at 6 AM. To finalize everything, we need to set up the SchedulerFactoryBean:
<bean class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.SchedulerFactoryBean"> <property name="triggers"> <list> <ref local="cronTrigger"/> <ref local="simpleTrigger"/> </list> </property> </bean>
More properties are available for the SchedulerFactoryBean for you to set, such as the calendars used by the job details, properties to customize Quartz with, etc. Have a look at the JavaDoc (http://www.springframework.org/docs/api/org/springframework/scheduling/quartz/SchedulerFactoryBean.html) for more information.
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private List emailAddresses; public void setEmailAddresses(List emailAddresses) { this.emailAddresses = emailAddresses; } public void run() { // iterate over all email addresses and archive them } }
Wiring it up is simple:
<bean id="checkEmail" class="examples.CheckEmailAddress"> <property name="emailAddresses"> <list> <value>[email protected]</value> <value>[email protected]</value> <value>[email protected]</value> </list> </property> </bean> <bean id="scheduledTask" class="org.springframework.scheduling.timer.ScheduledTimerTask"> <!-- wait 10 seconds before starting repeated execution --> <property name="delay"> <value>10000</value> </property> <!-- run every 50 seconds --> <property name="period"> <value>50000</value> </property> <property name="timerTask"> <ref local="checkEmail"/> </property> </bean>
Letting the task only run once can be done by changing the period property to -1 (or some other negative value)
The above example will result in the doIt being called on the exampleBusinessObject (see below):
public class BusinessObject { // properties and collaborators public void doIt() { // do the actual work } }
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Scheduling jobs using Quartz or Timer Changing the reference of the above example in which the ScheduledTimerTask is mentioned to the methodInvokingTask will result in this task being executed.
That's all!
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Thus Spring provides valuable support for integration testing, in the spring-mock.jar. This can be thought of as a significantly superior alternative to in-container testing using tools such as Cactus. The org.springframework.test package provides valuable superclasses for integration tests using a Spring container, but not dependent on an application server or other deployed environment. Such tests can run in JUnit--even in an IDE--without any special deployment step. They will be slower to run than unit tests, but much faster to run than Cactus tests or remote tests relying on deployment to an application server. The superclasses in this package provide the following functionality: Context caching. Dependency Injection for test classes. Transaction management appropriate to tests. Inherited instance variables useful for testing.
Numerous Interface21 and other projects since late 2004 have demonstrated the power and utility of this approach. Let's look at some of the important areas of functionality in detail.
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Testing
This should provide a list of the context locations--typically on the classpath--used to configure the application. This will be the same, or nearly the same, as the list of config locations specified in web.xml or other deployment configuration. By default, once loaded, the set of configs will be reused for each test case. Thus the setup cost will be incurred only once, and subsequent test execution will be much faster. In the unlikely case that a test may "dirty" the config location, requiring reloading--for example, by changing a bean definition or the state of an application object--you can call the setDirty() method on AbstractDependencyInjectionSpringContextTests to cause it to reload the configurations and rebuild the application context before executing the next test case.
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Testing subclasses) exist to meet this need. By default, they create and roll back a transaction for each test case. You simply write code that can assume the existence of a transaction. If you call transactionally proxied objects in your tests, they will behave correctly, according to their transactional semantics. depends on a PlatformTransactionManager bean being defined in the application context. The name doesn't matter, due to the use of autowire by type.
AbstractTransactionalSpringContextTests
Typically you will extend the subclass, AbstractTransactionalDataSourceSpringContextTests. This also requires a DataSource bean definition--again, with any name--is present in the configurations. It creates a JdbcTemplate instance variable that is useful for convenient querying, and provides handy methods to delete the contents of selected tables. (Remember that the transaction will roll back by default, so this is safe.) If you want a transaction to commit--unusual, but useful if you want a particular test to populate the database, for example--you can call the setComplete() method inherited from AbstractTransactionalSpringContextTests. This will cause the transaction to commit instead of roll back. There is also convenient ability to end a transaction before the test case ends, through calling the endTransaction() method. This will roll back the transaction by default, and commit it only if setComplete() had previously been called. This functionality is useful if you want to test the behaviour of "disconnected" data objects, such as Hibernate-mapped objects that will be used in a web or remoting tier outside a transaction. Often, lazy loading errors are discovered only through UI testing; if you call endTransaction() you can ensure correct operation of the UI through your JUnit test suite. Note that these test support classes are designed to work with a single database.
inherited from AbstractDependencyInjectionSpringContextTests. Use this to perfom explicit bean lookup, or test the state of the context as a whole.
jdbcTemplate:
inherited from AbstractTransactionalDataSourceSpringContextTests. Useful for querying to confirm state. For example, you might query before and after testing application code that creates an object and persists it using an ORM tool, to verify that the data appears in the database. (Spring will ensure that the query runs in the scope of the same transaction.) You will need to tell your ORM tool to "flush" its changes for this to work correctly, for example using the flush() method on Hibernate's Session interface.
Often you will provide an application-wide superclass for integration tests that provides further useful instance variables used in many tests.
20.2.5. Example
The PetClinic sample application included with the Spring distribution illustrates the use of these test superclasses (Spring 1.1.5 and above). Most test functionality is included in AbstractClinicTests, for which a partial listing is shown belong:
public abstract class AbstractClinicTests extends AbstractTransactionalDataSourceSpringContextTests {
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protected Clinic clinic; public void setClinic(Clinic clinic) { this.clinic = clinic; } public void testGetVets() { Collection vets = this.clinic.getVets(); assertEquals("JDBC query must show the same number of vets", jdbcTemplate.queryForInt("SELECT COUNT(0) FROM VETS"), vets.size()); Vet v1 = (Vet) EntityUtils.getById(vets, Vet.class, 2); assertEquals("Leary", v1.getLastName()); assertEquals(1, v1.getNrOfSpecialties()); assertEquals("radiology", ((Specialty) v1.getSpecialties().get(0)).getName()); Vet v2 = (Vet) EntityUtils.getById(vets, Vet.class, 3); assertEquals("Douglas", v2.getLastName()); assertEquals(2, v2.getNrOfSpecialties()); assertEquals("dentistry", ((Specialty) v2.getSpecialties().get(0)).getName()); assertEquals("surgery", ((Specialty) v2.getSpecialties().get(1)).getName()); }
Notes: This test case extends org.springframework.AbstractTransactionalDataSourceSpringContextTests, from which it inherits Dependency Injection and transactional behaviour. The clinic instance variable--the application object being tested--is set by Dependency Injection through the setClinic() method. The testGetVets() method illustrates how the inherited JdbcTemplate variable can be used to verify correct behaviour of the application code being tested. This allows for stronger tests, and lessens dependency on the exact test data. For example, you can add additional rows in the database without breaking tests. Like many integration tests using a database, most of the tests in AbstractClinicTests depend on a minimum amount of data already in the database before the test cases run. You might, however, choose to populate the database in your test cases also--again, within the one transaction.
The PetClinic application supports three data access technologies--JDBC, Hibernate and Apache OJB. Thus AbstractClinicTests does not specify the context locations--this is deferred to subclasses, that implement the necessary protected abstract method from AbstractDependencyInjectionSpringContextTests. For example, the JDBC implementation of the PetClinic tests contains the following method:
public class HibernateClinicTests extends AbstractClinicTests { protected String[] getConfigLocations() { return new String[] { "/org/springframework/samples/petclinic/hibernate/applicationContext-hibernate.xml" }; } }
As the PetClinic is a very simple application, there is only one Spring configuration file. Of course, more complex applications will typically break their Spring configuration across multiple files. Instead of being defined in a leaf class, config locations will often be specified in a common base class for all application-specific integration tests. This may also add useful instance variables--populated by Dependency Injection, naturally--such as a HibernateTemplate, in the case of an application using Hibernate. As far as possible, you should have exactly the same Spring configuration files in your integration tests as in Spring Framework Version 1.1.5 205
Testing
the deployed environment. One likely point of difference concerns database connection pooling and transaction infrastructure. If you are deploying to a full-blown application server, you will probably use its connection pool (available through JNDI) and JTA implementation. Thus in production you will use a JndiObjectFactoryBean for the DataSource, and JtaTransactionManager. JNDI and JTA will not be available in out-of-container integration tests, so you should use a combination like the Commons DBCP BasicDataSource and DataSourceTransactionManager or HibernateTransactionManager for them. You can factor out this variant behaviour into a single XML file, having the choice between application server and "local" configuration separated from all other configuration, which will not vary between the test and production environments.
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<!-The document root. A document can contain bean definitions only, imports only, or a mixture of both (typically with imports first). --> <!ELEMENT beans ( description?, import*, bean* )> <!-Default values for all bean definitions. Can be overridden at the "bean" level. See those attribute definitions for details. --> <!ATTLIST beans default-lazy-init (true | false) "false"> <!ATTLIST beans default-dependency-check (none | objects | simple | all) "none"> <!ATTLIST beans default-autowire (no | byName | byType | constructor | autodetect) "no"> <!-Element containing informative text describing the purpose of the enclosing element. Always optional. Used primarily for user documentation of XML bean definition documents. --> <!ELEMENT description (#PCDATA)> <!-Specifies an XML bean definition resource to import. -->
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Spring's beans.dtd
<!ELEMENT import EMPTY> <!-The relative resource location of the XML bean definition file to import, for example "myImport.xml" or "includes/myImport.xml" or "../myImport.xml". --> <!ATTLIST import resource CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Defines a single named bean. --> <!ELEMENT bean ( description?, (constructor-arg | property)*, (lookup-method)*, (replaced-method)* )> <!-Beans can be identified by an id, to enable reference checking. There are constraints on a valid XML id: if you want to reference your bean in Java code using a name that's illegal as an XML id, use the optional "name" attribute. If neither is given, the bean class name is used as id (with an appended counter like "#2" if there is already a bean with that name). --> <!ATTLIST bean id ID #IMPLIED> <!-Optional. Can be used to create one or more aliases illegal in an id. Multiple aliases can be separated by any number of spaces or commas. --> <!ATTLIST bean name CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Each bean definition must specify the fully qualified name of the class, except if it pure serves as parent for child bean definitions. --> <!ATTLIST bean class CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Optionally specify a parent bean definition. Will use the bean class of the parent if none specified, but can also override it. In the latter case, the child bean class must be compatible with the parent, i.e. accept the parent's property values and constructor argument values, if any. A child bean definition will inherit constructor argument values, property values and method overrides from the parent, with the option to add new values. If init method, destroy method, factory bean and/or factory method are specified, they will override the corresponding parent settings. The remaining settings will <i>always</i> be taken from the child definition: depends on, autowire mode, dependency check, singleton, lazy init. --> <!ATTLIST bean parent CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Is this bean "abstract", i.e. not meant to be instantiated itself but rather just serving as parent for concrete child bean definitions. Default is false. Specify true to tell the bean factory to not try to instantiate that particular bean in any case. --> <!ATTLIST bean abstract (true | false) "false"> <!-Is this bean a "singleton" (one shared instance, which will be returned by all calls to getBean() with the id), or a "prototype" (independent instance resulting from each call to getBean(). Default is singleton. Singletons are most commonly used, and are ideal for multi-threaded service objects. --> <!ATTLIST bean singleton (true | false) "true">
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<!-If this bean should be lazily initialized. If false, it will get instantiated on startup by bean factories that perform eager initialization of singletons. --> <!ATTLIST bean lazy-init (true | false | default) "default"> <!-Optional attribute controlling whether to "autowire" bean properties. This is an automagical process in which bean references don't need to be coded explicitly in the XML bean definition file, but Spring works out dependencies. There are 5 modes: 1. "no" The traditional Spring default. No automagical wiring. Bean references must be defined in the XML file via the <ref> element. We recommend this in most cases as it makes documentation more explicit. 2. "byName" Autowiring by property name. If a bean of class Cat exposes a dog property, Spring will try to set this to the value of the bean "dog" in the current factory. If there is no matching bean by name, nothing special happens - use dependency-check="objects" to raise an error in that case. 3. "byType" Autowiring if there is exactly one bean of the property type in the bean factory. If there is more than one, a fatal error is raised, and you can't use byType autowiring for that bean. If there is none, nothing special happens - use dependency-check="objects" to raise an error in that case. 4. "constructor" Analogous to "byType" for constructor arguments. If there isn't exactly one bean of the constructor argument type in the bean factory, a fatal error is raised. 5. "autodetect" Chooses "constructor" or "byType" through introspection of the bean class. If a default constructor is found, "byType" gets applied. The latter two are similar to PicoContainer and make bean factories simple to configure for small namespaces, but doesn't work as well as standard Spring behavior for bigger applications. Note that explicit dependencies, i.e. "property" and "constructor-arg" elements, always override autowiring. Autowire behavior can be combined with dependency checking, which will be performed after all autowiring has been completed. --> <!ATTLIST bean autowire (no | byName | byType | constructor | autodetect | default) "default"> <!-Optional attribute controlling whether to check whether all this beans dependencies, expressed in its properties, are satisfied. Default is no dependency checking. "simple" type dependency checking includes primitives and String "object" includes collaborators (other beans in the factory) "all" includes both types of dependency checking --> <!ATTLIST bean dependency-check (none | objects | simple | all | default) "default"> <!-The names of the beans that this bean depends on being initialized. The bean factory will guarantee that these beans get initialized before. Note that dependencies are normally expressed through bean properties or constructor arguments. This property should just be necessary for other kinds of dependencies like statics (*ugh*) or database preparation on startup. --> <!ATTLIST bean depends-on CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Optional attribute for the name of the custom initialization method to invoke after setting bean properties. The method must have no arguments, but may throw any exception. --> <!ATTLIST bean init-method CDATA #IMPLIED>
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<!-Optional attribute for the name of the custom destroy method to invoke on bean factory shutdown. The method must have no arguments, but may throw any exception. Note: Only invoked on singleton beans! --> <!ATTLIST bean destroy-method CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Optional attribute specifying the name of a factory method to use to create this object. Use constructor-arg elements to specify arguments to the factory method, if it takes arguments. Autowiring does not apply to factory methods. If the "class" attribute is present, the factory method will be a static method on the class specified by the "class" attribute on this bean definition. Often this will be the same class as that of the constructed object - for example, when the factory method is used as an alternative to a constructor. However, it may be on a different class. In that case, the created object will *not* be of the class specified in the "class" attribute. This is analogous to FactoryBean behavior. If the "factory-bean" attribute is present, the "class" attribute is not used, and the factory method will be an instance method on the object returned from a getBean call with the specified bean name. The factory bean may be defined as a singleton or a prototype. The factory method can have any number of arguments. Autowiring is not supported. Use indexed constructor-arg elements in conjunction with the factory-method attribute. Setter Injection can be used in conjunction with a factory method. Method Injection cannot, as the factory method returns an instance, which will be used when the container creates the bean. --> <!ATTLIST bean factory-method CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Alternative to class attribute for factory-method usage. If this is specified, no class attribute should be used. This should be set to the name of a bean in the current or ancestor factories that contains the relevant factory method. This allows the factory itself to be configured using Dependency Injection, and an instance (rather than static) method to be used. --> <!ATTLIST bean factory-bean CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Bean definitions can specify zero or more constructor arguments. This is an alternative to "autowire constructor". Arguments correspond to either a specific index of the constructor argument list or are supposed to be matched generically by type. Note: A single generic argument value will just be used once, rather than potentially matched multiple times (as of Spring 1.1). constructor-arg elements are also used in conjunction with the factory-method element to construct beans using static or instance factory methods. --> <!ELEMENT constructor-arg ( description?, (bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null) )> <!-The constructor-arg tag can have an optional index attribute, to specify the exact index in the constructor argument list. Only needed to avoid ambiguities, e.g. in case of 2 arguments of the same type. NOTE: it is highly recommended to use the index attribute, in Spring up to and including 1.1. The constructor matcher is extremely greedy in matching args without an index, to the point of duplicating supplied args to fill in unspecified constructor args, if they are compatible (i.e. one single String arg will match a constructor with two String args, etc.). The matcher should be less aggressive in a future version. --> <!ATTLIST constructor-arg index CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-The constructor-arg tag can have an optional type attribute,
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to specify the exact type of the constructor argument. Only needed to avoid ambiguities, e.g. in case of 2 single argument constructors that can both be converted from a String. --> <!ATTLIST constructor-arg type CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Bean definitions can have zero or more properties. Property elements correspond to JavaBean setter methods exposed by the bean classes. Spring supports primitives, references to other beans in the same or related factories, lists, maps and properties. --> <!ELEMENT property ( description?, (bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null) )> <!-The property name attribute is the name of the JavaBean property. This follows JavaBean conventions: a name of "age" would correspond to setAge()/optional getAge() methods. --> <!ATTLIST property name CDATA #REQUIRED> <!-A lookup method causes the IoC container to override the given method and return the bean with the name given in the bean attribute. This is a form of Method Injection. It's particularly useful as an alternative to implementing the BeanFactoryAware interface, in order to be able to make getBean() calls for non-singleton instances at runtime. In this case, Method Injection is a less invasive alternative. --> <!ELEMENT lookup-method EMPTY> <!-Name of a lookup method. This method should take no arguments. --> <!ATTLIST lookup-method name CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Similar to the lookup method mechanism, the replaced-method element is used to control IoC container method overriding: Method Injection. This mechanism allows the overriding of a method with arbitrary code. --> <!ELEMENT replaced-method ( (arg-type)* )> <!-Name of the method whose implementation should be replaced by the IoC container. If this method is not overloaded, there's no need to use arg-type sub-elements. If this method is overloaded, arg-type sub-elements must be used for all override definitions for the method. --> <!ATTLIST replaced-method name CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Bean name of an implementation of the MethodReplacer interface in the current or ancestor factories. This may be a singleton or prototype bean. If it's a prototype, a new instance will be used for each method replacement. Singleton usage is the norm. --> <!ATTLIST replaced-method replacer CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Sub-element of replaced-method identifying an argument for a replaced method in the event of method overloading. --> <!ELEMENT arg-type (#PCDATA)> <!-Specification of the type of an overloaded method argument as a String. For convenience, this may be a substring of the FQN. E.g. all the following would match "java.lang.String": - java.lang.String - String - Str
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As the number of arguments will be checked also, this convenience can often be used to save typing. --> <!ATTLIST arg-type match CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Name of the bean in the current or ancestor factories that the lookup method should resolve to. Often this bean will be a prototype, in which case the lookup method will return a distinct instance on every invocation. This is useful for single-threaded objects. --> <!ATTLIST lookup-method bean CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Defines a reference to another bean in this factory or an external factory (parent or included factory). --> <!ELEMENT ref EMPTY> <!-References must specify a name of the target bean. The "bean" attribute can reference any name from any bean in the context, to be checked at runtime. Local references, using the "local" attribute, have to use bean ids; they can be checked by this DTD, thus should be preferred for references within the same bean factory XML file. --> <!ATTLIST ref bean CDATA #IMPLIED> <!ATTLIST ref local IDREF #IMPLIED> <!ATTLIST ref parent CDATA #IMPLIED> <!-Defines a string property value, which must also be the id of another bean in this factory or an external factory (parent or included factory). While a regular 'value' element could instead be used for the same effect, using idref in this case allows validation of local bean ids by the xml parser, and name completion by helper tools. --> <!ELEMENT idref EMPTY> <!-ID refs must specify a name of the target bean. The "bean" attribute can reference any name from any bean in the context, potentially to be checked at runtime by bean factory implementations. Local references, using the "local" attribute, have to use bean ids; they can be checked by this DTD, thus should be preferred for references within the same bean factory XML file. --> <!ATTLIST idref bean CDATA #IMPLIED> <!ATTLIST idref local IDREF #IMPLIED> <!-A list can contain multiple inner bean, ref, collection, or value elements. Java lists are untyped, pending generics support in Java 1.5, although references will be strongly typed. A list can also map to an array type. The necessary conversion is automatically performed by the BeanFactory. --> <!ELEMENT list ( (bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null)* )> <!-A set can contain multiple inner bean, ref, collection, or value elements. Java sets are untyped, pending generics support in Java 1.5, although references will be strongly typed. --> <!ELEMENT set ( (bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null)* )> <!-A Spring map is a mapping from a string key to object. Maps may be empty. --> <!ELEMENT map ( (entry)*
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)> <!-A map entry can be an inner bean, ref, collection, or value. The name of the property is given by the "key" attribute. --> <!ELEMENT entry ( (bean | ref | idref | list | set | map | props | value | null) )> <!-Each map element must specify its key. --> <!ATTLIST entry key CDATA #REQUIRED> <!-Props elements differ from map elements in that values must be strings. Props may be empty. --> <!ELEMENT props ( (prop)* )> <!-Element content is the string value of the property. Note that whitespace is trimmed off to avoid unwanted whitespace caused by typical XML formatting. --> <!ELEMENT prop (#PCDATA)> <!-Each property element must specify its key. --> <!ATTLIST prop key CDATA #REQUIRED> <!-Contains a string representation of a property value. The property may be a string, or may be converted to the required type using the JavaBeans PropertyEditor machinery. This makes it possible for application developers to write custom PropertyEditor implementations that can convert strings to objects. Note that this is recommended for simple objects only. Configure more complex objects by populating JavaBean properties with references to other beans. --> <!ELEMENT value (#PCDATA)> <!-Denotes a Java null value. Necessary because an empty "value" tag will resolve to an empty String, which will not be resolved to a null value unless a special PropertyEditor does so. --> <!ELEMENT null (#PCDATA)>
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