I've already read these questions and none of them worked:
Spring boot MVC - Unable to Autowire Repository in the service class
Why can't #Autowired a JPA repository - Spring boot + JPA
JpaRepository getting Null at service class
And also this one: https://www.baeldung.com/spring-autowired-field-null
Unfortunately, none of them worked.
What I have is:
Service interface:
#Service
public interface DayTradeService {
public List<DayTrade> getDayTrades(List<NotaDeCorretagem> corretagens);
}
Service Implementation:
public class DayTradeServiceImpl implements DayTradeService {
#Autowired
private DayTradeRepository dayTradeRepository;
#Override
public List<DayTrade> getDayTrades(List<NotaDeCorretagem> corretagens) {
// Several lines of code and some of them is trying to use dayTradeRepository.
}
}
My DayTradeRepository:
#Repository
public interface DayTradeRepository extends JpaRepository<DayTrade, Integer> {}
Inside my DayTradeController (annotated with #Controller), I can use a dayTradeRepository with #Autowired. But inside a service class, I cannot use. I get this message:
Cannot invoke "meca.irpf.Repositories.DayTradeRepository.getDayTrades()" because "this.dayTradeRepository" is null"
How can I make it possible?
EDIT after I accepted Nikita's answer:
I didn't post the Controller code, but it didn't have the #Autowired for the service class DayTradeServiceImpl. That was the point I was missing. After Nikita pointing that, I could solve the problem.
You not need create new object. You have to call like this:
#Controller
#RequestMapping("/test")
public class TestController {
#Autowired
private DayTradeServiceImpl dayTradeService;
#GetMapping(value = "/get")
public void getTrades() {
dayTradeService.getDayTrades(...);
}
}
And set annotation #Service for DayTradeServiceImpl.
#Service
public class DayTradeServiceImpl implements DayTradeService {
#Autowired
private DayTradeRepository dayTradeRepository;
#Override
public List<DayTrade> getDayTrades(List<NotaDeCorretagem> corretagens) {
// Several lines of code and some of them is trying to use dayTradeRepository.
}
}
Spring framework use inversion of control, which has container for beans. For detect beans use annotation like: #Service, #Component, #Repository.
I have two (more in the future) implementations of ImportantService – VeryImportantService and LessImportantService:
public interface ImportantService<T extends ImportantRequest> {}
#Service
public class VeryImportantService implements ImportantService<VeryImportantRequest> {}
#Service
public class LessImportantService implements ImportantService<LessImportantRequest> {}
And then I have a controller, in which I want to inject all of the implementations of ImportantService:
#RequiredArgsConstructor
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/api/important")
public class ImportantController<T extends ImportantRequest> {
private final ImportantService<T> importantService;
#PostMapping
public ResponseEntity<ImportantResponse> create(#RequestBody #Valid T request) {
// very important code here
}
}
Obviously, such king of injecting fails:
UnsatisfiedDependencyException: Error creating bean with name 'importantController' defined in file ...
...
Consider marking one of the beans as #Primary, updating the consumer to accept multiple beans, or using #Qualifier to identify the bean that should be consumed
What I want is:
Inject all of the implementations of ImportantService, and then, based on the T automatically select required bean. I know I can add method to ImportantService, which returns the type that implementation works with and then inject ImportantService as List<ImportantService> importantServices and then filter like this:
importantServices.stream()
.filter(importantService -> importantService.getType().equals(request.getClass()))
.findFirst()
.ifPresent(importantService -> importantService.doImportantJob(request));
BUT! I have hundreds of services to refactor like this and I really don't want to write additional logic to controllers.
I know about #Conditional annotation and Condition interface, but AFAIK there's no way to make them do what I want.
Why not implement the proxy pattern?
example:
#Service
#Primary
#RequiredArgsConstructor
public class ImportantServiceProxy implements ImportantService<T extends ImportantRequest> {
private final List<ImportantService> importantServices;
private ImportantService getImportantService(ImportantRequest request){
return this.importantServices.stream()
.filter(importantService -> importantService.getType().equals(request.getClass()))
.findFirst()
.get();
}
public void doImportantJob(ImportantRequest request){
this.getImportantService(request).doImportantJob(request);
}
}
Then in your controller you can call the function without check the type.
#RequiredArgsConstructor
#RestController
#RequestMapping("/api/important")
public class ImportantController<T extends ImportantRequest> {
private final ImportantService<T> importantService;
#PostMapping
public ResponseEntity<ImportantResponse> create(#RequestBody #Valid T request) {
importantService.doImportantJob(request);
}
}
what you want is a list of beans which are of type ImportantService
so you have to declare a variable like this.
final List<ImportantService> importantServices;
demoController(List<ImportantService> importantServices) {
this.importantServices = importantServices;
}
I have a spring-boot app that now needs to support multiple Object stores and selectively use the desired store based on the environment. Essentially what i have done is create an interface that each store repository then implements.
I have simplified the code for the examples.
I have created 2 beans for each store type based on the spring profile determining the env:
#Profile("env1")
#Bean
public store1Sdk buildClientStore1() {
return new store1sdk();
}
#Profile("env2")
#Bean
public store2Sdk buildClientStore2() {
return new store2sdk();
}
in the service layer I have autowired the interface and then in the repositories i have used #Profile to specify which instance of the interface to use.
public interface ObjectStore {
String download(String fileObjectKey);
...
}
#Service
public class ObjectHandlerService {
#Autowired
private ObjectStore objectStore;
public String getObject(String fileObjectKey) {
return objectStore.download(fileObjectKey);
}
...
}
#Repository
#Profile("env1")
public class Store1Repository implements ObjectStore {
#Autowired
private Store1Sdk store1client;
public String download(String fileObjectKey) {
return store1client.getObject(storeName, fileObjectKey);
}
}
When I start the application with the configured "env" this actually runs as expected. however when running the test I get the "no qualifying bean of type ObjectStore. expected at least 1 bean which qualifies as autowire candidate."
#ExtendWith({ SpringExtension.class })
#SpringBootTest(classes = Application.class)
#ActiveProfiles("env1,test")
public class ComposerServiceTest {
#Autowired
private ObjectHandlerService service;
#Test
void download_success() {
String response = service.getObject("testKey");
...
}
}
As noted in the #ActiveProfile on the test class there are some other environments e.g. dev,test,prod. I have tried playing around with Component scan, having impl and interface in the same package, etc, to no success. I feel like I am missing something obvious with the test setup. But could be something with my overall application config? my main aim with the solution is to avoid having something a long the lines of
if (store1Sdk != null) {
store1Sdk.download(fileObjectKey);
}
if (store2Sdk != null) {
store2Sdk.download(fileObjectKey);
}
Try #ActiveProfiles({"env1", "test"}).
Activate multiple profiles using #ActiveProfiles and specify profiles as an array.
this probrom because Store1Repository use #Profile("env1"), when you use #test,this class not invoke. try delete #Profile("env1") of Store1Repository.
if you use #test, both of store1Sdk/store2Sdk don't instanse, try add default instanse.eg:
#Bean
public store2Sdk buildClientStoreDefault() {
return new store2sdk();
}
In a java-spring web-app I would like to be able to dynamically inject beans.
For example I have an interface with 2 different implementations:
In my app I'm using some properties file to configure injections:
#Determines the interface type the app uses. Possible values: implA, implB
myinterface.type=implA
My injections actually loaded conditionally relaying on the properties values in the properties file. For example in this case myinterface.type=implA wherever I inject MyInterface the implementation that will be injected will be ImplA (I accomplished that by extending the Conditional annotation).
I would like that during runtime - once the properties are changed the following will happen (without server restart):
The right implementation will be injected. For example when setting myinterface.type=implB ImplB will be injected where-ever MyInterface is used
Spring Environment should be refreshed with the new values and re-injected as well to beans.
I thought of refreshing my context but that creates problems.
I thought maybe to use setters for injection and re-use those setters once properties are re-configured. Is there a working practice for such a requirement?
Any ideas?
UPDATE
As some suggested I can use a factory/registry that holds both implementations (ImplA and ImplB) and returns the right one by querying the relevant property.
If I do that I still have the second challenge - the environment. for example if my registry looks like this:
#Service
public class MyRegistry {
private String configurationValue;
private final MyInterface implA;
private final MyInterface implB;
#Inject
public MyRegistry(Environmant env, MyInterface implA, MyInterface ImplB) {
this.implA = implA;
this.implB = implB;
this.configurationValue = env.getProperty("myinterface.type");
}
public MyInterface getMyInterface() {
switch(configurationValue) {
case "implA":
return implA;
case "implB":
return implB;
}
}
}
Once property has changed I should re-inject my environment. any suggestions for that?
I know I can query that env inside the method instead of constructor but this is a performance reduction and also I would like to think of an ider for re-injecting environment (again, maybe using a setter injection?).
I would keep this task as simple as possible. Instead of conditionally load one implementation of the MyInterface interface at startup and then fire an event that triggers dynamic loading of another implementation of the same interface, I would tackle this problem in a different way, that is much simpler to implement and maintain.
First of all, I'd just load all possible implementations:
#Component
public class MyInterfaceImplementationsHolder {
#Autowired
private Map<String, MyInterface> implementations;
public MyInterface get(String impl) {
return this.implementations.get(impl);
}
}
This bean is just a holder for all implementations of the MyInterface interface. Nothing magic here, just common Spring autowiring behavior.
Now, wherever you need to inject a specific implementation of MyInterface, you could do it with the help of an interface:
public interface MyInterfaceReloader {
void changeImplementation(MyInterface impl);
}
Then, for every class that needs to be notified of a change of the implementation, just make it implement the MyInterfaceReloader interface. For instance:
#Component
public class SomeBean implements MyInterfaceReloader {
// Do not autowire
private MyInterface myInterface;
#Override
public void changeImplementation(MyInterface impl) {
this.myInterface = impl;
}
}
Finally, you need a bean that actually changes the implementation in every bean that has MyInterface as an attribute:
#Component
public class MyInterfaceImplementationUpdater {
#Autowired
private Map<String, MyInterfaceReloader> reloaders;
#Autowired
private MyInterfaceImplementationsHolder holder;
public void updateImplementations(String implBeanName) {
this.reloaders.forEach((k, v) ->
v.changeImplementation(this.holder.get(implBeanName)));
}
}
This simply autowires all beans that implement the MyInterfaceReloader interface and updates each one of them with the new implementation, which is retrieved from the holder and passed as an argument. Again, common Spring autowiring rules.
Whenever you want the implementation to be changed, you should just invoke the updateImplementations method with the name of the bean of the new implementation, which is the lower camel case simple name of the class, i.e. myImplA or myImplB for classes MyImplA and MyImplB.
You should also invoke this method at startup, so that an initial implementation is set on every bean that implements the MyInterfaceReloader interface.
I solved a similar issue by using org.apache.commons.configuration.PropertiesConfiguration and org.springframework.beans.factory.config.ServiceLocatorFactoryBean:
Let VehicleRepairService be an interface:
public interface VehicleRepairService {
void repair();
}
and CarRepairService and TruckRepairService two classes that implements it:
public class CarRepairService implements VehicleRepairService {
#Override
public void repair() {
System.out.println("repair a car");
}
}
public class TruckRepairService implements VehicleRepairService {
#Override
public void repair() {
System.out.println("repair a truck");
}
}
I create an interface for a service factory:
public interface VehicleRepairServiceFactory {
VehicleRepairService getRepairService(String serviceType);
}
Let use Config as configuration class:
#Configuration()
#ComponentScan(basePackages = "config.test")
public class Config {
#Bean
public PropertiesConfiguration configuration(){
try {
PropertiesConfiguration configuration = new PropertiesConfiguration("example.properties");
configuration
.setReloadingStrategy(new FileChangedReloadingStrategy());
return configuration;
} catch (ConfigurationException e) {
throw new IllegalStateException(e);
}
}
#Bean
public ServiceLocatorFactoryBean serviceLocatorFactoryBean() {
ServiceLocatorFactoryBean serviceLocatorFactoryBean = new ServiceLocatorFactoryBean();
serviceLocatorFactoryBean
.setServiceLocatorInterface(VehicleRepairServiceFactory.class);
return serviceLocatorFactoryBean;
}
#Bean
public CarRepairService carRepairService() {
return new CarRepairService();
}
#Bean
public TruckRepairService truckRepairService() {
return new TruckRepairService();
}
#Bean
public SomeService someService(){
return new SomeService();
}
}
By using FileChangedReloadingStrategy your configuration be reload when you change the property file.
service=truckRepairService
#service=carRepairService
Having the configuration and the factory in your service, let you can get the appropriate service from the factory using the current value of the property.
#Service
public class SomeService {
#Autowired
private VehicleRepairServiceFactory factory;
#Autowired
private PropertiesConfiguration configuration;
public void doSomething() {
String service = configuration.getString("service");
VehicleRepairService vehicleRepairService = factory.getRepairService(service);
vehicleRepairService.repair();
}
}
Hope it helps.
If I understand you correctly then the goal is not to replace injected object instances but to use different implementations during interface method call depends on some condition at run time.
If it is so then you can try to look at the Sring TargetSource mechanism in combination with ProxyFactoryBean. The point is that proxy objects will be injected to beans that uses your interface, and all the interface method calls will be sent to TargetSource target.
Let's call this "Polymorphic Proxy".
Have a look at example below:
ConditionalTargetSource.java
#Component
public class ConditionalTargetSource implements TargetSource {
#Autowired
private MyRegistry registry;
#Override
public Class<?> getTargetClass() {
return MyInterface.class;
}
#Override
public boolean isStatic() {
return false;
}
#Override
public Object getTarget() throws Exception {
return registry.getMyInterface();
}
#Override
public void releaseTarget(Object target) throws Exception {
//Do some staff here if you want to release something related to interface instances that was created with MyRegistry.
}
}
applicationContext.xml
<bean id="myInterfaceFactoryBean" class="org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean">
<property name="proxyInterfaces" value="MyInterface"/>
<property name="targetSource" ref="conditionalTargetSource"/>
</bean>
<bean name="conditionalTargetSource" class="ConditionalTargetSource"/>
SomeService.java
#Service
public class SomeService {
#Autowired
private MyInterface myInterfaceBean;
public void foo(){
//Here we have `myInterfaceBean` proxy that will do `conditionalTargetSource.getTarget().bar()`
myInterfaceBean.bar();
}
}
Also if you want to have both MyInterface implementations to be Spring beans, and the Spring context could not contains both instances at the same time then you can try to use ServiceLocatorFactoryBean with prototype target beans scope and Conditional annotation on target implementation classes. This approach can be used instead of MyRegistry.
P.S.
Probably Application Context refresh operation also can do what you want but it can cause other problems such as performance overheads.
This may be a duplicate question or at least very similar, anyway I answered this sort of question here: Spring bean partial autowire prototype constructor
Pretty much when you want a different beans for a dependency at run-time you need to use a prototype scope. Then you can use a configuration to return different implementations of the prototype bean. You will need to handle the logic on which implementation to return yourself, (they could even be returning 2 different singleton beans it doesn't matter) But say you want new beans, and the logic for returning the implementation is in a bean called SomeBeanWithLogic.isSomeBooleanExpression(), then you can make a configuration:
#Configuration
public class SpringConfiguration
{
#Bean
#Autowired
#Scope("prototype")
public MyInterface createBean(SomeBeanWithLogic someBeanWithLogic )
{
if (someBeanWithLogic .isSomeBooleanExpression())
{
return new ImplA(); // I could be a singleton bean
}
else
{
return new ImplB(); // I could also be a singleton bean
}
}
}
There should never be a need to reload the context. If for instance, you want the implementation of a bean to change at run-time, use the above. If you really need to reload your application, because this bean was used in constructors of a singleton bean or something weird, then you need to re-think your design, and if these beans are really singleton beans. You shouldn't be reloading the context to re-create singleton beans to achieve different run-time behavior, that is not needed.
Edit The first part of this answer answered the question about dynamically injecting beans. As asked, but I think the question is more of one: 'how can I change the implementation of a singleton bean at run-time'. This could be done with a proxy design pattern.
interface MyInterface
{
public String doStuff();
}
#Component
public class Bean implements MyInterface
{
boolean todo = false; // change me as needed
// autowire implementations or create instances within this class as needed
#Qualifier("implA")
#Autowired
MyInterface implA;
#Qualifier("implB")
#Autowired
MyInterface implB;
public String doStuff()
{
if (todo)
{
return implA.doStuff();
}
else
{
return implB.doStuff();
}
}
}
You can use #Resource annotation for injection as originally answered here
e.g.
#Component("implA")
public class ImplA implements MyInterface {
...
}
#Component("implB")
public class ImplB implements MyInterface {
...
}
#Component
public class DependentClass {
#Resource(name = "\${myinterface.type}")
private MyInterface impl;
}
and then set the implementation type in properties file as -
myinterface.type=implA
Be aware that - if interesting to know about - FileChangedReloadingStrategy makes your project highly dependent on the deployment conditions: the WAR/EAR should be exploded by container and your should have direct access to the file system, conditions that are not always met in all situations and environments.
You can use Spring #Conditional on a property value. Give both Beans the same name and it should work as only one Instance will be created.
Have a look here on how to use #Conditional on Services and Components:
http://blog.codeleak.pl/2015/11/how-to-register-components-using.html
public abstract class SystemService {
}
public class FooSystemService extends FileSystemService {
}
public class GoSystemService extends FileSystemService {
}
#Configuration
public class SystemServiceConf {
#Bean
#Conditional(SystemServiceCondition.class)
public SystemService systemService(#Value("${value.key}") value) {
switch (value) {
case A:
return new FooSystemService();
case B:
return new GoSystemService();
default:
throw new RuntimeException("unknown value ");
}
}
}
public class SystemServiceCondition implements Condition {
#Override
public boolean matches(ConditionContext conditionContext, AnnotatedTypeMetadata annotatedTypeMetadata) {
return true;
}
}
I have a Spring Boot application, using Spring 4, in this app I have an interface and an implementing class:
interface Sorter{
void start();
List<MailingListMessage> getMessages();
}
and
#Service
public class SorterImpl implements Sorter {
List<MailingListMessage> messages;
#Override
public void start() {
}
#Override
public List<MailingListMessage> getMessages() {
return null;
}
}
What I want to to is test the implementation directly but still as a bean with autowiring and everything.
I want to do that because when I need to assert something that for example relates to messages, I have to make the method public as you can see in the Impl class.
Is there a way in Spring to properly write tests for implementations directly and still have them work as beans?
Thanks.