Spring Java config same Bean reference - java

Looking through question Autowire a bean within Spring's Java configuration I got a question.
#Configuration
public class Config {
#Bean
public RandomBean randomBean(){
return new RandomBean();
}
#Bean
public AnotherBean anotherBean(){
return new AnotherBean(randomBean()); // this line
}
}
How Spring guarantees that method randomBean() will return the same reference as one which was injected into AnotherBean?
Is it achieved via proxies?
On the other hand, doing it with providing dependencies as method parameters is quiet obvious:
#Configuration
public class Config {
#Bean
public RandomBean randomBean(){
return new RandomBean();
}
#Bean
public AnotherBean anotherBean(RandomBean randomBean){
return new AnotherBean(randomBean);
}
}
Edit: finally, I found this behavior described in Further information about how Java-based configuration works internally topic.

There is only one "randomBean" because the default scope is "singleton".(To force Spring to produce a new bean instance each time one is needed, you should declare the bean's scope attribute to be prototype)
singleton
This scopes the bean definition to a single instance per Spring IoC
container (default).
prototype
This scopes a single bean definition to have any number of object
instances.
Spring guarantees that method randomBean() will return the same reference as one which was injected into AnotherBean By using proxies.
In order to generate proxies, Spring uses a third party library called CGLIB.
Spring enhances classes by generating a CGLIB subclass which
interacts with the Spring container to respect bean scoping
semantics for methods.
Each such bean method will be overridden in the generated subclass,
only delegating to the actual bean method implementation if the
container actually requests the construction of a new instance.
Otherwise, a call to such an bean method serves as a reference back
to the container, obtaining the corresponding bean by name.
see org.springframework.context.annotation.ConfigurationClassEnhancer.BeanMethodInterceptor
// To handle the case of an inter-bean method reference, we must explicitly check the
// container for already cached instances.
// First, check to see if the requested bean is a FactoryBean. If so, create a subclass
// proxy that intercepts calls to getObject() and returns any cached bean instance.
// This ensures that the semantics of calling a FactoryBean from within #Bean methods
// is the same as that of referring to a FactoryBean within XML. See SPR-6602.
if (factoryContainsBean(BeanFactory.FACTORY_BEAN_PREFIX + beanName) && factoryContainsBean(beanName)) {
Object factoryBean = this.beanFactory.getBean(BeanFactory.FACTORY_BEAN_PREFIX + beanName);
if (factoryBean instanceof ScopedProxyFactoryBean) {
// Pass through - scoped proxy factory beans are a special case and should not
// be further proxied
}
else {
// It is a candidate FactoryBean - go ahead with enhancement
return enhanceFactoryBean(factoryBean.getClass(), beanName);
}
}
If you want to get two different beans, you should change the default scope by #Scope
#Configuration
public class Config {
#Bean
#Scope(ConfigurableBeanFactory.SCOPE_PROTOTYPE)
public RandomBean randomBean(){
return new RandomBean();
}
#Bean
public AnotherBean anotherBean(){
return new AnotherBean(randomBean()); // this line
}
}

According to Spring documentation injection of inter-bean possible only when #Bean method declared within #Configuration. It uses CGLIB and all #Configuration classes are subclassed by it.
Please, check this reference https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/spring-framework-reference/html/beans.html#beans-java-bean-annotation, section '7.12.4 Using the #Configuration annotation'. You will find answer on your question from original source.

Related

What's the difference between #Bean and #Component? [duplicate]

I understand that #Component annotation was introduced in spring 2.5 in order to get rid of xml bean definition by using classpath scanning.
#Bean was introduced in spring 3.0 and can be used with #Configuration in order to fully get rid of xml file and use java config instead.
Would it have been possible to re-use the #Component annotation instead of introducing #Bean annotation? My understanding is that the final goal is to create beans in both cases.
#Component
Preferable for component scanning and automatic wiring.
When should you use #Bean?
Sometimes automatic configuration is not an option. When? Let's imagine that you want to wire components from 3rd-party libraries (you don't have the source code so you can't annotate its classes with #Component), so automatic configuration is not possible.
The #Bean annotation returns an object that spring should register as bean in application context. The body of the method bears the logic responsible for creating the instance.
#Component and #Bean do two quite different things, and shouldn't be confused.
#Component (and #Service and #Repository) are used to auto-detect and auto-configure beans using classpath scanning. There's an implicit one-to-one mapping between the annotated class and the bean (i.e. one bean per class). Control of wiring is quite limited with this approach, since it's purely declarative.
#Bean is used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically as above. It decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition, and lets you create and configure beans exactly how you choose.
To answer your question...
would it have been possible to re-use the #Component annotation instead of introducing #Bean annotation?
Sure, probably; but they chose not to, since the two are quite different. Spring's already confusing enough without muddying the waters further.
#Component auto detects and configures the beans using classpath scanning whereas #Bean explicitly declares a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically.
#Component does not decouple the declaration of the bean from the class definition where as #Bean decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition.
#Component is a class level annotation whereas #Bean is a method level annotation and name of the method serves as the bean name.
#Component need not to be used with the #Configuration annotation where as #Bean annotation has to be used within the class which is annotated with #Configuration.
We cannot create a bean of a class using #Component, if the class is outside spring container whereas we can create a bean of a class using #Bean even if the class is present outside the spring container.
#Component has different specializations like #Controller, #Repository and #Service whereas #Bean has no specializations.
Let's consider I want specific implementation depending on some dynamic state.
#Bean is perfect for that case.
#Bean
#Scope("prototype")
public SomeService someService() {
switch (state) {
case 1:
return new Impl1();
case 2:
return new Impl2();
case 3:
return new Impl3();
default:
return new Impl();
}
}
However there is no way to do that with #Component.
Both approaches aim to register target type in Spring container.
The difference is that #Bean is applicable to methods, whereas #Component is applicable to types.
Therefore when you use #Bean annotation you control instance creation logic in method's body (see example above). With #Component annotation you cannot.
I see a lot of answers and almost everywhere it's mentioned #Component is for autowiring where component is scanned, and #Bean is exactly declaring that bean to be used differently. Let me show how it's different.
#Bean
First it's a method level annotation.
Second you generally use it to configure beans in Java code (if you are not using xml configuration) and then call it from a class using the
ApplicationContext.getBean method. Example:
#Configuration
class MyConfiguration{
#Bean
public User getUser() {
return new User();
}
}
class User{
}
// Getting Bean
User user = applicationContext.getBean("getUser");
#Component
It is the general way to annotate a bean and not a specialized bean.
It is a class level annotation and is used to avoid all that configuration stuff through java or xml configuration.
We get something like this.
#Component
class User {
}
// to get Bean
#Autowired
User user;
That's it. It was just introduced to avoid all the configuration steps to instantiate and use that bean.
You can use #Bean to make an existing third-party class available to your Spring framework application context.
#Bean
public ViewResolver viewResolver() {
InternalResourceViewResolver viewResolver = new InternalResourceViewResolver();
viewResolver.setPrefix("/WEB-INF/view/");
viewResolver.setSuffix(".jsp");
return viewResolver;
}
By using the #Bean annotation, you can wrap a third-party class (it may not have #Component and it may not use Spring), as a Spring bean. And then once it is wrapped using #Bean, it is as a singleton object and available in your Spring framework application context. You can now easily share/reuse this bean in your app using dependency injection and #Autowired.
So think of the #Bean annotation is a wrapper/adapter for third-party classes. You want to make the third-party classes available to your Spring framework application context.
By using #Bean in the code above, I'm explicitly declare a single bean because inside of the method, I'm explicitly creating the object using the new keyword. I'm also manually calling setter methods of the given class. So I can change the value of the prefix field. So this manual work is referred to as explicit creation. If I use the #Component for the same class, the bean registered in the Spring container will have default value for the prefix field.
On the other hand, when we annotate a class with #Component, no need for us to manually use the new keyword. It is handled automatically by Spring.
When you use the #Component tag, it's the same as having a POJO (Plain Old Java Object) with a vanilla bean declaration method (annotated with #Bean). For example, the following method 1 and 2 will give the same result.
Method 1
#Component
public class SomeClass {
private int number;
public SomeClass(Integer theNumber){
this.number = theNumber.intValue();
}
public int getNumber(){
return this.number;
}
}
with a bean for 'theNumber':
#Bean
Integer theNumber(){
return new Integer(3456);
}
Method 2
//Note: no #Component tag
public class SomeClass {
private int number;
public SomeClass(Integer theNumber){
this.number = theNumber.intValue();
}
public int getNumber(){
return this.number;
}
}
with the beans for both:
#Bean
Integer theNumber(){
return new Integer(3456);
}
#Bean
SomeClass someClass(Integer theNumber){
return new SomeClass(theNumber);
}
Method 2 allows you to keep bean declarations together, it's a bit more flexible etc. You may even want to add another non-vanilla SomeClass bean like the following:
#Bean
SomeClass strawberryClass(){
return new SomeClass(new Integer(1));
}
You have two ways to generate beans.
One is to create a class with an annotation #Component.
The other is to create a method and annotate it with #Bean. For those classes containing method with #Bean should be annotated with #Configuration
Once you run your spring project, the class with a #ComponentScan annotation would scan every class with #Component on it, and restore the instance of this class to the Ioc Container. Another thing the #ComponentScan would do is running the methods with #Bean on it and restore the return object to the Ioc Container as a bean.
So when you need to decide which kind of beans you want to create depending upon current states, you need to use #Bean. You can write the logic and return the object you want.
Another thing worth to mention is the name of the method with #Bean is the default name of bean.
Difference between Bean and Component:
#component and its specializations(#Controller, #service, #repository) allow for auto-detection
using classpath scanning. If we see component class like #Controller, #service, #repository will be scan automatically by the spring framework using the component scan.
#Bean on the other hand can only be used to explicitly declare a single bean in a configuration class.
#Bean used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting spring do it automatically. Its make septate declaration of bean from the class definition.
In short #Controller, #service, #repository are for auto-detection and #Bean to create seprate bean from class
- #Controller
public class LoginController
{ --code-- }
- #Configuration
public class AppConfig {
#Bean
public SessionFactory sessionFactory()
{--code-- }
Spring supports multiple types annotations such as #Component, #Service, #Repository. All theses can be found under the org.springframework.stereotype package.
#Bean can be found under the org.springframework.context.annotation package.
When classes in our application are annotated with any of the above mentioned annotation then during project startup spring scan(using #ComponentScan) each class and inject the instance of the classes to the IOC container. Another thing the #ComponentScan would do is running the methods with #Bean on it and restore the return object to the Ioc Container as a bean.
#Component
If we mark a class with #Component or one of the other Stereotype annotations these classes will be auto-detected using classpath scanning. As long as these classes are in under our base package or Spring is aware of another package to scan, a new bean will be created for each of these classes.
package com.beanvscomponent.controller;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Controller;
#Controller
public class HomeController {
public String home(){
return "Hello, World!";
}
}
There's an implicit one-to-one mapping between the annotated class and the bean (i.e. one bean per class). Control of wiring is quite limited with this approach since it's purely declarative. It is also important to note that the stereotype annotations are class level annotations.
#Bean
#Bean is used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically like we did with #Controller. It decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition and lets you create and configure beans exactly how you choose. With #Bean you aren't placing this annotation at the class level. If you tried to do that you would get an invalid type error. The #Bean documentation defines it as:
Indicates that a method produces a bean to be managed by the Spring container.
Typically, #Bean methods are declared within #Configuration classes.We have a user class that we needed to instantiate and then create a bean using that instance. This is where I said earlier that we have a little more control over how the bean is defined.
package com.beanvscomponent;
public class User {
private String first;
private String last;
public User(String first, String last) {
this.first = first;
this.last = last;
}
}
As i mentioned earlier #Bean methods should be declared within #Configuration classes.
package com.beanvscomponent;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
#Configuration
public class ApplicationConfig {
#Bean
public User superUser() {
return new User("Partho","Bappy");
}
}
The name of the method is actually going to be the name of our bean. If we pull up the /beans endpoint in the actuator we can see the bean defined.
{
"beans": "superUser",
"aliases": [],
"scope": "singleton",
"type": "com.beanvscomponent.User",
"resource": "class path resource
[com/beanvscomponent/ApplicationConfig.class]",
"dependencies": []
}
#Component vs #Bean
I hope that cleared up some things on when to use #Component and when to use #Bean. It can be a little confusing but as you start to write more applications it will become pretty natural.
#Bean was created to avoid coupling Spring and your business rules in compile time. It means you can reuse your business rules in other frameworks like PlayFramework or JEE.
Moreover, you have total control on how create beans, where it is not enough the default Spring instantation.
I wrote a post talking about it.
https://coderstower.com/2019/04/23/factory-methods-decoupling-ioc-container-abstraction/
1. About #Component
#Component functs similarily to #Configuration.
They both indicate that the annotated class has one or more beans need to be registered to Spring-IOC-Container.
The class annotated by #Component, we call it Component of Spring. It is a concept that contains several beans.
Component class needs to be auto-scanned by Spring for registering those beans of the component class.
2. About #Bean
#Bean is used to annotate the method of component-class(as mentioned above). It indicate the instance retured by the annotated method needs to be registered to Spring-IOC-Container.
3. Conclusion
The difference between them two is relatively obivious, they are used in different circumstances.
The general usage is:
// #Configuration is implemented by #Component
#Configuration
public ComponentClass {
#Bean
public FirstBean FirstBeanMethod() {
return new FirstBean();
}
#Bean
public SecondBean SecondBeanMethod() {
return new SecondBean();
}
}
Additional Points from above answers
Let’s say we got a module which is shared in multiple apps and it contains a few services. Not all are needed for each app.
If use #Component on those service classes and the component scan in the application,
we might end up detecting more beans than necessary
In this case, you either had to adjust the filtering of the component scan or provide the configuration that even the unused beans can run. Otherwise, the application context won’t start.
In this case, it is better to work with #Bean annotation and only instantiate those beans,
which are required individually in each app
So, essentially, use #Bean for adding third-party classes to the context. And #Component if it is just inside your single application.
#Bean can be scoped and #component cannot
such as
#Scope(value = WebApplicationContext.SCOPE_REQUEST, proxyMode = ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS)

Injecting #Beans from within a very same #Configuration class idioms

In the past I have seen people using the following 2 idioms to inject dependencies from the same #Configuration:
#Configuration
public class MyConfiguration {
#Bean
public MyBeanDependencyA myBeanDependencyA(){
return new MyBeanDependencyA();
}
#Bean . //IDIOM 1
public MyBeanDependencyB1 myBeanDependencyB1(){
return new MyBeanDependencyB1(myBeanDependencyA());
}
#Bean //IDIOM 2
public MyBeanDependencyB2 myBeanDependencyB2(MyBeanDependencyA myBeanDependencyA){
return new MyBeanDependencyB1(myBeanDependencyA);
}
}
Is there any practical difference between them?
Does Spring process the whole instantiation method in each call for IDIOM 1? (relevant if method has any side-effect, might be not idempotent)?
Does otherwise Spring inject the global managed instance when injecting for IDIOM 1? (relevant If some external process changes the state of the original singleton bean)
Is Spring container that smart?
Does Spring process the whole instantiation method in each call for IDIOM 1? (relevant if method has any side-effect, might be not idempotent)?
By default #Configuration classes are proxied at runtime so the MyBeanDependencyA will be created once and myBeanDependencyA() will be called only once by Spring and next calls will be proxied to return the same instance (as far as example that you shared is concerned). There will be only one instance of this bean in the context as it's scope is Singleton.
Does otherwise Spring inject the global managed instance when injecting for IDIOM 1? (relevant If some external process changes the state of the original singleton bean)
The IOC container will return same instance of Singleton bean when it is queried to do so. Since it is a Singleton all changes to this bean (if it is mutable) will be visible to components that have reference to it.
As a side note you can disable autoproxing of configuration class since Spring 5.2 by using :
#Configuration(proxyBeanMethods = false)
which will prevent proxying calls of methods annotated with #Bean invoked from other #Bean methods.
Does Spring process the whole instantiation method in each call for IDIOM 1?
No, This is called inter-bean dependencies, a method that annotated with #Bean annotation in #Configuration class will create a bean in spring IOC container
The #Bean annotation is used to indicate that a method instantiates, configures and initializes a new object to be managed by the Spring IoC container. For those familiar with Spring's XML configuration the #Bean annotation plays the same role as the element. You can use #Bean annotated methods with any Spring #Component, however, they are most often used with #Configuration beans.
Does otherwise Spring inject the global managed instance when injecting for IDIOM 1?
Yes, spring injects the same bean if it is required at multiple places Basic concepts: #Bean and #Configuration This inter-bean dependencies will only work in combination of #Bean and #Configuration which also prevents calling same bean method multiple times.
Only using #Bean methods within #Configuration classes is a recommended approach of ensuring that 'full' mode is always used. This will prevent the same #Bean method from accidentally being invoked multiple times and helps to reduce subtle bugs that can be hard to track down when operating in 'lite' mode.

Create Spring Components dynamically [duplicate]

I understand that #Component annotation was introduced in spring 2.5 in order to get rid of xml bean definition by using classpath scanning.
#Bean was introduced in spring 3.0 and can be used with #Configuration in order to fully get rid of xml file and use java config instead.
Would it have been possible to re-use the #Component annotation instead of introducing #Bean annotation? My understanding is that the final goal is to create beans in both cases.
#Component
Preferable for component scanning and automatic wiring.
When should you use #Bean?
Sometimes automatic configuration is not an option. When? Let's imagine that you want to wire components from 3rd-party libraries (you don't have the source code so you can't annotate its classes with #Component), so automatic configuration is not possible.
The #Bean annotation returns an object that spring should register as bean in application context. The body of the method bears the logic responsible for creating the instance.
#Component and #Bean do two quite different things, and shouldn't be confused.
#Component (and #Service and #Repository) are used to auto-detect and auto-configure beans using classpath scanning. There's an implicit one-to-one mapping between the annotated class and the bean (i.e. one bean per class). Control of wiring is quite limited with this approach, since it's purely declarative.
#Bean is used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically as above. It decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition, and lets you create and configure beans exactly how you choose.
To answer your question...
would it have been possible to re-use the #Component annotation instead of introducing #Bean annotation?
Sure, probably; but they chose not to, since the two are quite different. Spring's already confusing enough without muddying the waters further.
#Component auto detects and configures the beans using classpath scanning whereas #Bean explicitly declares a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically.
#Component does not decouple the declaration of the bean from the class definition where as #Bean decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition.
#Component is a class level annotation whereas #Bean is a method level annotation and name of the method serves as the bean name.
#Component need not to be used with the #Configuration annotation where as #Bean annotation has to be used within the class which is annotated with #Configuration.
We cannot create a bean of a class using #Component, if the class is outside spring container whereas we can create a bean of a class using #Bean even if the class is present outside the spring container.
#Component has different specializations like #Controller, #Repository and #Service whereas #Bean has no specializations.
Let's consider I want specific implementation depending on some dynamic state.
#Bean is perfect for that case.
#Bean
#Scope("prototype")
public SomeService someService() {
switch (state) {
case 1:
return new Impl1();
case 2:
return new Impl2();
case 3:
return new Impl3();
default:
return new Impl();
}
}
However there is no way to do that with #Component.
Both approaches aim to register target type in Spring container.
The difference is that #Bean is applicable to methods, whereas #Component is applicable to types.
Therefore when you use #Bean annotation you control instance creation logic in method's body (see example above). With #Component annotation you cannot.
I see a lot of answers and almost everywhere it's mentioned #Component is for autowiring where component is scanned, and #Bean is exactly declaring that bean to be used differently. Let me show how it's different.
#Bean
First it's a method level annotation.
Second you generally use it to configure beans in Java code (if you are not using xml configuration) and then call it from a class using the
ApplicationContext.getBean method. Example:
#Configuration
class MyConfiguration{
#Bean
public User getUser() {
return new User();
}
}
class User{
}
// Getting Bean
User user = applicationContext.getBean("getUser");
#Component
It is the general way to annotate a bean and not a specialized bean.
It is a class level annotation and is used to avoid all that configuration stuff through java or xml configuration.
We get something like this.
#Component
class User {
}
// to get Bean
#Autowired
User user;
That's it. It was just introduced to avoid all the configuration steps to instantiate and use that bean.
You can use #Bean to make an existing third-party class available to your Spring framework application context.
#Bean
public ViewResolver viewResolver() {
InternalResourceViewResolver viewResolver = new InternalResourceViewResolver();
viewResolver.setPrefix("/WEB-INF/view/");
viewResolver.setSuffix(".jsp");
return viewResolver;
}
By using the #Bean annotation, you can wrap a third-party class (it may not have #Component and it may not use Spring), as a Spring bean. And then once it is wrapped using #Bean, it is as a singleton object and available in your Spring framework application context. You can now easily share/reuse this bean in your app using dependency injection and #Autowired.
So think of the #Bean annotation is a wrapper/adapter for third-party classes. You want to make the third-party classes available to your Spring framework application context.
By using #Bean in the code above, I'm explicitly declare a single bean because inside of the method, I'm explicitly creating the object using the new keyword. I'm also manually calling setter methods of the given class. So I can change the value of the prefix field. So this manual work is referred to as explicit creation. If I use the #Component for the same class, the bean registered in the Spring container will have default value for the prefix field.
On the other hand, when we annotate a class with #Component, no need for us to manually use the new keyword. It is handled automatically by Spring.
When you use the #Component tag, it's the same as having a POJO (Plain Old Java Object) with a vanilla bean declaration method (annotated with #Bean). For example, the following method 1 and 2 will give the same result.
Method 1
#Component
public class SomeClass {
private int number;
public SomeClass(Integer theNumber){
this.number = theNumber.intValue();
}
public int getNumber(){
return this.number;
}
}
with a bean for 'theNumber':
#Bean
Integer theNumber(){
return new Integer(3456);
}
Method 2
//Note: no #Component tag
public class SomeClass {
private int number;
public SomeClass(Integer theNumber){
this.number = theNumber.intValue();
}
public int getNumber(){
return this.number;
}
}
with the beans for both:
#Bean
Integer theNumber(){
return new Integer(3456);
}
#Bean
SomeClass someClass(Integer theNumber){
return new SomeClass(theNumber);
}
Method 2 allows you to keep bean declarations together, it's a bit more flexible etc. You may even want to add another non-vanilla SomeClass bean like the following:
#Bean
SomeClass strawberryClass(){
return new SomeClass(new Integer(1));
}
You have two ways to generate beans.
One is to create a class with an annotation #Component.
The other is to create a method and annotate it with #Bean. For those classes containing method with #Bean should be annotated with #Configuration
Once you run your spring project, the class with a #ComponentScan annotation would scan every class with #Component on it, and restore the instance of this class to the Ioc Container. Another thing the #ComponentScan would do is running the methods with #Bean on it and restore the return object to the Ioc Container as a bean.
So when you need to decide which kind of beans you want to create depending upon current states, you need to use #Bean. You can write the logic and return the object you want.
Another thing worth to mention is the name of the method with #Bean is the default name of bean.
Difference between Bean and Component:
#component and its specializations(#Controller, #service, #repository) allow for auto-detection
using classpath scanning. If we see component class like #Controller, #service, #repository will be scan automatically by the spring framework using the component scan.
#Bean on the other hand can only be used to explicitly declare a single bean in a configuration class.
#Bean used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting spring do it automatically. Its make septate declaration of bean from the class definition.
In short #Controller, #service, #repository are for auto-detection and #Bean to create seprate bean from class
- #Controller
public class LoginController
{ --code-- }
- #Configuration
public class AppConfig {
#Bean
public SessionFactory sessionFactory()
{--code-- }
Spring supports multiple types annotations such as #Component, #Service, #Repository. All theses can be found under the org.springframework.stereotype package.
#Bean can be found under the org.springframework.context.annotation package.
When classes in our application are annotated with any of the above mentioned annotation then during project startup spring scan(using #ComponentScan) each class and inject the instance of the classes to the IOC container. Another thing the #ComponentScan would do is running the methods with #Bean on it and restore the return object to the Ioc Container as a bean.
#Component
If we mark a class with #Component or one of the other Stereotype annotations these classes will be auto-detected using classpath scanning. As long as these classes are in under our base package or Spring is aware of another package to scan, a new bean will be created for each of these classes.
package com.beanvscomponent.controller;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Controller;
#Controller
public class HomeController {
public String home(){
return "Hello, World!";
}
}
There's an implicit one-to-one mapping between the annotated class and the bean (i.e. one bean per class). Control of wiring is quite limited with this approach since it's purely declarative. It is also important to note that the stereotype annotations are class level annotations.
#Bean
#Bean is used to explicitly declare a single bean, rather than letting Spring do it automatically like we did with #Controller. It decouples the declaration of the bean from the class definition and lets you create and configure beans exactly how you choose. With #Bean you aren't placing this annotation at the class level. If you tried to do that you would get an invalid type error. The #Bean documentation defines it as:
Indicates that a method produces a bean to be managed by the Spring container.
Typically, #Bean methods are declared within #Configuration classes.We have a user class that we needed to instantiate and then create a bean using that instance. This is where I said earlier that we have a little more control over how the bean is defined.
package com.beanvscomponent;
public class User {
private String first;
private String last;
public User(String first, String last) {
this.first = first;
this.last = last;
}
}
As i mentioned earlier #Bean methods should be declared within #Configuration classes.
package com.beanvscomponent;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Bean;
import org.springframework.context.annotation.Configuration;
#Configuration
public class ApplicationConfig {
#Bean
public User superUser() {
return new User("Partho","Bappy");
}
}
The name of the method is actually going to be the name of our bean. If we pull up the /beans endpoint in the actuator we can see the bean defined.
{
"beans": "superUser",
"aliases": [],
"scope": "singleton",
"type": "com.beanvscomponent.User",
"resource": "class path resource
[com/beanvscomponent/ApplicationConfig.class]",
"dependencies": []
}
#Component vs #Bean
I hope that cleared up some things on when to use #Component and when to use #Bean. It can be a little confusing but as you start to write more applications it will become pretty natural.
#Bean was created to avoid coupling Spring and your business rules in compile time. It means you can reuse your business rules in other frameworks like PlayFramework or JEE.
Moreover, you have total control on how create beans, where it is not enough the default Spring instantation.
I wrote a post talking about it.
https://coderstower.com/2019/04/23/factory-methods-decoupling-ioc-container-abstraction/
1. About #Component
#Component functs similarily to #Configuration.
They both indicate that the annotated class has one or more beans need to be registered to Spring-IOC-Container.
The class annotated by #Component, we call it Component of Spring. It is a concept that contains several beans.
Component class needs to be auto-scanned by Spring for registering those beans of the component class.
2. About #Bean
#Bean is used to annotate the method of component-class(as mentioned above). It indicate the instance retured by the annotated method needs to be registered to Spring-IOC-Container.
3. Conclusion
The difference between them two is relatively obivious, they are used in different circumstances.
The general usage is:
// #Configuration is implemented by #Component
#Configuration
public ComponentClass {
#Bean
public FirstBean FirstBeanMethod() {
return new FirstBean();
}
#Bean
public SecondBean SecondBeanMethod() {
return new SecondBean();
}
}
Additional Points from above answers
Let’s say we got a module which is shared in multiple apps and it contains a few services. Not all are needed for each app.
If use #Component on those service classes and the component scan in the application,
we might end up detecting more beans than necessary
In this case, you either had to adjust the filtering of the component scan or provide the configuration that even the unused beans can run. Otherwise, the application context won’t start.
In this case, it is better to work with #Bean annotation and only instantiate those beans,
which are required individually in each app
So, essentially, use #Bean for adding third-party classes to the context. And #Component if it is just inside your single application.
#Bean can be scoped and #component cannot
such as
#Scope(value = WebApplicationContext.SCOPE_REQUEST, proxyMode = ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS)

Define bean depending on Spring's bean

When using Spring Boot, a lot of beans are created implicitly by Spring Boot itself. For example, when I link the spring-boot-starter-data-redis dependency, the jedisConnectionFactory bean is created automatically under the hood.
What I'm looking for is the way to define my custom bean with a dependency on such an implicit bean, e.g. new MyService( jedisConnectionFactory ). The problem is that I don't have a variable or a method which would be resolved to that implicit bean.
For now I've come up with the following solution: create a separate BeanConfig class, autowire/inject ApplicationContext into it and then retrieve the required bean with ApplicationContext.getBean( Class<T> ) method call:
#Bean
public Transport eventTransport() {
final JedisConnectionFactory jedisConnectionFactory = context.getBean( JedisConnectionFactory.class );
return new RedisTransport( jedisConnectionFactory.getHostName(), jedisConnectionFactory.getPort() );
}
Is there any integrated way to get a reference to the beans defined internally? So that I could move this bean definition to MyApplication class without injecting the ApplicationContext instance.
First as a rule of thumb if you starting to resort to the ApplicationContext or BeanFactory to obtain beans you are, generally speaking, doing it wrong (at least when simply developing an application with Spring).
When using #Bean on a method, effectively making it a factory method for those beans, you can use 0 or more method arguments. (This is also explained in the reference guide). The arguments are resolved against the context and will have the beans injected (or fail starting if it cannot be found).
So in your case you can simply add JedisConnnectionFactory (or maybe the ConnectionFactory interface) as a method argument for your eventTransport method.
#Bean
public Transport eventTransport(final JedisConnectionFactory jedisConnectionFactory) {
return new RedisTransport( jedisConnectionFactory.getHostName(), jedisConnectionFactory.getPort() );
}
This also allows Spring to resolve dependencies between beans instead of hoping the bean is already constructed and fully ready for use.
If JedisConnectionFactory class is getting instantiated by spring then you can simply autowire this instance at the class level and use the same to create RedisTransport object.
#Autowired
private JedisConnectionFactory jedisConnectionFactory;
#Bean
public Transport eventTransport() {
return new RedisTransport( jedisConnectionFactory.getHostName(), jedisConnectionFactory.getPort() );
}

Spring JavaConfig how do I refer to beans that I have defined to create new beans

Here's an excerpt from my Applications beans definition, I want to be able to refer to beans that I have defined.
#Configuration
#ComponentScan({"com.abc.config", "com.abc.config.common"})
public class ApplicationConfig {
#Bean(name = "AWSCredentialsProvider")
AWSCredentials credentialsProvider() { return new AWSCredentials(/*Omitted*/); }
#Bean(name = "DynamoDBClient")
AmazonDynamoDBClient dynamoDBClient() {
AmazonDynamoDBClient dynamoDB = new AmazonDynamoDBClient(credentialsProvider());
return dynamoDB;
}
#Bean S3Repository s3Repository() {
AmazonS3 s3 = new AmazonS3Client(credentialsProvider());
return new S3Repository(s3);
}
#Bean LevelMapper levelMapper() { return new LevelMapper(s3Repository()); }
#Bean ImageDownloader imageDownloader() { return new ImageDownloader(s3Repository()); }
}
Right now what I'm doing is calling methods like s3Repository() in two places; this way I'll be creating two instances of the repository whereas I would like there to be only one instance across the application. Something like credentialsProvider() is lightweight so I don't mind a new instance being created for every bean.
Actually it will only create one instance of repository. Using s3Repository() in your #Bean annotated method doesn't really call that method, but just tells the spring to inject the already created bean of type (as implied by return type of method) to the LevelMapper and ImageDownloader bean you create. So it will inject the same repository bean instance in both the beans referencing the method.
From this Spring Docs:
All #Configuration classes are subclassed at startup-time with CGLIB.
In the subclass, the child method checks the container first for any
cached (scoped) beans before it calls the parent method and creates a
new instance. Note that as of Spring 3.2, it is no longer necessary to
add CGLIB to your classpath because CGLIB classes have been repackaged
under org.springframework and included directly within the spring-core
JAR.

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