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Introduction to Spring Matt Wheeler. Notes This is a training NOT a presentation Please ask questions Prerequisites – Introduction to Java Stack – Basic.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Spring Matt Wheeler. Notes This is a training NOT a presentation Please ask questions Prerequisites – Introduction to Java Stack – Basic."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Spring Matt Wheeler

2 Notes This is a training NOT a presentation Please ask questions Prerequisites – Introduction to Java Stack – Basic Java and XML skills – Installed LdsTech IDE (or other equivalent – good luck there ;)

3 Overview Become familiar with Spring documentation http://www.springsource.org/documentation Learn basics of the Spring architecture Learn about bean definition and creation Learn about the application context Inversion of Control (IoC) Dependency Injection (DI) Learn about bean scopes

4 Goals of the Spring Framework Simplify Java EE development Solve problems not addressed by Java EE Provide simple integration for best of breed technologies Provide modular/pluggable architecture – Use what you want – don’t use what you don’t http://www.springsource.org/about

5 Explore the Spring Ecosystem Main Page: http://www.springsource.org/ Documentation: http://www.springsource.org/documentation Forum: http://forum.springsource.org/ Jira: https://jira.springsource.org/secure/Dashboard.j spa

6 Spring Framework Modified from http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.1.0.M1/spring-framework-reference/html/images/spring-overview.png

7 Data Access Integration Data Access Integration layer includes: – JDBC (abstraction layer over native JDBC) – ORM (integration support for JPA, Hibernate, …) – Transaction support (declarative and programmatic)

8 Web Basic web integration features – File upload – Initialization of IoC container using servlet listeners – Contains Spring’s model view controller (MVC) implementation

9 Test Test module provides integration with test frameworks – JUnit – TestNG Provides ability to load test specific ApplicationContexts Also provides helpful mock objects

10 Core Container Core and Beans modules provide framework fundamentals – Inversion of Control (IoC) and Dependency Injection (DI) – BeanFactory provides factory pattern implementation for creating Java objects – Allows decoupling of configuration and dependencies from actual code

11 Spring Container / Application Context Spring container / application context contains instances of objects Spring managed object instances are called beans Spring manages the creation, configuration, and destruction of these beans Beans are defined for use in the application context – The definitions are a template for creating new bean instances Bean definitions can be provided to Spring: – In xml – Using annotations – In Java code

12 Defining Beans ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("beans.xml"); SomeBean someBean = context.getBean(SomeBean.class); someBean.callMethod(); Bean definition (beans.xml) Application Context

13 Defining beans Each bean has a unique id – If none is provided, Spring will create one – Class should contain fully qualified package and name of the object

14 Defining Beans ApplicationContext context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("beans.xml"); SomeBean someBean = context.getBean("someBean", SomeBean.class); someBean.callMethod(); Bean definition (beans.xml) Application Context

15 Lab 1: Bean Creation https://tech.lds.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Spring#L ab_1_Bean_Configuration

16 Dependency Injection Dependency Injection (DI) & Inversion of Control (IoC)

17 Object Dependencies This is where your Spring investment starts to pay dividends Most objects cannot do much by themselves – They depend on other objects to accomplish some tasks – For instance if an object wanted to insert something into a database it will need a connection to accomplish this Most objects have properties that should be configurable – For example if you have an object that times out after a certain period, you might want to be able to configure the timeout period Additionally, what if two objects need the same object dependency – For instance a data source might be used by many objects to persist data

18 Inversion of Control (IoC) the Concept Container injects dependencies when (or right after) the bean is created Inverse of bean controlling instantiation and/or location of its dependencies Objects instead obtain dependencies through – Constructor arguments – Setter arguments

19 Inversion of Control (IoC) the Concept Managing dependencies on other beans – Dependency lookup vs. Dependency Injection //dependency lookup public class Lookup { private SomeBean someBean; public SomeBean findBean(Container container) { //or new SomeBean( " some param values " ); return (SomeBean) container.getBean( " someBean " ); } //dependency injection public class Injection { private SomeBean someBean; public void setSomeBean(SomeBean someBean) { this.someBean = someBean; }

20 Advantages of Inversion of Control (IoC) Separates configuration from code Simplifies component dependency and lifecycle management Eliminates need for: – Calling new and managing dependencies – Looking up dependencies Decouples code from IoC container Injection is easier – less code – easier to maintain Minimizes need for creational pattern implementation Simplifies testing

21 Dependency Injection (DI) Two basic types of injection – Setter injection – Constructor injection

22 DI (setter injection) Say we have the following Rabbit class Example public class Rabbit { private String favoriteFood; public void setFavoriteFood(String favoriteFood) { this.favoriteFood = favoriteFood; } public void printFavoriteFood() { System.out.println(favoriteFood); }

23 DI (constructor injection) Say we have the following Rabbit class Example public class Rabbit { private String favoriteFood; public Rabbit(String favoriteFood) { this.favoriteFood = favoriteFood; } public void printFavoriteFood() { System.out.println(favoriteFood); }

24 DI (continued) Ability to inject many data types – Lists, Sets, Properties, Maps (most collection types) – Other beans Lets us look at a few examples: – http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/spri ng-framework-reference/html/beans.html#beans- collection-elements

25 Constructor Injection vs. Setter Injection Which should you use? Rule of thumb – write the bean as though Spring were not managing it – If the bean will not operate without a particular member variable use constructor injection – Otherwise use setter injection – This is a change from the past Let’s look at some more examples

26 DI Collections Say our rabbit has many favorite foods public class Rabbit { private Set favoriteFoods; public void setFavoriteFoods(Set favoriteFoods) { this.favoriteFoods = favoriteFoods; } public void printFavoriteFood() { for (String favoriteFoods : favoriteFood) { System.out.println(favoriteFood); } lettuce carrot

27 DI Bean References Lets expand our rabbit concept to an entire farm And then modify our rabbit class as follows public class Farm { private List rabbits; public void setRabbits(List rabbits) { this.rabbits = rabbits; } public class Rabbit { private String name; private float weight; public Rabbit(float weight) { this.weight = weight; } public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; } //… }

28 Bean Reference Examples

29 More Examples public class Farm { private Rabbit prizeRabbit; public void setPrizeRabbit(Rabbit prizeRabbit) { this.prizeRabbit = prizeRabbit; }

30 Lab 2: Dependency Injection https://tech.lds.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Spring#L ab_2_Dependency_Injection

31 Bean Scopes Sometimes you want to be able to control the life of a bean – Bean scopes provide this ability For instance, you may want a new instance of a bean every time it is requested, or you may want one instance for the entire application

32 Available Bean Scopes ScopeDocumentation singletonCreates a single bean instance per IoC container (default) prototypeCreates a new instance every time a bean of the type is requested requestCreates a single instance per HTTP request. Only valid in a web application context. sessionCreates a single instance per HTTP session. Only valid in a web application context. globalSessionCreates a single instance per HTTP session. Only valid in a portal application.

33 Singleton Scope Singleton - only one instance in a given context Any time you request an instance of this bean you will get the single instance of this bean For instance (if SomeBean is a singleton): The new world context.getBean(SomeBean.class) == context.getBean(SomeBean.class) is true

34 Prototype Scope Equivalent to calling new every time an instance of a class is needed Spring does not manage the lifecycle of prototype beans For instance if SomeBean is prototype scope: The configuration is as follows: context.getBean(SomeBean.class) == context.getBean(SomeBean.class) is false

35 Lab 3: Bean Scopes https://tech.lds.org/wiki/Introduction_to_Spring#L ab_3_Bean_Scopes

36 Credit where credit is due http://springsource.org Spring Recipies 2 nd Edition (Gary Mak, Josh Long and Daniel Rubio)

37 Dedication Mike Youngstrom and Bruce Campbell for their undying love and support through this process – And for reviewing and offering suggestions And for Spencer Uresk and Mike Heath for the inspiration And a special thanks to the rabbit farm who made this all possible


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