Using Producer Methods, Producer Fields, and Disposer Methods in CDI Applications (original) (raw)
2. Using the Tutorial Examples
3. Getting Started with Web Applications
4. JavaServer Faces Technology
7. Using JavaServer Faces Technology in Web Pages
8. Using Converters, Listeners, and Validators
9. Developing with JavaServer Faces Technology
10. JavaServer Faces Technology: Advanced Concepts
11. Using Ajax with JavaServer Faces Technology
12. Composite Components: Advanced Topics and Example
13. Creating Custom UI Components and Other Custom Objects
14. Configuring JavaServer Faces Applications
16. Uploading Files with Java Servlet Technology
17. Internationalizing and Localizing Web Applications
18. Introduction to Web Services
19. Building Web Services with JAX-WS
20. Building RESTful Web Services with JAX-RS
21. JAX-RS: Advanced Topics and Example
23. Getting Started with Enterprise Beans
24. Running the Enterprise Bean Examples
25. A Message-Driven Bean Example
26. Using the Embedded Enterprise Bean Container
27. Using Asynchronous Method Invocation in Session Beans
Part V Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform
28. Introduction to Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform
29. Running the Basic Contexts and Dependency Injection Examples
30. Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform: Advanced Topics
Using Alternatives in CDI Applications
Using Predefined Beans in CDI Applications
Using Events in CDI Applications
Using Observer Methods to Handle Events
Using Interceptors in CDI Applications
Using Decorators in CDI Applications
Using Stereotypes in CDI Applications
31. Running the Advanced Contexts and Dependency Injection Examples
32. Introduction to the Java Persistence API
33. Running the Persistence Examples
34. The Java Persistence Query Language
35. Using the Criteria API to Create Queries
36. Creating and Using String-Based Criteria Queries
37. Controlling Concurrent Access to Entity Data with Locking
38. Using a Second-Level Cache with Java Persistence API Applications
39. Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform
40. Getting Started Securing Web Applications
41. Getting Started Securing Enterprise Applications
42. Java EE Security: Advanced Topics
Part VIII Java EE Supporting Technologies
43. Introduction to Java EE Supporting Technologies
45. Resources and Resource Adapters
46. The Resource Adapter Example
47. Java Message Service Concepts
48. Java Message Service Examples
49. Bean Validation: Advanced Topics
50. Using Java EE Interceptors
51. Duke's Bookstore Case Study Example
52. Duke's Tutoring Case Study Example
53. Duke's Forest Case Study Example
A producer method generates an object that can then be injected. Typically, you use producer methods in the following situations:
- When you want to inject an object that is not itself a bean
- When the concrete type of the object to be injected may vary at runtime
- When the object requires some custom initialization that the bean constructor does not perform
For more information on producer methods, see Injecting Objects by Using Producer Methods.
A producer field is a simpler alternative to a producer method; it is a field of a bean that generates an object. It can be used instead of a simple getter method. Producer fields are particularly useful for declaring Java EE resources such as data sources, JMS resources, and web service references.
A producer method or field is annotated with the javax.enterprise.inject.Produces annotation.
Using Producer Methods
A producer method can allow you to select a bean implementation at runtime, instead of at development time or deployment time. For example, in the example described in The producermethods Example: Using a Producer Method To Choose a Bean Implementation, the managed bean defines the following producer method:
@Produces @Chosen @RequestScoped public Coder getCoder(@New TestCoderImpl tci, @New CoderImpl ci) {
switch (coderType) {
case TEST:
return tci;
case SHIFT:
return ci;
default:
return null;
}
}
The javax.enterprise.inject.New qualifier instructs the CDI runtime to instantiate both of the coder implementations and provide them as arguments to the producer method. Here, getCoder becomes in effect a getter method, and when the coder property is injected with the same qualifier and other annotations as the method, the selected version of the interface is used.
@Inject @Chosen @RequestScoped Coder coder;
Specifying the qualifier is essential: It tells CDI which Coder to inject. Without it, the CDI implementation would not be able to choose between CoderImpl,TestCoderImpl, and the one returned by getCoder, and would cancel deployment, informing the user of the ambiguous dependency.
Using Producer Fields to Generate Resources
A common use of a producer field is to generate an object such as a JDBC DataSource or a Java Persistence API EntityManager. The object can then be managed by the container. For example, you could create a@UserDatabase qualifier and then declare a producer field for an entity manager as follows:
@Produces @UserDatabase @PersistenceContext private EntityManager em;
The @UserDatabase qualifier can be used when you inject the object into another bean, RequestBean, elsewhere in the application:
@Inject
@UserDatabase
EntityManager em;
...
The producerfields Example: Using Producer Fields to Generate Resources shows how to use producer fields to generate an entity manager. You can use a similar mechanism to inject @Resource, @EJB, or @WebServiceRef objects.
To minimize the reliance on resource injection, specify the producer field for the resource in one place in the application, then inject the object wherever in the application you need it.
Using a Disposer Method
You can use a producer method to generate an object that needs to be removed when its work is completed. If you do, you need a corresponding disposer method, annotated with a @Disposes annotation. For example, if you used a producer method instead of a producer field to create the entity manager, you would create and close it as follows:
@PersistenceContext private EntityManager em;
@Produces @UserDatabase public EntityManager create() { return em; }
public void close(@Disposes @UserDatabase EntityManager em) { em.close(); }
The disposer method is called automatically when the context ends (in this case, at the end of the conversation, because RequestBean has conversation scope), and the parameter in the close method receives the object produced by the producer method, create.
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