A re-think of your architecture is potentially practical in this scenario. If you can isolate the data that needs to be serialized into a simple data transfer object (DTO), then it should be possible to provide a wrapper to that DTO that itself can contain dependencies to other beans.
For example:
public interface IDataBean {
void setSomething(String someData);
}
// This is your session bean - just a plain DTO
public class MyDataBean implements IDataBean, Serializable {
private String someData;
public void setSomething( String someData ) {
this.someData = someData;
}
}
// This is the wrapper that delegates calls to a wrapped MyDataBean.
public class MyDataBeanWithDependency() implements IDataBean {
private SomeOtherService service;
private MyDataBean dataBean;
public SimpleDataBeanWithDependency(MyDataBean dataBean, SomeOtherService service) {
this.dataBean = dataBean;
this.service = service;
}
public void setSomething(String someData) {
// Here we make a call to the service to perform some specific logic that may, for example, hit a DB or something.
String transformedString = service.transformString(someData);
dataBean.setSomething(transformedString);
}
}
public class SomeService {
// This is a Spring session scoped bean (configured using <aop:scoped-proxy/>)
@Autowired
private MyDataBean myDataBean;
// Just a plain singleton Spring bean
@Autowired
private SomeOtherService someOtherService;
public IDataBean getDataBean() {
return new MyDataBeanWithDependency(myDataBean, someOtherService);
}
}
Sorry for all the code! However, let me try to explain what I mean here. If you always retrieve the session bean via a service (in this case SomeService), you have the option of creating a wrapper around the session bean. This wrapper can contain any bean dependencies (autowired into SomeService) that you may wish to use as part of performing logic alongside the session bean.
The neat thing about this approach is that you can program to an interface as well (see IDataBean). This means that, if you, for example, had a controller that obtains the data bean from the service, it makes unit testing/mocking very clean.
Possibly, an even cleaner approach from the code perspective, would be for MyDataBeanWithDependency to be registered in the spring container using "request" scope. So you could just autowire that bean directly into SomeService. This would essentially transparently deal with the instantiation so you don't need to manually instantiate MyDataBeanWithDependency from within the service.
Hopefully I've done enough to explain myself here!