When moving to Spring 2.5.x I found that it adds more stereotype annotations (on top of @Repository from 2.0): @Component, @Service and @Controller. How do you use them? Do you rely on implicit Spring support or you define custom stereotype specific functions/aspects/features? Or is it predominately for marking beans (compile time, conceptual, etc.)?
|
|
The following stereotype annotations in 2.5 can be used in a Spring MVC application as an alternative to wiring the beans in XML:
In addition, a generic fourth annotation has been introduced: @Component. All of the MVC annotations are specialisations of this one, and you can even use @Component on it's own, though by doing this in Spring MVC, you will not make use of any future optimisations/functionality added to the higher-level annotations. You can also extend @Component to create your own custom stereotypes. Here is a quick example of the MVC annotations in action... First, the data access object:
The service:
And finally, the controller:
I found this article very good for giving a broad overview of the stereotype annotations, in addition to the official documentation. |
|||||
|
|
The annotations isn't MVC specific anymore. See the reference documentation for more information. An example of using the @Component annotation or a specification of it is the tcServer with its monitoring support. See here for an example. This monitoring support is added with load-time AspectJ weaving. Summarized, the annotations can be used in different settings at runtime after the Spring container is started, or at compile/load-time with AspectJ weaving. |
|||||
|
|
dont forget to add this tag on xml
|
|||
|