I'm currently learning the new Java EE 6 component models and am confused with the latest dependency injection mechanism. So here are my questions:

1) What is the difference between @Inject and @EJB

2) If I have a simple POJO that contains another POJOs (which one of them is the DAO code), what would be the better choice: @Inject or @EJB?

Can I mix @Inject and @EJB?

An example would be:

  • ClassA implements InterfaceA and has an instance of ClassA_Adaptor

  • ClassA_Adaptor implements InterfaceAB and has an instance of ClassB

  • ClassB implements InterfaceB and has an instance of ClassB_Adaptor and an instance DAO_ClassB

  • ClassB_Adaptor implements InterfaceB and has an instance of ClassC

  • ClassC implements InterfaceBC and has an instance of WebService_ClassC

  • DAO_ClassB will use JPA 2.0 (@PersistenceContext)

I'd like to inject all of them including the DAO and the WebService.

3) Is it a bad approach to only use transactional for certain operations but not for all?

As an example: Some methods in DAO_ClassB are your typical query, while other methods are "write" methods. Is it bad to not wrap the "READ" methods with transaction?

To my understanding, the DAO_ClassB can be wrapped with transaction using @EJB (inject the DAO_ClassB and make all methods transactional). How can I control it?

Sorry if some of the questions are confusing because I know only bits and pieces of the JEE 6 new component model.

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2 Answers

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  1. @EJB injects EJBs only, but @Inject can be used to inject POJOs rather than EJBs. However, @Inject requires that your archive be a BDA (contain beans.xml).

  2. If the target is not an EJB, then you must not use @EJB.

  3. It depends whether you're making multiple inter-related queries and then attempting to make business decisions. You need to understand isolation levels and take them into consideration, even for read-only operations.

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Thank you for the answer. Would you mind to explain what BDA is? – xandross May 13 '11 at 18:26
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Bean Deployment Archive. It's a JAR that contains a beans.xml. – bkail May 13 '11 at 23:54
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What are the consequences of injecting a (local, same-archive) EJB using @Inject rather than @EJB? – Haakon Jun 22 '11 at 8:49
The @Inject version will respect the scope of the EJB. For example, using @EJB to inject an SFSB into a servlet makes no sense because only one SFSB will exist for every request. Using @Inject to inject a @SessionScoped SFSB into a servlet means you have a CDI proxy that creates a new SFSB as needed for each session. – bkail Jun 22 '11 at 15:17
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  1. @Inject is more general than EJB and is part of CDI specification. So if you want to use @Inject, you need an implementation of it in your server.

  2. For POJOs (not EJBs) you have to use @Inject.

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