1

As per my post here, I have the following DAO hierarchy:

GenericDAO.java

public interface GenericDAO<T, K> {
    public K insert(T object);
    public void remove(K objectId);
    // extensible
}

GenericDAOMongoDBImpl.java

public class GenericDAOMongoDBImpl<T, K> extends BasicDAO<T, K> implements GenericDAO<T, K> {
    public GenericDAOMongoDBImpl(Class<T> entityClass, Mongo mongo, Morphia morphia, String dbName) {
        super(entityClass, mongo, morphia, dbName);
    }

    public K insert(T object) {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
        return null;
    }

    public void remove(K objectId) {
        // TODO Auto-generated method stub
    }
}

ObjectDAO.java

public interface ObjectDAO extends GenericDAO<Object, ObjectId> {
}

ObjectDAOMongoDBImpl.java

public class ObjectDAOMongoDBImpl extends GenericDAOMongoDBImpl<Object, ObjectId> implements ObjectDAO {
    public ObjectDAOMongoDBImpl(Class<Object> entityClass, Mongo mongo, Morphia morphia, String dbName) {
        super(entityClass, mongo, morphia, dbName);
    }
}

I'm confused on how I should go about using ObjectDAO? At this point in time, I think a factory method is overkill. So instead, it makes more sense to simply construct the DAO from the client like so:

ObjectDAOMongoDBImpl objectDAO = new ObjectDAOMongoDBImpl(clazz, mongo, morphia, dbName);

As clazz is dynamic, it might have proven a nightmare trying to alter the factory method to accept an argument, breaking my generic interface along the way.

Is there a cleaner way? I could have simply extended the morphia provided BasicDAO<T, K>, but this wouldn't have allowed me to easily change from MongoDB to JDBC, etc.

1 Answer 1

2

I will suggest you to look at Spring or Guice. That's what we called Dependency Injection, so that "client" will not be responsible to perform lookup/instantiation for their dependencies. These container will create the "beans" and inject the correct one you need in your "client" object, so that your client object do not need to worry about where to get the DAO, or which implementation it should use.

And in a DI world, it just doesn't harm to have different creation method for beans for different implementation. These "dirty" things are centralized (e.g. in App Context config in case of Spring).

1
  • so you're saying my approach is fine (no factory method, I should just use something like Guice instead of defining the concrete implementation class in my client code?
    – wulfgarpro
    Nov 16, 2011 at 5:22

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.