5

I have the impression that CDI is not working with classes that have a @javax.faces.component.FacesComponent. Is this true?

Here's my example, that doesn't work. The MyInjectableClass is used at other points in the code where injection is not a problem, so it must be about the @FacesComponent annotation I think.

The class I want to inject:

@Named
@Stateful
public class MyInjectableClass implements Serializable {

    private static final long serialVersionUID = 4556482219775071397L;
}

The component which uses that class;

@FacesComponent(value = "mycomponents.mytag")
public class MyComponent extends UIComponentBase implements Serializable {

    private static final long serialVersionUID = -5656806814384095309L;

    @Inject
    protected MyInjectableClass injectedInstance;


    @Override
    public void encodeBegin(FacesContext context) throws IOException {
        /* injectedInstance is null here */
    }
}

3 Answers 3

14

Unfortunately, even for JSF 2.2 @FacesComponent, @FacesValidator and @FacesConverter are not valid injection targets (read What's new in JSF 2.2? by Arjan Tijms for more details). As Arjan points out:

It’s likely that those will be taken into consideration for JSF 2.3 though.

What can you do for now? Well, you've got basically two choices:

  1. Handle CDI injection via lookup, or switch to EJB and do the simpler EJB lookup;
  2. Annotate tour class with @Named instead of @FacesComponent, @Inject the component the way you did and register your component in faces-config.xml. As the UI component instance is created via JSF Application#createComponent(), not via CDI you will also need a custom Application implementation as well (exactly like OmniFaces has for those converters/validators).

And, by the way, you've got two issues with what you've got this far: (1) what is meant by @Named @Stateful when the former is from a CDI world and the latter is from EJB world and (2) are you sure you intend to keep state in a faces component that's basically recreated on every request?

1
  • 6
    Did you really test #2? UI component instance is created via JSF Application#createComponent(), not via CDI. So you basically need a custom Application implementation as well (exactly like OmniFaces has for those converters/validators).
    – BalusC
    Oct 7, 2013 at 20:04
1

@FacesCompnent is managed by JSF and injection is not supported into them.

0

Passing the value in from the XHTML page via a composite component attribute worked for us.

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.