1

I am newbie in cdi and these are my first steps. I have a bean in ejb module:

@Stateless
public class TestBean {
    public String getIt(){
        return "test";
    }
}

I have a POJO in war module (I tried with @EJB and @Inject - same result)

public class SaveAction  extends Action{
    @EJB    
    private TestBean bean;

    @Override
    public void execute(){
    ....    
    String test = bean.getIt(); //HERE I GET java.lang.NullPointerException
    ...
    }
}

Both war and ejb are inside ear. In log I see

EJB5181:Portable JNDI names for EJB TestBean: [java:global/example.com/my-ejb/TestBean!com.example.TestBean, java:global/example.com/my-ejb/TestBean]]]

From that I conclude that bean is initialized - but I can't find it. What am I doing wrong?

16
  • Where is SaveAction instantiated / who instantiates it?
    – isnot2bad
    Nov 22, 2013 at 7:39
  • @isnot2bad It's instantiated in servlet.
    – user2022068
    Nov 22, 2013 at 7:40
  • so you do it via 'new'?
    – isnot2bad
    Nov 22, 2013 at 7:40
  • @PashaTurok, Probably you try to Inject EJB bean on Struts, Please try it on HTTPServlet.
    – Masudul
    Nov 22, 2013 at 7:46
  • 1
    @PashaTurok when you create the bean by yourself with 'new', no magical injection will happen! Let the CDI container create your bean, then it will work!
    – isnot2bad
    Nov 22, 2013 at 7:49

1 Answer 1

3

CDI and other dependency injection containers don't use magic! It's just ordinary java code that cannot do more or less than any other java code written anywhere. So it is impossible for a framework to do injection when an object is instantiated directly via new:

SaveAction action = new SaveAction();
// don't expect any injection has happened - it can't! no magic!
// action.bean is still null here!

The framework does not have any idea that an object like SaveAction has been instantiated. (Therefore it would be necessary to somehow inform the framework about the newly created object - but neither the constructor nor the 'new' statement do this! Just think one minute about how you would write such a framework code! It's not possible!* ).

To make injection work, the object must be created by the container instead! Otherwise it is NOT managed! (See also chapter 3.7 of the Web Beans specification (JSR 299)).

The best way to do this is to let the container inject the object into another already managed bean. It seems this just deferes the problem, but there are some already managed beans in your application, like the servlet!

Suggestion: Make your SaveAction CDI aware (e.g. annotate it with @Default) and let it be injected into your servlet!

Tutorials:


*) In theory it should be possible using aspect oriented programming or instrumentation to manipulate the constructors of beans to notify the container if they are invoked. But that's a very complex concept with many unsolved issues I think.

3
  • Will he believe you now? Nov 22, 2013 at 8:44
  • @isnot2bad You know, the most important part of your answer is "CDI and other dependency injection containers don't use magic!" because everything becomes clear when you start to think how it works.
    – user2022068
    Nov 22, 2013 at 12:52
  • @PashaTurok That's why it is in the first line! ;)
    – isnot2bad
    Nov 22, 2013 at 14:03

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