18

I have an abstract class in which I am trying to use the @Value annotation to inject value from a property file

public abstract class Parent {
     @Value ("${shared.val}")
     private String sharedVal;

     public Parent() {
        //perform common action using sharedVal
     }

}

@Component
public class ChildA extends Parent {
     Param a1;
     @Autowired
     public ChildA (Param a1) {
        super();
        this.a1 = a1;
     }
}

I am getting NullPointerException since sharedVal is not set. I tried adding @Component stereotype on the abstract class and still the same thing.

Can I inject value into abstract class this way? If not how can accomplish this?

1
  • 1
    How is your subclass instantiated?
    – MattR
    Jul 31, 2013 at 3:53

2 Answers 2

22

I think you'll find the sharedVal is being set, but you're trying to use it too soon in the constructor. The constructor is being called (must be called) before Spring injects the value using the @Value annotation.

Instead of processing the value in the constructor, try a @PostContruct method instead, eg:

@PostConstruct
void init() {
    //perform common action using sharedVal
 }

(or alternatively, implement Spring's InitializingBean interface).

3
  • 3
    The earliest you should touch any injected value is in a post-construct method; the state of properties earlier in the lifecycle is undefined (well, typically null or zero to be pedantic). Jul 31, 2013 at 8:10
  • 1
    And how could I get the value defined in my porperties file? @Value ("${shared.val}") Oct 31, 2013 at 13:13
  • since java 9+, the annotation is deprecated, need to import javax.annotation javax.annotation-api
    – Yosep
    Oct 4, 2021 at 5:22
5

Can I inject value into abstract class this way?

Abstract classes cannot be instantiated, so nothing can be injected into the abstract class. Instead , you should inject the value to its concrete subclass.

Make sure your concrete subclass is marked as @Component stereotype and being "component scanning" by Spring . @Component on the abstract class is not needed as it cannot be instantiated.


Update : I finally figure out that you are trying to access the injected value inside the constructor but found that the value is not set. It is because Spring will inject the value after the bean is instantiated . So if constructor injection is not used , the injected value cannot be accessed inside the constructor . You can use @PostContruct or implementing InitializingBean as suggested by Matt.

Following shows if XML configuration is used :

<context:property-placeholder location="classpath:xxxxx.properties" ignore-unresolvable="true" />


<bean id="parent" class="pkg.Parent" abstract="true" init-method="postConstruct">
    <property name="sharedVal" value="${shared.val}" />
</bean>


<bean id="child" class="pkg.ChildA" parent="parent">

Perform your common action using sharedVal inside Parent#postConstruct()

9
  • Thanks. I was hoping there is a way to do it since via xml, you could create an bean as abstract. But this does make sense, since Spring have no way to initialize the abstract class, value can not be injected. I can only think of using Property object to load my property file, and obtain the key. I was hoping to avoid this by using the @Value annotation
    – ltfishie
    Jul 31, 2013 at 4:20
  • 1
    I think this answer is misleading - Spring will in fact inject values for properties defined on abstract base classes when you're using autowiring.
    – MattR
    Jul 31, 2013 at 4:46
  • @MattR . Yes . Spring will inject the value of the properties defined on the abstract class into the concrete subclass but not into the abstract class as abstract class cannot be instantiated . Please let me know which part of my answer you think is misleading .
    – Ken Chan
    Jul 31, 2013 at 5:36
  • @KenChan yes of course, but the question was clearly asking why his code wasn't working. He was wrong about why (nothing to do with abstract classes), so while your answer is factual it has left him with the wrong impression that his code can't be made to work (it does actually work, he's just accessing the value too early).
    – MattR
    Jul 31, 2013 at 5:39
  • @MattR But I see him asking "Can I inject value into abstract class this way? If not how can accomplish this?"
    – Ken Chan
    Jul 31, 2013 at 5:44

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