The greatest benefit of @Configuration and @Bean is that allows you to create spring beans that are not decorated with @Component or any of its children (@Service, @Repository and those). This is really helpful when you want/need to define spring beans that are defined in an external library that has no direct interaction with Spring (maybe written by you or somebody else).
E.g.
You have a jar created by an external provider that contains this class:
public class EmailSender {
private String config1;
private String config2;
//and on...
public void sendEmail(String from, String to, String title, String body, File[] attachments) {
/* implementation */
}
}
Since the class is in an external jar, you cannot modify it. Still, Spring allows you to create spring beans based on this class (remember, the bean is the object, not the class).
In your project, you'll have something like this:
import thepackage.from.externaljar.EmailSender;
@Configuration
public class EmailSenderConfiguration {
@Bean
public EmailSender emailSender() {
EmailSender emailSender = new EmailSender();
emailSender.setConfig1(...);
emailSender.setConfig2(...);
//and on...
return emailSender;
}
}
And then you can inject the bean as needed:
@Service
public class MyService {
@Autowired
private EmailSender emailSender;
}