39

Is it possible to use @Autowired with a list?

Like I have properties file with mimetypes and in my class file I have something like this

@Autowired
private List<String> mimeTypes = new ArrayList<String>();
2

6 Answers 6

66

Spring 4 and older support the ability to automatically collect all beans of a given type and inject them into a collection or array.

Here is an example:

@Component
public class Car implements Vehicle {
}

@Component
public class Bus implements Vehicle {
}

@Component
public class User {
   @Autowired
   List<Vehicle> vehicles; // contains both car and bus
}

Ref: Spring 4 Ordering Autowired Collections

3
  • 4
    what happens when there is no bean of that type defined? Will it autowire an empty list Jan 11, 2017 at 21:23
  • @user2798694 It should be empty or null.
    – Tho
    Jan 12, 2017 at 1:39
  • 1
    @user2798694, In my experience Spring will throw an exception about no beans found. To get around this, wrap the collection in Optional when auto-wiring. Optional<List<Vehicle>> Feb 8 at 20:33
34

@Qualifier("..") is discouraged, instead try to autowire-by-name using

private @Resource(name="..") List<Strings> mimeTypes;

See also How to autowire factorybean.

1
  • 2
    +1 Excellent find! I was just trying to figure out why I couldn't get this scenario to work. Jan 25, 2012 at 21:33
13

You can even create a java.util.List within your spring .xml and inject this via @Qualifier into your application. From the springsource http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/current/reference/xsd-config.html :

 <!-- creates a java.util.List instance with the supplied values -->
 <util:list id="emails">
   <value>pechorin@hero.org</value>
   <value>raskolnikov@slums.org</value>
   <value>stavrogin@gov.org</value>
   <value>porfiry@gov.org</value>
 </util:list>

So this would change your wiring to:

 @Autowired
 @Qualifier("emails")
 private List<String> mimeTypes = new ArrayList<String>();

I would suggest this approach since you're injecting a list of strings anyways.

cheers!

EDIT

If you want to inject properties, have a look at this How can I inject a property value into a Spring Bean which was configured using annotations?

1
  • You forgot to add mailto:prince.myshkin@idiot.org to the list.
    – Bass
    Jan 25 at 16:15
1

I think you'll need a qualifier at minimum. And the call to "new" seems contrary to the idea of using Spring. You have Spring's role confused. If you call "new", then the object isn't under Spring's control.

2
0

If the autowired bean is declared in the same (@Configuration) class and you need it to declare another bean, then following works:

@Bean
public BeanWithMimeTypes beanWithMimeTypes() {
    return new BeanWithMimeTypes(mimeTypes());
}

@Bean
public List<String> mimeTypes() {
    return Arrays.<String>asList("text/html", "application/json);
}

Naturally it behaves correctly even if you override the mimeTypes bean in another config. No need for explicit @Qualifier or @Resource annotations.

1
  • 1
    This is simply showing how to use a constructor (which is ok). But it needs to be pointed out that in this example there is not need to annotate mimeTypes() with @Bean unless you want its result available in the application context for some other reason than creating the BeanWithMimeTypes component. Jun 17, 2017 at 4:52
-1

You should be able to autowire it as long as the list is a bean. You'd then use the @Qualifier to tell Spring which bean/list to use. See http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/reference/beans.html#beans-autowired-annotation-qualifiers

1
  • Wouldnt all beans of that type get autowired into the list? Jul 15, 2018 at 9:55

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