@Target(value={METHOD,ANNOTATION_TYPE}) @Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Documented public @interface Bean
The names and semantics of the attributes to this annotation are intentionally
 similar to those of the <bean/> element in the Spring XML schema. For
 example:
 
     @Bean
     public MyBean myBean() {
         // instantiate and configure MyBean obj
         return obj;
     }
 While a name attribute is available, the default strategy for
 determining the name of a bean is to use the name of the @Bean method.
 This is convenient and intuitive, but if explicit naming is desired, the
 name attribute may be used. Also note that name accepts an array
 of Strings. This is in order to allow for specifying multiple names (i.e., aliases)
 for a single bean.
 
     @Bean(name={"b1","b2"}) // bean available as 'b1' and 'b2', but not 'myBean'
     public MyBean myBean() {
         // instantiate and configure MyBean obj
         return obj;
     }
 Note that the @Bean annotation does not provide attributes for scope,
 depends-on, primary, or lazy. Rather, it should be used in conjunction with
 @Scope, @DependsOn, @Primary,
 and @Lazy annotations to achieve those semantics. For example:
 
     @Bean
     @Scope("prototype")
     public MyBean myBean() {
         // instantiate and configure MyBean obj
         return obj;
     }
 @Bean Methods in @Configuration ClassesTypically, @Bean methods are declared within @Configuration
 classes. In this case, bean methods may reference other @Bean methods
 in the same class by calling them directly. This ensures that references between
 beans are strongly typed and navigable. Such so-called 'inter-bean references' are
 guaranteed to respect scoping and AOP semantics, just like getBean() lookups
 would. These are the semantics known from the original 'Spring JavaConfig' project
 which require CGLIB subclassing of each such configuration class at runtime. As a
 consequence, @Configuration classes and their factory methods must not be
 marked as final or private in this mode. For example:
 
 @Configuration
 public class AppConfig {
     @Bean
     public FooService fooService() {
         return new FooService(fooRepository());
     }
     @Bean
     public FooRepository fooRepository() {
         return new JdbcFooRepository(dataSource());
     }
     // ...
 }
 @Bean Lite Mode@Bean methods may also be declared within classes that are not
 annotated with @Configuration. For example, bean methods may be declared
 in a @Component class or even in a plain old class. In such cases,
 a @Bean method will get processed in a so-called 'lite' mode.
 
Bean methods in lite mode will be treated as plain factory
 methods by the container (similar to factory-method declarations
 in XML), with scoping and lifecycle callbacks properly applied. The containing
 class remains unmodified in this case, and there are no unusual constraints for
 the containing class or the factory methods.
 
In contrast to the semantics for bean methods in @Configuration classes,
 'inter-bean references' are not supported in lite mode. Instead,
 when one @Bean-method invokes another @Bean-method in lite
 mode, the invocation is a standard Java method invocation; Spring does not intercept
 the invocation via a CGLIB proxy. This is analogous to inter-@Transactional
 method calls where in proxy mode, Spring does not intercept the invocation —
 Spring does so only in AspectJ mode.
 
For example:
 @Component
 public class Calculator {
     public int sum(int a, int b) {
         return a+b;
     }
     @Bean
     public MyBean myBean() {
         return new MyBean();
     }
 }
 See @Configuration Javadoc for further details including how to bootstrap
 the container using AnnotationConfigApplicationContext and friends.
 
BeanFactoryPostProcessor-returning @Bean methodsSpecial consideration must be taken for @Bean methods that return Spring
 BeanFactoryPostProcessor
 (BFPP) types. Because BFPP objects must be instantiated very early in the
 container lifecycle, they can interfere with processing of annotations such as @Autowired,
 @Value, and @PostConstruct within @Configuration classes. To avoid these
 lifecycle issues, mark BFPP-returning @Bean methods as static. For example:
 
     @Bean
     public static PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer ppc() {
         // instantiate, configure and return ppc ...
     }
 By marking this method as static, it can be invoked without causing instantiation of its
 declaring @Configuration class, thus avoiding the above-mentioned lifecycle conflicts.
 Note however that static @Bean methods will not be enhanced for scoping and AOP
 semantics as mentioned above. This works out in BFPP cases, as they are not typically
 referenced by other @Bean methods. As a reminder, a WARN-level log message will be
 issued for any non-static @Bean methods having a return type assignable to
 BeanFactoryPostProcessor.| Modifier and Type | Optional Element and Description | 
|---|---|
| Autowire | autowireAre dependencies to be injected via convention-based autowiring by name or type? | 
| String | destroyMethodThe optional name of a method to call on the bean instance upon closing the
 application context, for example a  close()method on a JDBCDataSourceimplementation, or a HibernateSessionFactoryobject. | 
| String | initMethodThe optional name of a method to call on the bean instance during initialization. | 
| String[] | nameThe name of this bean, or if plural, aliases for this bean. | 
public abstract String[] name
public abstract Autowire autowire
public abstract String initMethod
The default value is "", indicating no init method to be called.
public abstract String destroyMethod
close() method on a JDBC
 DataSource implementation, or a Hibernate SessionFactory object.
 The method must have no arguments but may throw any exception.
 As a convenience to the user, the container will attempt to infer a destroy
 method against an object returned from the @Bean method. For example, given
 an @Bean method returning an Apache Commons DBCP BasicDataSource,
 the container will notice the close() method available on that object and
 automatically register it as the destroyMethod. This 'destroy method
 inference' is currently limited to detecting only public, no-arg methods named
 'close' or 'shutdown'. The method may be declared at any level of the inheritance
 hierarchy and will be detected regardless of the return type of the @Bean
 method (i.e., detection occurs reflectively against the bean instance itself at
 creation time).
 
To disable destroy method inference for a particular @Bean, specify an
 empty string as the value, e.g. @Bean(destroyMethod=""). Note that the
 DisposableBean and the
 Closeable/AutoCloseable interfaces will
 nevertheless get detected and the corresponding destroy/close method invoked.
 
Note: Only invoked on beans whose lifecycle is under the full control of the factory, which is always the case for singletons but not guaranteed for any other scope.
ConfigurableApplicationContext.close()