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Introduction to the Spring IoC Container and Beans
This chapter covers the Spring Framework implementation of the Inversion of Control (IoC) principle. Dependency injection (DI) is a specialized form of IoC, whereby objects define their dependencies (that is, the other objects they work with) only through constructor arguments, arguments to a factory method, or properties that are set on the object instance after it is constructed or returned from a factory method. The IoC container then injects those dependencies when it creates the bean. This process is fundamentally the inverse (hence the name, Inversion of Control) of the bean itself controlling the instantiation or location of its dependencies by using direct construction of classes or a mechanism such as the Service Locator pattern.
The org.springframework.beans
and org.springframework.context
packages are the basis
for Spring Framework’s IoC container. The
BeanFactory
interface provides an advanced configuration mechanism capable of managing any type of
object.
ApplicationContext
is a sub-interface of BeanFactory
. It adds:
-
Easier integration with Spring’s AOP features
-
Message resource handling (for use in internationalization)
-
Event publication
-
Application-layer specific contexts such as the
WebApplicationContext
for use in web applications.
In short, the BeanFactory
provides the configuration framework and basic functionality,
and the ApplicationContext
adds more enterprise-specific functionality. The
ApplicationContext
is a complete superset of the BeanFactory
and is used exclusively
in this chapter in descriptions of Spring’s IoC container. For more information on using
the BeanFactory
instead of the ApplicationContext,
see the section covering the
BeanFactory
API.
In Spring, the objects that form the backbone of your application and that are managed by the Spring IoC container are called beans. A bean is an object that is instantiated, assembled, and managed by a Spring IoC container. Otherwise, a bean is simply one of many objects in your application. Beans, and the dependencies among them, are reflected in the configuration metadata used by a container.