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  • BeanFactory和FactoryBean

    BeanFactory

    BeanFactory是一个工厂,提供了OC容器最基本的形式,给具体的IOC容器的实现提供了规范,其实现类有DefaultListableBeanFactory、XmlBeanFactory、ApplicationContext等

    /*
     * Copyright 2002-2019 the original author or authors.
     *
     * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
     * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
     * You may obtain a copy of the License at
     *
     *      https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
     *
     * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     * limitations under the License.
     */
    
    package org.springframework.beans.factory;
    
    import org.springframework.beans.BeansException;
    import org.springframework.core.ResolvableType;
    import org.springframework.lang.Nullable;
    
    /**
     * The root interface for accessing a Spring bean container.
     * This is the basic client view of a bean container;
     * further interfaces such as {@link ListableBeanFactory} and
     * {@link org.springframework.beans.factory.config.ConfigurableBeanFactory}
     * are available for specific purposes.
     *
     * <p>This interface is implemented by objects that hold a number of bean definitions,
     * each uniquely identified by a String name. Depending on the bean definition,
     * the factory will return either an independent instance of a contained object
     * (the Prototype design pattern), or a single shared instance (a superior
     * alternative to the Singleton design pattern, in which the instance is a
     * singleton in the scope of the factory). Which type of instance will be returned
     * depends on the bean factory configuration: the API is the same. Since Spring
     * 2.0, further scopes are available depending on the concrete application
     * context (e.g. "request" and "session" scopes in a web environment).
     *
     * <p>The point of this approach is that the BeanFactory is a central registry
     * of application components, and centralizes configuration of application
     * components (no more do individual objects need to read properties files,
     * for example). See chapters 4 and 11 of "Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and
     * Development" for a discussion of the benefits of this approach.
     *
     * <p>Note that it is generally better to rely on Dependency Injection
     * ("push" configuration) to configure application objects through setters
     * or constructors, rather than use any form of "pull" configuration like a
     * BeanFactory lookup. Spring's Dependency Injection functionality is
     * implemented using this BeanFactory interface and its subinterfaces.
     *
     * <p>Normally a BeanFactory will load bean definitions stored in a configuration
     * source (such as an XML document), and use the {@code org.springframework.beans}
     * package to configure the beans. However, an implementation could simply return
     * Java objects it creates as necessary directly in Java code. There are no
     * constraints on how the definitions could be stored: LDAP, RDBMS, XML,
     * properties file, etc. Implementations are encouraged to support references
     * amongst beans (Dependency Injection).
     *
     * <p>In contrast to the methods in {@link ListableBeanFactory}, all of the
     * operations in this interface will also check parent factories if this is a
     * {@link HierarchicalBeanFactory}. If a bean is not found in this factory instance,
     * the immediate parent factory will be asked. Beans in this factory instance
     * are supposed to override beans of the same name in any parent factory.
     *
     * <p>Bean factory implementations should support the standard bean lifecycle interfaces
     * as far as possible. The full set of initialization methods and their standard order is:
     * <ol>
     * <li>BeanNameAware's {@code setBeanName}
     * <li>BeanClassLoaderAware's {@code setBeanClassLoader}
     * <li>BeanFactoryAware's {@code setBeanFactory}
     * <li>EnvironmentAware's {@code setEnvironment}
     * <li>EmbeddedValueResolverAware's {@code setEmbeddedValueResolver}
     * <li>ResourceLoaderAware's {@code setResourceLoader}
     * (only applicable when running in an application context)
     * <li>ApplicationEventPublisherAware's {@code setApplicationEventPublisher}
     * (only applicable when running in an application context)
     * <li>MessageSourceAware's {@code setMessageSource}
     * (only applicable when running in an application context)
     * <li>ApplicationContextAware's {@code setApplicationContext}
     * (only applicable when running in an application context)
     * <li>ServletContextAware's {@code setServletContext}
     * (only applicable when running in a web application context)
     * <li>{@code postProcessBeforeInitialization} methods of BeanPostProcessors
     * <li>InitializingBean's {@code afterPropertiesSet}
     * <li>a custom init-method definition
     * <li>{@code postProcessAfterInitialization} methods of BeanPostProcessors
     * </ol>
     *
     * <p>On shutdown of a bean factory, the following lifecycle methods apply:
     * <ol>
     * <li>{@code postProcessBeforeDestruction} methods of DestructionAwareBeanPostProcessors
     * <li>DisposableBean's {@code destroy}
     * <li>a custom destroy-method definition
     * </ol>
     *
     * @author Rod Johnson
     * @author Juergen Hoeller
     * @author Chris Beams
     * @since 13 April 2001
     * @see BeanNameAware#setBeanName
     * @see BeanClassLoaderAware#setBeanClassLoader
     * @see BeanFactoryAware#setBeanFactory
     * @see org.springframework.context.ResourceLoaderAware#setResourceLoader
     * @see org.springframework.context.ApplicationEventPublisherAware#setApplicationEventPublisher
     * @see org.springframework.context.MessageSourceAware#setMessageSource
     * @see org.springframework.context.ApplicationContextAware#setApplicationContext
     * @see org.springframework.web.context.ServletContextAware#setServletContext
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor#postProcessBeforeInitialization
     * @see InitializingBean#afterPropertiesSet
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.support.RootBeanDefinition#getInitMethodName
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor#postProcessAfterInitialization
     * @see DisposableBean#destroy
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.support.RootBeanDefinition#getDestroyMethodName
     */
    public interface BeanFactory {
    
        /**
         * Used to dereference a {@link FactoryBean} instance and distinguish it from
         * beans <i>created</i> by the FactoryBean. For example, if the bean named
         * {@code myJndiObject} is a FactoryBean, getting {@code &myJndiObject}
         * will return the factory, not the instance returned by the factory.
         */
        String FACTORY_BEAN_PREFIX = "&";
    
    
        /**
         * Return an instance, which may be shared or independent, of the specified bean.
         * <p>This method allows a Spring BeanFactory to be used as a replacement for the
         * Singleton or Prototype design pattern. Callers may retain references to
         * returned objects in the case of Singleton beans.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to retrieve
         * @return an instance of the bean
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the specified name
         * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be obtained
         */
        Object getBean(String name) throws BeansException;
    
        /**
         * Return an instance, which may be shared or independent, of the specified bean.
         * <p>Behaves the same as {@link #getBean(String)}, but provides a measure of type
         * safety by throwing a BeanNotOfRequiredTypeException if the bean is not of the
         * required type. This means that ClassCastException can't be thrown on casting
         * the result correctly, as can happen with {@link #getBean(String)}.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to retrieve
         * @param requiredType type the bean must match; can be an interface or superclass
         * @return an instance of the bean
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no such bean definition
         * @throws BeanNotOfRequiredTypeException if the bean is not of the required type
         * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be created
         */
        <T> T getBean(String name, Class<T> requiredType) throws BeansException;
    
        /**
         * Return an instance, which may be shared or independent, of the specified bean.
         * <p>Allows for specifying explicit constructor arguments / factory method arguments,
         * overriding the specified default arguments (if any) in the bean definition.
         * @param name the name of the bean to retrieve
         * @param args arguments to use when creating a bean instance using explicit arguments
         * (only applied when creating a new instance as opposed to retrieving an existing one)
         * @return an instance of the bean
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no such bean definition
         * @throws BeanDefinitionStoreException if arguments have been given but
         * the affected bean isn't a prototype
         * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be created
         * @since 2.5
         */
        Object getBean(String name, Object... args) throws BeansException;
    
        /**
         * Return the bean instance that uniquely matches the given object type, if any.
         * <p>This method goes into {@link ListableBeanFactory} by-type lookup territory
         * but may also be translated into a conventional by-name lookup based on the name
         * of the given type. For more extensive retrieval operations across sets of beans,
         * use {@link ListableBeanFactory} and/or {@link BeanFactoryUtils}.
         * @param requiredType type the bean must match; can be an interface or superclass
         * @return an instance of the single bean matching the required type
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if no bean of the given type was found
         * @throws NoUniqueBeanDefinitionException if more than one bean of the given type was found
         * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be created
         * @since 3.0
         * @see ListableBeanFactory
         */
        <T> T getBean(Class<T> requiredType) throws BeansException;
    
        /**
         * Return an instance, which may be shared or independent, of the specified bean.
         * <p>Allows for specifying explicit constructor arguments / factory method arguments,
         * overriding the specified default arguments (if any) in the bean definition.
         * <p>This method goes into {@link ListableBeanFactory} by-type lookup territory
         * but may also be translated into a conventional by-name lookup based on the name
         * of the given type. For more extensive retrieval operations across sets of beans,
         * use {@link ListableBeanFactory} and/or {@link BeanFactoryUtils}.
         * @param requiredType type the bean must match; can be an interface or superclass
         * @param args arguments to use when creating a bean instance using explicit arguments
         * (only applied when creating a new instance as opposed to retrieving an existing one)
         * @return an instance of the bean
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no such bean definition
         * @throws BeanDefinitionStoreException if arguments have been given but
         * the affected bean isn't a prototype
         * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be created
         * @since 4.1
         */
        <T> T getBean(Class<T> requiredType, Object... args) throws BeansException;
    
        /**
         * Return a provider for the specified bean, allowing for lazy on-demand retrieval
         * of instances, including availability and uniqueness options.
         * @param requiredType type the bean must match; can be an interface or superclass
         * @return a corresponding provider handle
         * @since 5.1
         * @see #getBeanProvider(ResolvableType)
         */
        <T> ObjectProvider<T> getBeanProvider(Class<T> requiredType);
    
        /**
         * Return a provider for the specified bean, allowing for lazy on-demand retrieval
         * of instances, including availability and uniqueness options.
         * @param requiredType type the bean must match; can be a generic type declaration.
         * Note that collection types are not supported here, in contrast to reflective
         * injection points. For programmatically retrieving a list of beans matching a
         * specific type, specify the actual bean type as an argument here and subsequently
         * use {@link ObjectProvider#orderedStream()} or its lazy streaming/iteration options.
         * @return a corresponding provider handle
         * @since 5.1
         * @see ObjectProvider#iterator()
         * @see ObjectProvider#stream()
         * @see ObjectProvider#orderedStream()
         */
        <T> ObjectProvider<T> getBeanProvider(ResolvableType requiredType);
    
        /**
         * Does this bean factory contain a bean definition or externally registered singleton
         * instance with the given name?
         * <p>If the given name is an alias, it will be translated back to the corresponding
         * canonical bean name.
         * <p>If this factory is hierarchical, will ask any parent factory if the bean cannot
         * be found in this factory instance.
         * <p>If a bean definition or singleton instance matching the given name is found,
         * this method will return {@code true} whether the named bean definition is concrete
         * or abstract, lazy or eager, in scope or not. Therefore, note that a {@code true}
         * return value from this method does not necessarily indicate that {@link #getBean}
         * will be able to obtain an instance for the same name.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @return whether a bean with the given name is present
         */
        boolean containsBean(String name);
    
        /**
         * Is this bean a shared singleton? That is, will {@link #getBean} always
         * return the same instance?
         * <p>Note: This method returning {@code false} does not clearly indicate
         * independent instances. It indicates non-singleton instances, which may correspond
         * to a scoped bean as well. Use the {@link #isPrototype} operation to explicitly
         * check for independent instances.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @return whether this bean corresponds to a singleton instance
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #isPrototype
         */
        boolean isSingleton(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Is this bean a prototype? That is, will {@link #getBean} always return
         * independent instances?
         * <p>Note: This method returning {@code false} does not clearly indicate
         * a singleton object. It indicates non-independent instances, which may correspond
         * to a scoped bean as well. Use the {@link #isSingleton} operation to explicitly
         * check for a shared singleton instance.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @return whether this bean will always deliver independent instances
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @since 2.0.3
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #isSingleton
         */
        boolean isPrototype(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Check whether the bean with the given name matches the specified type.
         * More specifically, check whether a {@link #getBean} call for the given name
         * would return an object that is assignable to the specified target type.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @param typeToMatch the type to match against (as a {@code ResolvableType})
         * @return {@code true} if the bean type matches,
         * {@code false} if it doesn't match or cannot be determined yet
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @since 4.2
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #getType
         */
        boolean isTypeMatch(String name, ResolvableType typeToMatch) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Check whether the bean with the given name matches the specified type.
         * More specifically, check whether a {@link #getBean} call for the given name
         * would return an object that is assignable to the specified target type.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @param typeToMatch the type to match against (as a {@code Class})
         * @return {@code true} if the bean type matches,
         * {@code false} if it doesn't match or cannot be determined yet
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @since 2.0.1
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #getType
         */
        boolean isTypeMatch(String name, Class<?> typeToMatch) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Determine the type of the bean with the given name. More specifically,
         * determine the type of object that {@link #getBean} would return for the given name.
         * <p>For a {@link FactoryBean}, return the type of object that the FactoryBean creates,
         * as exposed by {@link FactoryBean#getObjectType()}. This may lead to the initialization
         * of a previously uninitialized {@code FactoryBean} (see {@link #getType(String, boolean)}).
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @return the type of the bean, or {@code null} if not determinable
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @since 1.1.2
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #isTypeMatch
         */
        @Nullable
        Class<?> getType(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Determine the type of the bean with the given name. More specifically,
         * determine the type of object that {@link #getBean} would return for the given name.
         * <p>For a {@link FactoryBean}, return the type of object that the FactoryBean creates,
         * as exposed by {@link FactoryBean#getObjectType()}. Depending on the
         * {@code allowFactoryBeanInit} flag, this may lead to the initialization of a previously
         * uninitialized {@code FactoryBean} if no early type information is available.
         * <p>Translates aliases back to the corresponding canonical bean name.
         * Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the name of the bean to query
         * @param allowFactoryBeanInit whether a {@code FactoryBean} may get initialized
         * just for the purpose of determining its object type
         * @return the type of the bean, or {@code null} if not determinable
         * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
         * @since 5.2
         * @see #getBean
         * @see #isTypeMatch
         */
        @Nullable
        Class<?> getType(String name, boolean allowFactoryBeanInit) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;
    
        /**
         * Return the aliases for the given bean name, if any.
         * All of those aliases point to the same bean when used in a {@link #getBean} call.
         * <p>If the given name is an alias, the corresponding original bean name
         * and other aliases (if any) will be returned, with the original bean name
         * being the first element in the array.
         * <p>Will ask the parent factory if the bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
         * @param name the bean name to check for aliases
         * @return the aliases, or an empty array if none
         * @see #getBean
         */
        String[] getAliases(String name);
    
    }
    BeanFactory.java

    FactoryBean

    FactoryBean是一个bean,为IOC容器中Bean的实现提供了更加灵活的方式,FactoryBean在IOC容器的基础上给Bean的实现加上了一个简单工厂模式和装饰模式,我们可以在getObject()方法中灵活配置。其实在Spring源码中有很多FactoryBean的实现类.

    要想获取FactoryBean的实现类,就要getBean(&BeanName),在BeanName之前加上&。

    实现类

     

    /*
     * Copyright 2002-2019 the original author or authors.
     *
     * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
     * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
     * You may obtain a copy of the License at
     *
     *      https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
     *
     * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
     * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
     * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
     * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
     * limitations under the License.
     */
    
    package org.springframework.beans.factory;
    
    import org.springframework.lang.Nullable;
    
    /**
     * Interface to be implemented by objects used within a {@link BeanFactory} which
     * are themselves factories for individual objects. If a bean implements this
     * interface, it is used as a factory for an object to expose, not directly as a
     * bean instance that will be exposed itself.
     *
     * <p><b>NB: A bean that implements this interface cannot be used as a normal bean.</b>
     * A FactoryBean is defined in a bean style, but the object exposed for bean
     * references ({@link #getObject()}) is always the object that it creates.
     *
     * <p>FactoryBeans can support singletons and prototypes, and can either create
     * objects lazily on demand or eagerly on startup. The {@link SmartFactoryBean}
     * interface allows for exposing more fine-grained behavioral metadata.
     *
     * <p>This interface is heavily used within the framework itself, for example for
     * the AOP {@link org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean} or the
     * {@link org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean}. It can be used for
     * custom components as well; however, this is only common for infrastructure code.
     *
     * <p><b>{@code FactoryBean} is a programmatic contract. Implementations are not
     * supposed to rely on annotation-driven injection or other reflective facilities.</b>
     * {@link #getObjectType()} {@link #getObject()} invocations may arrive early in
     * the bootstrap process, even ahead of any post-processor setup. If you need access
     * other beans, implement {@link BeanFactoryAware} and obtain them programmatically.
     *
     * <p>Finally, FactoryBean objects participate in the containing BeanFactory's
     * synchronization of bean creation. There is usually no need for internal
     * synchronization other than for purposes of lazy initialization within the
     * FactoryBean itself (or the like).
     *
     * @author Rod Johnson
     * @author Juergen Hoeller
     * @since 08.03.2003
     * @param <T> the bean type
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory
     * @see org.springframework.aop.framework.ProxyFactoryBean
     * @see org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean
     */
    public interface FactoryBean<T> {
    
        /**
         * The name of an attribute that can be
         * {@link org.springframework.core.AttributeAccessor#setAttribute set} on a
         * {@link org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanDefinition} so that
         * factory beans can signal their object type when it can't be deduced from
         * the factory bean class.
         * @since 5.2
         */
        String OBJECT_TYPE_ATTRIBUTE = "factoryBeanObjectType";
    
    
        /**
         * Return an instance (possibly shared or independent) of the object
         * managed by this factory.
         * <p>As with a {@link BeanFactory}, this allows support for both the
         * Singleton and Prototype design pattern.
         * <p>If this FactoryBean is not fully initialized yet at the time of
         * the call (for example because it is involved in a circular reference),
         * throw a corresponding {@link FactoryBeanNotInitializedException}.
         * <p>As of Spring 2.0, FactoryBeans are allowed to return {@code null}
         * objects. The factory will consider this as normal value to be used; it
         * will not throw a FactoryBeanNotInitializedException in this case anymore.
         * FactoryBean implementations are encouraged to throw
         * FactoryBeanNotInitializedException themselves now, as appropriate.
         * @return an instance of the bean (can be {@code null})
         * @throws Exception in case of creation errors
         * @see FactoryBeanNotInitializedException
         */
        @Nullable
        T getObject() throws Exception;
    
        /**
         * Return the type of object that this FactoryBean creates,
         * or {@code null} if not known in advance.
         * <p>This allows one to check for specific types of beans without
         * instantiating objects, for example on autowiring.
         * <p>In the case of implementations that are creating a singleton object,
         * this method should try to avoid singleton creation as far as possible;
         * it should rather estimate the type in advance.
         * For prototypes, returning a meaningful type here is advisable too.
         * <p>This method can be called <i>before</i> this FactoryBean has
         * been fully initialized. It must not rely on state created during
         * initialization; of course, it can still use such state if available.
         * <p><b>NOTE:</b> Autowiring will simply ignore FactoryBeans that return
         * {@code null} here. Therefore it is highly recommended to implement
         * this method properly, using the current state of the FactoryBean.
         * @return the type of object that this FactoryBean creates,
         * or {@code null} if not known at the time of the call
         * @see ListableBeanFactory#getBeansOfType
         */
        @Nullable
        Class<?> getObjectType();
    
        /**
         * Is the object managed by this factory a singleton? That is,
         * will {@link #getObject()} always return the same object
         * (a reference that can be cached)?
         * <p><b>NOTE:</b> If a FactoryBean indicates to hold a singleton object,
         * the object returned from {@code getObject()} might get cached
         * by the owning BeanFactory. Hence, do not return {@code true}
         * unless the FactoryBean always exposes the same reference.
         * <p>The singleton status of the FactoryBean itself will generally
         * be provided by the owning BeanFactory; usually, it has to be
         * defined as singleton there.
         * <p><b>NOTE:</b> This method returning {@code false} does not
         * necessarily indicate that returned objects are independent instances.
         * An implementation of the extended {@link SmartFactoryBean} interface
         * may explicitly indicate independent instances through its
         * {@link SmartFactoryBean#isPrototype()} method. Plain {@link FactoryBean}
         * implementations which do not implement this extended interface are
         * simply assumed to always return independent instances if the
         * {@code isSingleton()} implementation returns {@code false}.
         * <p>The default implementation returns {@code true}, since a
         * {@code FactoryBean} typically manages a singleton instance.
         * @return whether the exposed object is a singleton
         * @see #getObject()
         * @see SmartFactoryBean#isPrototype()
         */
        default boolean isSingleton() {
            return true;
        }
    
    }
    FactoryBean.java

    你都这么优秀了,不打算关注我一下嘛

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  • 原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/biaogejiushibiao/p/13760485.html
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