Spring"
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= Configuration = | = Configuration = | ||
− | The minimal dependency you need is : | + | The minimal Maven dependency you need is : |
<source lang='xml'> | <source lang='xml'> |
Revision as of 01:19, 18 February 2013
Overview
Spring Framework is a popular application development framework for enterprise Java. One key element is its infrastructural support: a light-weighted container that manages POJOs as Spring beans and maintain beans' dependency injection relationship. We will talk about several integration ways including wiring and accessing beans in various conditions. We assume that readers have knowledge in Spring's basic configuration and concept such as bean scope, we will therefore not cover these topics here. Please refer to Spring documentation. We write these source code examples based on Spring 3.0.5.RELEASE.
Configuration
The minimal Maven dependency you need is :
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-web</artifactId>
<version>3.0.5.RELEASE</version>
</dependency>
To integrate ZK application and Spring , the minimal configuration you have to setup is following:
Spring related configuration in web.xml
...
<!-- Loads the Spring application context configuration -->
<listener>
<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class>
</listener>
<!-- For using web scoped bean -->
<listener>
<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.request.RequestContextListener</listener-class>
</listener>
...
You can enable Spring's classpath scanning to register beans.
WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context"
xsi:schemaLocation="
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.0.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context-3.0.xsd">
<!-- Scans for application @Components to deploy -->
<context:component-scan base-package="org.zkoss.reference.developer" />
</beans>
- Line 12: Apply @Component on those classes that you plan to register them as Spring beans and specify base package of those classes.
Access a Spring Bean in a ZUL
ZUL provides a feature called variable resolver that allows users to access Spring bean using EL expressions. This is how you do it; simply put the below directive on top of a ZUML page:
<?variable-resolver class="org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver" ?>
Then, in the rest of your page, you can access a Spring-Managed bean directly using its bean id.
Assume that we have two beans:
@Component
@Scope("session")
public class UserPreference {
...
}
- User preference should be distinct for each user but shared among multiple requests. It is suitable to be a session scoped bean.
@Component
public class SystemConfiguration {
...
}
- As system configuration should be shared within the whole application, this should be a singleton bean.
Access Spring beans with EL
<?variable-resolver class="org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver"?>
<window title="Access Bean with different scopes" border="normal" width="700px"
apply="org.zkoss.reference.developer.composer.ResolverComposer">
<vlayout>
<hlayout>
User Preference :
<label id="sessionValue">${userPreference.value}</label>
</hlayout>
<hlayout>
System Configuration :
<label id="singletonValue">${systemConfiguration.value}</label>
</hlayout>
</vlayout>
</window>
- The delegating variable-resolver will look-up the bean named userPreference automatically for you.
Wire a Spring bean
Wire a Spring bean in a Composer
It is a very common requirement that we need to use a Spring bean in a composer, for example calling a service layer object to perform business logic. If a composer is a Spring-managed bean, we can just use Spring's injection mechanism like auto-wire to wire dependencies. However, we don't recommend this approach (explain in the previous section).
Therefore, ZK provides another way to wire a Spring bean to a composer which is not a Spring-managed bean. When we apply a composer to a ZUL with org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver mentioned in the previous section, we can apply annotation, @WireVariable on a variable we want to wire a Spring bean with. ZK will then wire the corresponding Spring bean with the variable using variable name that's same as the bean's name. Alternatively, you can specify the bean's name with @WireVariable("beanName").
Example code is as follow:
A composer that wires Spring beans
public class ResolverComposer extends SelectorComposer<Window> {
@WireVariable
private OrderService orderService;
@Wire("#number")
private Label label;
@Override
public void doAfterCompose(Window comp) throws Exception {
super.doAfterCompose(comp);
label.setValue(Integer.toString(orderService.list().size()));
}
}
A ZUL with Spring variable resolver
<?variable-resolver class="org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver"?>
<window title="Access Bean with different scopes" border="normal" width="700px"
apply="org.zkoss.reference.developer.spring.composer.ResolverComposer">
...
</window>
Wire a Spring bean in a ViewModel
Wiring a Spring bean in a ViewModel is very similar to the case in a composer, simply apply @WireVariable with variable resolver. In the example below we put variable resolver in a zul with a directive.
A ViewModel that wires a Spring bean
public class OrderVM {
@WireVariable
OrderService orderService;
public List<Order> getOrders() {
if (orders == null) {
//init the list
orders = orderService.list();
}
return orders;
}
...
}
The zul uses OrderVM with a Spring variable resolver
<?variable-resolver class="org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver"?>
<zk>
<window title="Order Management" border="normal" width="600px" apply="org.zkoss.bind.BindComposer"
viewModel="@id('vm') @init('org.zkoss.reference.developer.spring.order.viewmodel.OrderVM')"
validationMessages="@id('vmsgs')">
...
</window>
</zk>
Adding Variable Resolver to a Composer (or ViewModel)
Adding a variable resolver to a ZUL will make it available to all composers on the ZUL. If you want to add a variable resolver to a specific composer (or ViewModel) only, you should apply the annotation
@VariableResolver(org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver.class)
on the class that inherits SelectorComposer or a ViewModel. Then, apply @WireVariable on variables like we did in the previous section.
Example code are as follows:
@VariableResolver(org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.DelegatingVariableResolver.class)
public class SpringComposer extends SelectorComposer<Window> {
@WireVariable
private OrderService orderService;
...
}
Retrieve a Spring Bean Programmatically
org.zkoss.zkplus.spring.SpringUtil is a utility class which allows you to get Spring-managed beans in Java.
public class SpringComposer extends SelectorComposer<Window> {
@Wire("#number")
private Label label;
@Override
public void doAfterCompose(Window comp) throws Exception {
super.doAfterCompose(comp);
OrderService orderService = (OrderService)SpringUtil.getBean("orderService");
label.setValue(Integer.toString(orderService.list().size()));
}
}
Warning: Register a Composer (or ViewModel) as a Spring bean
Many developers tend to register ZK's composer (or ViewModel) as a Spring-managed bean, but we do not recommend this approach because none of Spring's scopes matches correctly with the life cycle of the composers, please see ZK Developer's Reference/MVC/Controller/Wire Variables for more details. The scope of a composer is "desktop" scope that is shorter than "session" and longer than "prototype". Only ZK knows when to create composers (or ViewModel), so it's better to let composers be managed by ZK.
If you insist on making Spring to manage the composers (or ViewModel), "prototype" scope could be a feasible scope. However, you need to use with care; each time you try to resolve a composer bean, you will get a new instance of a composer. If the composer stores some states, it will cause inconsistency of states among multiple composers.
Integrate Spring Webflow and Security
ZK also provides integration to other Spring projects such as Spring Security and Spring Webflow with ZK Spring. Please refer to ZK Spring Essentials for details.
Example Source Code
All source code of examples used in this chapter can be found in here.
Version History
Version | Date | Content |
---|---|---|
6.5.0 | November 2012 | Rewrite for improvement. |