Env:
Wildfly 8.2.0 Final
JDK 8
Java EE 7
Please note that by 'POJO' i am referring to the classes that serve the other classes i.e other than value objects, entities.
This question was on back of my head for some time. Just wanted to put it out.
Based on CDI and Managed Beans specs and various other books/articles, its pretty clear that CDI injection starts with a 'managed' bean instance. By 'managed' i mean servlet, EJBs etc. which are managed by a container. From there, it injects POJOs (kind of crawl through layers) till every bean gets its dependencies. This all makes very sense to me and i see very little reason why developers ever need to use "new" to create an instance of their dependent POJO's.
if(something) { use-heavy-weight-A-instance } else { use-heavy-weight-B-instance }
But, that also can be achieved via @Produces.
<%! @Inject BeanIntf bean; %>
But, the alternative to use a servlet works fine.
That said, would like to know if there is any scenario(s) where a developer has to use 'new'. As i understand, by using 'new', developer owns the responsibility of fulfilling dependencies into that bean and all its dependent beans, and their dependent beans etc..
Thanks in advance,
Rakesh
When using CDI or other container you don't use new, because you expect a bunch of service coming from the container.
For CDI these main services are:
@PostConstruct and
@PreDestroy)@RequestScoped bean will make container produce an instance leaving until the end of request)Now, on some rare occasion, you may want to add a part of these services to a class you instantiate yourself (or that another framework like JPA instantiate for you).
BeanManager bm = CDI.current().getBeanManager();
AnnotatedType<MyClass> type = bm.createAnnotatedType(MyClass.class);
InjectionTarget<MyClass> it = bm.getInjectionTargetFactory(type).createInjectionTarget(null);
CreationalContext<MyClass> ctx = bm.createCreationalContext(null);
MyClass pojo = new MyClass();
injectionTarget.inject(instance, ctx); // will try to satisfied injection points
injectionTarget.postConstruct(instance); // will call @PostConstruct
With this code you can instantiate your own MyClass containing injection points (@Inject) and lifecycle callbacks (@PostConstruct) and having these two services honored by the container.
This feature is used by 3rd party frameworks needing a basic integration with CDI.
The Unmanaged class handle this for you, but still prevent you to do the instantiation ;).
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