I probably missed something, but I thought Scopes like @Singleton are used to define "scoped lifecycles".
I use Dagger 2 in an Android app (but I don't think the problem is android related at all).
I have 1 Module:
@Module public class MailModule { @Singleton @Provides public AccountManager providesAccountManager() { return new AccountManager(); } @Singleton @Provides public MailProvider providesMailProvider(AccountManager accountManager) { return new MailProvider(accountManager); } }
I have two different components with @Singleton
scope:
@Singleton @Component(modules = MailModule.class) public interface LoginComponent { public LoginPresenter presenter(); } @Singleton @Component( modules = MailModule.class ) public interface MenuComponent { MenuPresenter presenter(); }
Both, MenuPresenter
and LoginPresenter
, have an @Inject
constructor. While MenuPresenter expects MailProvider
as parameter, LoginPresenter takes an AccountManager
:
@Inject public MenuPresenter(MailProvider mailProvider) { ... } @Inject public LoginPresenter(AccountManager accountManager) { ... }
But every time I use the components to create a MenuPresenter
or LoginPresenter
I get a fresh new instance of MailProvider
and AccountManager
. I thought they were in the same scope and should therefore be kind of singleton (in the same scope).
Did I understand something completely wrong. How do I define a real singleton for multiple components in dagger 2?
Scopes in dagger are nothing different. Consider a shopping app where you browse through the different screens(👇), add the products in the cart, and finally make payment. Let's look at how this can be implemented.
Dagger 2 provides @Scope as a mechanism to handle scoping. Scoping allows you to “preserve” the object instance and provide it as a “local singleton” for the duration of the scoped component. In the last tutorial, we discussed a special scope called @Singleton.
It's officially deprecated and you can pretty much ignore it. Google's framework, which became dominant in Android ecosystem, was originally called Dagger 2. Sometimes we still refer to it as such, but, in most cases, we simply call it Dagger today.
In Dagger 2, component is the main container-like object that binds all the dependencies (or it's factory). Subcomponent are components that is like an extension to its parent component. It can be used for. Partition the dependencies into different compartments.
I assume that LoginComponent
and MenuComponent
are used separately, e.g. in LoginActivity
and MenuActivity
. Each component is built in Activity.onCreate
. If so, components are recreated every time new activity created, modules and dependencies too, independent of what scope they bond to. Therefore, you get new instances of MainProvider
and AccountManager
every time.
MenuActivity
and LoginActivity
have separate livecycles, so dependencies from MailModule
cannot be singleton in both of them. What you need is to declare root component with @Singleton
scope (e.g. in Application subclass), make MenuComponent
and LoginComponent
depend on it. Activity level component cannot be @Singleton scoped, better to create your own scopes using @Scope
annotation, e.g.:
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Scope public @interface MenuScope { }
Or you can leave them unscoped.
Regarding scopes at all here's brief from initial Dagger 2 proposal:
@Singleton @Component(modules = {…}) public interface ApplicationComponent {}
That declaration enables dagger to enforce the following constraints:
- A given component may only have bindings (including scope annotations on classes) that are unscoped or of the declared scope. I.e. a component cannot represent two scopes. When no scope is listed, bindings may only be unscoped.
- A scoped component may only have one scoped dependency. This is the mechanism that enforces that two components don’t each declare their own scoped binding. E.g. Two Singleton components that each have their own @Singleton Cache would be broken.
- The scope for a component must not appear in any of its transitive dependencies. E.g.: SessionScoped -> RequestScoped -> SessionScoped doesn’t make any sense and is a bug.
- @Singleton is treated specially in that it cannot have any scoped dependencies. Everyone expects Singleton to be the “root”.
The goal of this combination of rules is to enforce that when scope is applied, components are composed with the same structure that we used to have with Dagger 1.0 plus()’d ObjectGraphs, but with the ability to have static knowledge of all of the bindings and their scopes. To put it another way, when scopes are applied, this limits the graphs than can be built to only those that can be correctly constructed.
From my own practice, it's clearer not to use @Singleton
at all. Instead of that, I use @ApplicationScope
. It serves to define singletons on whole application and does not have additional restrictions as @Singleton
has.
Hope that helps you :). It's quite tricky to be understood quickly, takes time, for me at least it was.
You can do the following to define a real singleton for multiple components. I am assuming @ApplicationScoped
and @ActivityScoped
to be the different scopes.
@Module public class MailModule { @Provides @ApplicationScoped public AccountManager providesAccountManager() { return new AccountManager(); } @Provides @ApplicationScoped public MailProvider providesMailProvider(AccountManager accountManager) { return new MailProvider(accountManager); } }
Then a MailComponent
can be defined for the MailModule
. The LoginComponent
and MenuComponent
can depend on the MailComponent
.
@ApplicationScoped @Component(modules = MailModule.class) public interface MailComponent { MailProvider mailProvider(); AccountManager accountManager(); } @ActivityScoped @Component(dependencies = MailComponent.class) public interface LoginComponent { LoginPresenter presenter(); } @ActivityScoped @Component(dependencies = MailComponent.class) public interface MenuComponent { MenuPresenter presenter(); }
The MailComponent
can be initialized as shown below and can be used in MenuComponent
and LoginComponent
again shown below.
MailComponent mailComponent = DaggerMailComponent.builder().build(); DaggerMenuComponent.builder().mailComponent(mailComponent).build(); DaggerLoginComponent.builder().mailComponent(mailComponent).build()
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