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    kapok

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    /*
     * Copyright 2002-2005 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
     *
     *      http://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;

    /**
     * The root interface for accessing a Spring IoC container.
     *
     * <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. The Singleton approach is
     * more useful and more common in practice.
     *
     * <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 BeanFactory
     * and its subinterfaces.
     *
     * <p>Normally a BeanFactory will load bean definitions stored in a configuration
     * source (such as an XML document), and use the 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, to either
     * Singletons or Prototypes.
     *
     * <p>In contrast to the methods in ListableBeanFactory, all of the methods in this
     * interface will also check parent factories if this is a HierarchicalBeanFactory.
     * If a bean is not found in this factory instance, the immediate parent is 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 maximum set of initialization methods and their standard
     * order is:<br>
     * 1. BeanNameAware's setBeanName<br>
     * 2. BeanFactoryAware's setBeanFactory<br>
     * 3. ApplicationContextAware's setApplicationContext (only applicable if running
     * in an application context)<br>
     * 4. postProcessBeforeInitialization methods of BeanPostProcessors<br>
     * 5. InitializingBean's afterPropertiesSet<br>
     * 6. a custom init-method definition<br>
     * 7. postProcessAfterInitialization methods of BeanPostProcessors
     *
     * <p>On shutdown of a bean factory, the following lifecycle methods apply:<br>
     * 1. DisposableBean's destroy<br>
     * 2. a custom destroy-method definition
     *
     * @author Rod Johnson
     * @author Juergen Hoeller
     * @since 13 April 2001
     * @see BeanNameAware#setBeanName
     * @see BeanFactoryAware#setBeanFactory
     * @see InitializingBean#afterPropertiesSet
     * @see DisposableBean#destroy
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor#postProcessBeforeInitialization
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.config.BeanPostProcessor#postProcessAfterInitialization
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.support.RootBeanDefinition#getInitMethodName
     * @see org.springframework.beans.factory.support.RootBeanDefinition#getDestroyMethodName
     * @see org.springframework.context.ApplicationContextAware#setApplicationContext
     */
    public interface BeanFactory {

     /**
      * Used to dereference a FactoryBean and distinguish it from beans
      * <i>created</i> by the FactoryBean. For example, if the bean named
      * <code>myEjb</code> is a FactoryBean, getting <code>&myEjb</code> 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 given bean name.
      * This method allows a Spring bean factory to be used as a replacement for
      * the Singleton or Prototype design pattern.
      * <p>Callers may retain references to returned objects
      * in the case of Singleton beans.
      * <p>This method delegates to the parent factory if the
      * bean cannot be found in this factory instance.
      * @param name the name of the bean to return
      * @return the instance of the bean
      * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean definition
      * with the specified name
      * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be obtained
      */
     Object getBean(String name) throws BeansException;

     /**
      * Return an instance (possibly shared or independent) of the given bean name.
      * <p>Behaves the same as getBean(String), but provides a measure of type safety by
      * throwing a Spring BeansException 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 getBean(String).
      * @param name the name of the bean to return
      * @param requiredType type the bean must match. Can be an interface or superclass
      * of the actual class, or null for any match. For example, if the value is
      * Object.class, this method will succeed whatever the class of the returned instance.
      * @return an instance of the bean (never null)
      * @throws BeanNotOfRequiredTypeException if the bean is not of the required type
      * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there's no such bean definition
      * @throws BeansException if the bean could not be created
      */
     Object getBean(String name, Class requiredType) throws BeansException;

     /**
      * Does this bean factory contain a bean definition with the given name?
      * <p>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 a bean with the given name is defined
      */
     boolean containsBean(String name);

     /**
      * Is this bean a singleton? That is, will getBean() always return the same object?
      * <p>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 is this bean a singleton
      * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
      */
     boolean isSingleton(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;

     /**
      * Determine the type of the bean with the given name.
      * More specifically, checks the type of object that getBean would return.
      * For a FactoryBean, returns the type of object that the FactoryBean creates.
      * @param name the name of the bean to query
      * @return the type of the bean, or null if not determinable
      * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there is no bean with the given name
      * @since 1.1.2
      * @see #getBean
      * @see FactoryBean#getObjectType
      */
     Class getType(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;

     /**
      * Return the aliases for the given bean name, if defined.
      * <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
      * @throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException if there's no such bean definition
      */
     String[] getAliases(String name) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException;

    }

    posted on 2005-05-06 00:43 笨笨 閱讀(526) 評論(0)  編輯  收藏 所屬分類: J2EE 、HibernateAndSpringALL
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