Interface ListableBeanFactory
- All Superinterfaces:
BeanFactory
- All Known Subinterfaces:
ApplicationContext
,ConfigurableApplicationContext
,ConfigurableListableBeanFactory
,ConfigurableWebApplicationContext
,WebApplicationContext
- All Known Implementing Classes:
AbstractApplicationContext
,AbstractRefreshableApplicationContext
,AbstractRefreshableConfigApplicationContext
,AbstractRefreshableWebApplicationContext
,AbstractXmlApplicationContext
,AnnotationConfigApplicationContext
,AnnotationConfigWebApplicationContext
,ClassPathXmlApplicationContext
,DefaultListableBeanFactory
,FileSystemXmlApplicationContext
,GenericApplicationContext
,GenericGroovyApplicationContext
,GenericWebApplicationContext
,GenericXmlApplicationContext
,GroovyWebApplicationContext
,ResourceAdapterApplicationContext
,StaticApplicationContext
,StaticListableBeanFactory
,StaticWebApplicationContext
,XmlBeanFactory
,XmlWebApplicationContext
public interface ListableBeanFactory extends BeanFactory
Extension of theBeanFactory
interface to be implemented by bean factories that can enumerate all their bean instances, rather than attempting bean lookup by name one by one as requested by clients. BeanFactory implementations that preload all their bean definitions (such as XML-based factories) may implement this interface.If this is a
HierarchicalBeanFactory
, the return values will not take any BeanFactory hierarchy into account, but will relate only to the beans defined in the current factory. Use theBeanFactoryUtils
helper class to consider beans in ancestor factories too.The methods in this interface will just respect bean definitions of this factory. They will ignore any singleton beans that have been registered by other means like
ConfigurableBeanFactory
'sregisterSingleton
method, with the exception ofgetBeanNamesForType
andgetBeansOfType
which will check such manually registered singletons too. Of course, BeanFactory'sgetBean
does allow transparent access to such special beans as well. However, in typical scenarios, all beans will be defined by external bean definitions anyway, so most applications don't need to worry about this differentiation.NOTE: With the exception of
getBeanDefinitionCount
andcontainsBeanDefinition
, the methods in this interface are not designed for frequent invocation. Implementations may be slow.- Since:
- 16 April 2001
- Author:
- Rod Johnson, Juergen Hoeller
- See Also:
HierarchicalBeanFactory
,BeanFactoryUtils
Field Summary
Fields inherited from interface org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory
FACTORY_BEAN_PREFIX
Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Abstract Methods Modifier and Type Method Description boolean
containsBeanDefinition(String beanName)
Check if this bean factory contains a bean definition with the given name.<A extends Annotation>
AfindAnnotationOnBean(String beanName, Class<A> annotationType)
Find anAnnotation
ofannotationType
on the specified bean, traversing its interfaces and super classes if no annotation can be found on the given class itself, as well as checking the bean's factory method (if any).int
getBeanDefinitionCount()
Return the number of beans defined in the factory.String[]
getBeanDefinitionNames()
Return the names of all beans defined in this factory.String[]
getBeanNamesForAnnotation(Class<? extends Annotation> annotationType)
Find all names of beans which are annotated with the suppliedAnnotation
type, without creating corresponding bean instances yet.String[]
getBeanNamesForType(Class<?> type)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.String[]
getBeanNamesForType(Class<?> type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.String[]
getBeanNamesForType(ResolvableType type)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.String[]
getBeanNamesForType(ResolvableType type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.<T> Map<String,T>
getBeansOfType(Class<T> type)
Return the bean instances that match the given object type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.<T> Map<String,T>
getBeansOfType(Class<T> type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit)
Return the bean instances that match the given object type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.Map<String,Object>
getBeansWithAnnotation(Class<? extends Annotation> annotationType)
Find all beans which are annotated with the suppliedAnnotation
type, returning a Map of bean names with corresponding bean instances.Methods inherited from interface org.springframework.beans.factory.BeanFactory
containsBean, getAliases, getBean, getBean, getBean, getBean, getBean, getBeanProvider, getBeanProvider, getType, getType, isPrototype, isSingleton, isTypeMatch, isTypeMatch
Method Detail
containsBeanDefinition
boolean containsBeanDefinition(String beanName)
Check if this bean factory contains a bean definition with the given name.Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in, and ignores any singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
- Parameters:
beanName
- the name of the bean to look for- Returns:
- if this bean factory contains a bean definition with the given name
- See Also:
BeanFactory.containsBean(java.lang.String)
getBeanDefinitionCount
int getBeanDefinitionCount()
Return the number of beans defined in the factory.Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in, and ignores any singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
- Returns:
- the number of beans defined in the factory
getBeanDefinitionNames
String[] getBeanDefinitionNames()
Return the names of all beans defined in this factory.Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in, and ignores any singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
- Returns:
- the names of all beans defined in this factory, or an empty array if none defined
getBeanNamesForType
String[] getBeanNamesForType(ResolvableType type)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type.
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
This version of
getBeanNamesForType
matches all kinds of beans, be it singletons, prototypes, or FactoryBeans. In most implementations, the result will be the same as forgetBeanNamesForType(type, true, true)
.Bean names returned by this method should always return bean names in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the generically typed class or interface to match- Returns:
- the names of beans (or objects created by FactoryBeans) matching the given object type (including subclasses), or an empty array if none
- Since:
- 4.2
- See Also:
BeanFactory.isTypeMatch(String, ResolvableType)
,FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, ResolvableType)
getBeanNamesForType
String[] getBeanNamesForType(ResolvableType type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans if the "allowEagerInit" flag is set, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type. If "allowEagerInit" is not set, only raw FactoryBeans will be checked (which doesn't require initialization of each FactoryBean).
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
Bean names returned by this method should always return bean names in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the generically typed class or interface to matchincludeNonSingletons
- whether to include prototype or scoped beans too or just singletons (also applies to FactoryBeans)allowEagerInit
- whether to initialize lazy-init singletons and objects created by FactoryBeans (or by factory methods with a "factory-bean" reference) for the type check. Note that FactoryBeans need to be eagerly initialized to determine their type: So be aware that passing in "true" for this flag will initialize FactoryBeans and "factory-bean" references.- Returns:
- the names of beans (or objects created by FactoryBeans) matching the given object type (including subclasses), or an empty array if none
- Since:
- 5.2
- See Also:
FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, ResolvableType, boolean, boolean)
getBeanNamesForType
String[] getBeanNamesForType(@Nullable Class<?> type)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type.
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
This version of
getBeanNamesForType
matches all kinds of beans, be it singletons, prototypes, or FactoryBeans. In most implementations, the result will be the same as forgetBeanNamesForType(type, true, true)
.Bean names returned by this method should always return bean names in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the class or interface to match, ornull
for all bean names- Returns:
- the names of beans (or objects created by FactoryBeans) matching the given object type (including subclasses), or an empty array if none
- See Also:
FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, Class)
getBeanNamesForType
String[] getBeanNamesForType(@Nullable Class<?> type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit)
Return the names of beans matching the given type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans if the "allowEagerInit" flag is set, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type. If "allowEagerInit" is not set, only raw FactoryBeans will be checked (which doesn't require initialization of each FactoryBean).
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
Bean names returned by this method should always return bean names in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the class or interface to match, ornull
for all bean namesincludeNonSingletons
- whether to include prototype or scoped beans too or just singletons (also applies to FactoryBeans)allowEagerInit
- whether to initialize lazy-init singletons and objects created by FactoryBeans (or by factory methods with a "factory-bean" reference) for the type check. Note that FactoryBeans need to be eagerly initialized to determine their type: So be aware that passing in "true" for this flag will initialize FactoryBeans and "factory-bean" references.- Returns:
- the names of beans (or objects created by FactoryBeans) matching the given object type (including subclasses), or an empty array if none
- See Also:
FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beanNamesForTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, Class, boolean, boolean)
getBeansOfType
<T> Map<String,T> getBeansOfType(@Nullable Class<T> type) throws BeansException
Return the bean instances that match the given object type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type.
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beansOfTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
This version of getBeansOfType matches all kinds of beans, be it singletons, prototypes, or FactoryBeans. In most implementations, the result will be the same as for
getBeansOfType(type, true, true)
.The Map returned by this method should always return bean names and corresponding bean instances in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the class or interface to match, ornull
for all concrete beans- Returns:
- a Map with the matching beans, containing the bean names as keys and the corresponding bean instances as values
- Throws:
BeansException
- if a bean could not be created- Since:
- 1.1.2
- See Also:
FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beansOfTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, Class)
getBeansOfType
<T> Map<String,T> getBeansOfType(@Nullable Class<T> type, boolean includeNonSingletons, boolean allowEagerInit) throws BeansException
Return the bean instances that match the given object type (including subclasses), judging from either bean definitions or the value ofgetObjectType
in the case of FactoryBeans.NOTE: This method introspects top-level beans only. It does not check nested beans which might match the specified type as well.
Does consider objects created by FactoryBeans if the "allowEagerInit" flag is set, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized. If the object created by the FactoryBean doesn't match, the raw FactoryBean itself will be matched against the type. If "allowEagerInit" is not set, only raw FactoryBeans will be checked (which doesn't require initialization of each FactoryBean).
Does not consider any hierarchy this factory may participate in. Use BeanFactoryUtils'
beansOfTypeIncludingAncestors
to include beans in ancestor factories too.Note: Does not ignore singleton beans that have been registered by other means than bean definitions.
The Map returned by this method should always return bean names and corresponding bean instances in the order of definition in the backend configuration, as far as possible.
- Parameters:
type
- the class or interface to match, ornull
for all concrete beansincludeNonSingletons
- whether to include prototype or scoped beans too or just singletons (also applies to FactoryBeans)allowEagerInit
- whether to initialize lazy-init singletons and objects created by FactoryBeans (or by factory methods with a "factory-bean" reference) for the type check. Note that FactoryBeans need to be eagerly initialized to determine their type: So be aware that passing in "true" for this flag will initialize FactoryBeans and "factory-bean" references.- Returns:
- a Map with the matching beans, containing the bean names as keys and the corresponding bean instances as values
- Throws:
BeansException
- if a bean could not be created- See Also:
FactoryBean.getObjectType()
,BeanFactoryUtils.beansOfTypeIncludingAncestors(ListableBeanFactory, Class, boolean, boolean)
getBeanNamesForAnnotation
String[] getBeanNamesForAnnotation(Class<? extends Annotation> annotationType)
Find all names of beans which are annotated with the suppliedAnnotation
type, without creating corresponding bean instances yet.Note that this method considers objects created by FactoryBeans, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized in order to determine their object type.
- Parameters:
annotationType
- the type of annotation to look for (at class, interface or factory method level of the specified bean)- Returns:
- the names of all matching beans
- Since:
- 4.0
- See Also:
findAnnotationOnBean(java.lang.String, java.lang.Class<A>)
getBeansWithAnnotation
Map<String,Object> getBeansWithAnnotation(Class<? extends Annotation> annotationType) throws BeansException
Find all beans which are annotated with the suppliedAnnotation
type, returning a Map of bean names with corresponding bean instances.Note that this method considers objects created by FactoryBeans, which means that FactoryBeans will get initialized in order to determine their object type.
- Parameters:
annotationType
- the type of annotation to look for (at class, interface or factory method level of the specified bean)- Returns:
- a Map with the matching beans, containing the bean names as keys and the corresponding bean instances as values
- Throws:
BeansException
- if a bean could not be created- Since:
- 3.0
- See Also:
findAnnotationOnBean(java.lang.String, java.lang.Class<A>)
findAnnotationOnBean
@Nullable <A extends Annotation> A findAnnotationOnBean(String beanName, Class<A> annotationType) throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException
Find anAnnotation
ofannotationType
on the specified bean, traversing its interfaces and super classes if no annotation can be found on the given class itself, as well as checking the bean's factory method (if any).- Parameters:
beanName
- the name of the bean to look for annotations onannotationType
- the type of annotation to look for (at class, interface or factory method level of the specified bean)- Returns:
- the annotation of the given type if found, or
null
otherwise - Throws:
NoSuchBeanDefinitionException
- if there is no bean with the given name- Since:
- 3.0
- See Also:
getBeanNamesForAnnotation(java.lang.Class<? extends java.lang.annotation.Annotation>)
,getBeansWithAnnotation(java.lang.Class<? extends java.lang.annotation.Annotation>)