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Internally, the framework uses its own dependency injection container. The container loads key framework objects, so that any piece of the framework can be replaced, extended, or removed in a standard, consistent way. Plugins, in particular, leverage this capability to extend the framework to provide support for third-party libraries like Spring or Sitemesh.

(tick) Most applications won't need to extend the Bean Configuration.

Beans

The bean element has one required attribute, class, which specifies the Java class to be created or manipulated. A bean can either

  1. be created by the framework's container and injected into internal framework objects, or
  2. have values injected to its static methods

The first use, object injection, is generally accompanied by the type attribute, which tells the container which interface this object implements.

The second use, value injection, is good for allowing objects not created by the container to receive framework constants. Objects using value inject must define the the static attribute.

Attribute

Required

Description

class

yes

the name of the bean class

type

no

the primary Java interface this class implements

name

no

the unique name of this bean; must be unique among other beans that specify the same type

scope

no

the scope of the bean; must be either default, singleton, request, session, thread

static

no

whether to inject static methods or not; shouldn't be true when the type is specified

optional

no

whether the bean is optional or not

Sample usage

Bean Example (struts.xml)