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As mentioned in the introduction, the
BeanContext
API also provides a standard mechanism through which JavaBeans can discover and utilize the services offered by their enclosingBeanContext
. Service capability is defined by theBeanContextServices
interface. Because this interface is aBeanContext
extension, it inherits allBeanContext
membership capabilities. The discovery and requesting of services can be summarized in the following steps:
- A JavaBean that implements the
java.beans.beancontext.BeanContextServicesListener
interface joins the bean context (the context itself is aBeanContextServices
implementation), and registers its intent to be notified of new services via the context'saddBeanContextServicesListener(BeanContextServicesListener bcsl)
method.- A
java.beans.beancontext.BeanContextServiceProvider
registers a new service with the context via the context'saddService()
method. The context notifies all currently registered listeners that this new service has been added.- After being notified of the newly available service, the listening JavaBean requests an instance of the service from the context.
- The context tells the service provider to deliver the service to the requesting JavaBean.
BeanContextServices: Service Related Methods
Using a
java.beans.beancontext.BeanContextServicesSupport
object as the bean context, it is possible to:
- Add a service to this
BeanContext
:boolean addService(java.lang.Class serviceClass, BeanContextServiceProvider serviceProvider)
- Add a service to this
BeanContext
:- Revoke a service:
void revokeService(java.lang.Class serviceClass, BeanContextServiceProvider serviceProvider, boolean revokeCurrentServicesNow)
- Release a
BeanContextChild
's (or any arbitrary object associated with aBeanContextChild
) reference to the specified service:void releaseService(BeanContextChild child, java.lang.Object requestor, java.lang.Object service)
- Add a
BeanContextServicesListener
void addBeanContextServicesListener(BeanContextServicesListener bcsl)
- Remove a
BeanContextServicesListener
:void removeBeanContextServicesListener(BeanContextServicesListener bcsl)
- Get the currently available services for this context:
Iterator getCurrentServiceClasses()
- Determine whether or not a given service is currently available from this context:
boolean hasService(java.lang.Class serviceClass)
- Get a service from the context:
Object getService(BeanContextChild child, java.lang.Object requestor, java.lang.Class serviceClass, java.lang.Object serviceSelector, BeanContextServiceRevokedListener bcsrl)
- Get the list of service dependent service parameters (Service Selectors) for the specified service:
Iterator getCurrentServiceSelectors(java.lang.Class serviceClass)
JavaBeans nested into a
BeanContextServices
implementBeanContextServicesListener
to listen for new services being added, and/orBeanContextServiceRevokedListener
to listen for services being revoked.There are two event types that may be intercepted by such listeners:
BeanContextServiceAvailableEvent
: received by theBeanContextServicesListener
in order to identify the service being registered.BeanContextServiceRevokedEvent
: received by theBeanContextServiceRevokedListener
in order to identify the service being revoked.JavaBeans can query their enclosing bean context for a list of available services, or ask for a specific service by name. The service itself, however, is actually delivered by a
BeanContextServiceProvider
. The provider can be any object that implements thejava.beans.beancontext.BeanContextServiceProvider
interface. Services become available in a context via the bean context's addService() registration method.BeanContextServiceProvider offers the following three methods, which will be automatically called when a bean requests (or releases) a service from its context:
Object getService(BeanContextServices bcs, java.lang.Object requestor, java.lang.Class serviceClass, java.lang.Object serviceSelector)
Iterator getCurrentServiceSelectors(BeanContextServices bcs, java.lang.Class serviceClass)
public void releaseService(BeanContextServices bcs, java.lang.Object requestor, java.lang.Object service)
Release a service from any object that currently has a reference to itThe service itself is best described by this paragraph from the specification:
A service, represented by a Class object, is typically a reference to either an interface, or to an implementation that is not publicly instantiable. This Class defines an interface protocol or contract between a BeanContextServiceProvider, the factory of the service, and an arbitrary object associated with a BeanContextChild that is currently nested within the BeanContext the service is registered with.
The following section presents a sample application that uses a word counting service to count the number of words in a given text file.
A Word Counting Service Example
The classes defined in this sample application are:
DocumentBean.java
: A JavaBean that encapsulates aFile
object. Create an instance of this bean by passing it aString
indicating the name of the text file to represent. This bean extendsBeanContextChildSupport
, which allows it to listen for addition/revocation of services in its context. When the bean detects that aWordCount
service has been added to the context, it requests the service to count the number of words it contains.WordCountServiceProvider.java
: A class that acts as the factory for delivering theWordCount
service. This class implements theBeanContextServiceProvider
interface.WordCount.java
: This interface defines the service itself.DocumentTester.java
: The main test program.File:
DocumentBean.java
import java.beans.beancontext.*; import java.io.*; import java.util.*; /** * A JavaBean that encapsulates a text file. When added to a bean context, * this bean listens for a WordCount service to become available. When * the service does become available, the DocumentBean requests an * instance of the service. The service then counts the number of words in the file, * and prints a report to standard output. */ public final class DocumentBean extends BeanContextChildSupport { private File document; private BeanContextServices context; /** * Creates a new DocumentBean given the name of the file to read from. * @param fileName the name of the file to read from */ public DocumentBean(String fileName) { document = new File(fileName); } /** * Called when this bean detects that a new service * has been registered with its context. * * @param bcsae the BeanContextServiceAvailableEvent */ public void serviceAvailable(BeanContextServiceAvailableEvent bcsae) { System.out.println("[Detected a service being added to the context]"); // Get a reference to the context BeanContextServices context = bcsae.getSourceAsBeanContextServices(); System.out.println("Is the context offering a WordCount service? " + context.hasService(WordCount.class)); // Use the service, if it's available if (context.hasService(WordCount.class)) { System.out.println("Attempting to use the service..."); try { WordCount service = (WordCount)context.getService(this, this, WordCount.class, document, this); System.out.println("Got the service!"); service.countWords(); } catch(Exception e) { } } } /** * Called when this bean detects that a service * has been revoked from the context. * * @param bcsre the BeanContextServiceRevokedEvent */ public void serviceRevoked(BeanContextServiceRevokedEvent bcsre) { System.out.println("[Detected a service being revoked from the context]"); } }File:
WordCountServiceProvider.java
import java.beans.beancontext.*; import java.util.*; import java.io.*; /** * This class is the factory that delivers a word counting service. * The 3 methods defined in this class are the concrete implementations * of the BeanContextServiceProvider interface. For this demonstration, the primary * method of interest is getService(). The getService() methods returns a new * WordCount instance. It is called by the bean context when a nested * JavaBean requests the service. */ public final class WordCountServiceProvider implements BeanContextServiceProvider { public Object getService(BeanContextServices bcs, Object requestor, Class serviceClass, Object serviceSelector) { // For this demo, we know that the cast from serviceSelector // to File will always work. final File document = (File)serviceSelector; /* Return an instance of the service. The service itself is * the WordCount interface, which is implemented here using * an anonymous inner class. */ return new WordCount() { public void countWords() { try { // Create a Reader to the DocumentBean's File BufferedReader br = new BufferedReader(new FileReader(document)); String line = null; int wordCount = 0; while ((line = br.readLine()) != null) { StringTokenizer st = new StringTokenizer(line); while (st.hasMoreTokens()) { System.out.println("Word " + (++wordCount) + " is: " + st.nextToken()); } } System.out.println("Total number of words in the document: " + wordCount); System.out.println("[WordCount service brought to you by WordCountServiceProvider]"); br.close(); } catch(Exception e) { } } }; } public void releaseService(BeanContextServices bcs, Object requestor, Object service) { // do nothing } public Iterator getCurrentServiceSelectors(BeanContextServices bcs, Class serviceClass) { return null; // do nothing } }File:
WordCount.java
/** * The WordCount service. Implementations of the * countWords() method are provided by the * WordCountServiceProvider class. */ public interface WordCount { /** * Counts the number of words in the file. */ public abstract void countWords(); }File:
DocumentTester.java
import java.beans.beancontext.*; import java.util.*; /** * A test program that creates all of the objects, * a tests the service capabilities. Run this program * from the command line using java DocumentTester */ public class DocumentTester { public static void main(String[] args) { BeanContextServicesSupport context = new BeanContextServicesSupport(); // a bean context DocumentBean doc1 = new DocumentBean("Test.txt"); context.add(doc1); context.addBeanContextServicesListener(doc1); // listen for new services WordCountServiceProvider provider = new WordCountServiceProvider(); context.addService(WordCount.class, provider); // add the service to the context } }File:
Test.txt
This text will be analyzed by the WordCount service.[Detected a service being added to the context] Is the context offering a WordCount service? true Attempting to use the service... Got the service! Word 1 is: This Word 2 is: text Word 3 is: will Word 4 is: be Word 5 is: analyzed Word 6 is: by Word 7 is: the Word 8 is: WordCount Word 9 is: service. Total number of words in the document: 9 [WordCount service brought to you by WordCountServiceProvider]
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