Document Information

Preface

Part I Introduction

1.  Overview

2.  Using the Tutorial Examples

Part II The Web Tier

3.  Getting Started with Web Applications

4.  JavaServerTM Faces Technology

5.  Introduction to Facelets

6.  Unified Expression Language

7.  Using JavaServerTM Faces Technology in Web Pages

8.  Using Converters, Listeners and Validators

9.  Developing With JavaServerTM Faces Technology

10.  Java Servlet Technology

Part III Web Services

11.  Introduction to Web Services

12.  Building Web Services with JAX-WS

13.  Building RESTful Web Services with JAX-RS and Jersey

Part IV Enterprise Beans

14.  Enterprise Beans

15.  Getting Started with Enterprise Beans

16.  Running the Enterprise Bean Examples

Part V Contexts and Dependency Injection for the JavaTM EE Platform

17.  Introduction to Contexts and Dependency Injection for the JavaTM EE Platform

Overview of Contexts and Dependency Injection for the Java EE Platform

About Beans

About Managed Beans

Using Qualifiers

Injecting Beans

Using Scopes

Giving Beans EL Names

Adding Setter and Getter Methods

Using a Managed Bean in a Facelets Page

Injecting Objects by Using Producer Methods

Configuring a CDI Application

Further Information

18.  Running the Basic Contexts and Dependency Injection Examples

Part VI Persistence

19.  Introduction to the Java Persistence API

20.  Running the Persistence Examples

21.  The Java Persistence Query Language

22.  Creating Queries Using the Criteria API

Part VII Security

23.  Introduction to Security in the Java EE Platform

24.  Getting Started Securing Enterprise Applications

25.  Getting Started Securing Web Applications

Part VIII JavaTM EE Supporting Technologies

26.  Introduction to JavaTM EE Supporting Technologies

27.  Transactions

28.  Resource Connections

Index

 

Beans as Injectable Objects

The concept of injection has been part of Java technology for some time. Since the Java EE 5 platform was introduced, annotations have made it possible to inject resources and some other kinds of objects into container-managed objects. CDI makes it possible to inject more kinds of objects, and to inject them into objects that are not container-managed.

The following kinds of objects can be injected:

  • (Almost) any Java class

  • Session beans

  • Java EE resources (data sources, Java Message Service topics, queues, and connection factories, and the like)

  • Persistence contexts (JPA EntityManager objects)

  • Producer fields, and objects returned by producer methods

  • Web service references

  • Remote enterprise bean references

For example, suppose you created a simple Java class with a method that returns a string:

package greetings;

public class Greeting {
    public String greet(String name) {
        return "Hello, " + name + ".";
    }
}

This class becomes a bean that you can then inject into another class. This bean is not exposed to the EL in this form. Giving Beans EL Names explains how you can make a bean accessible via the EL.