Constructor Injection using Guice
I have some sample code which is using factories. I'd like to clean up the code by removing the factories and use Guice instead. I attempted to do开发者_开发问答 this but I hit a small roadblock. I am really new to Guice, so I am hoping someone can help me out here.
Existing client code (Using factories):
public class MailClient {
public static void main(String[] args) {
MailConfig config = MailConfigFactory.get();
config.setHost("smtp.gmail.com");
Mail mail = MailFactory.get(config);
mail.send();
}
}
My attempt to refactor using Guice:
//Replaces existing factories
public class MailModule extends AbstractModule {
@Override
protected void configure() {
bind(Mail.class)
.to(MailImpl.class);
bind(MailConfig.class)
.to(MailConfigImpl.class);
}
}
public class MailImpl implements Mail {
private final MailConfig config;
@Inject
public MailImpl(MailConfig config) {
this.config = config;
}
public void send() { ... }
}
public class MailClient {
public static void main(String[] args) {
MailModule mailModule = new MailModule();
Injector injector = Guice.createInjector(mailModule);
MailConfig config = injector.getInstance(MailConfig.class);
config.setHost("smtp.gmail.com");
Mail mail = //??
mail.send();
}
}
How would I construct an instance of MailImpl
using the object config
in my revised MailClient? Should I be using Guice in this way?
Take a look at AssistedInject. It appears to address this problem.
2 solutions are possible: 1) bind the config as a guice object also, including its host parameter. then just inject Mail, in your main method you cna ignore the fact that mail has further dependencies.
2) mail must be configured individually for each send (recipient?). then you have no choice, but create it yourself using MailFactory.
You can do everything in MailModule as follows:
public class MailModule extends AbstractModule {
@Override
protected void configure() {
... // other bindings
}
@Provides
MailConfig getMailConfig( ... ) {
MailConfig config = new MailConfig( ... );
config.setHost("smtp.gmail.com");
config;
}
}
If you want a singleton MailConfig, add the @Singleton annotation to getMailConfig(), and Bob's your uncle.
Note that arguments to getMailConfig must be bound. When you bind commonly used types like String, be sure to add a binding annotation.
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