Book Image

Java 9 Dependency Injection

By : Nilang Patel, Krunal Patel
Book Image

Java 9 Dependency Injection

By: Nilang Patel, Krunal Patel

Overview of this book

Dependency Injection (DI) is a design pattern that allows us to remove the hard-coded dependencies and make our application loosely coupled, extendable, and maintainable. We can implement DI to move the dependency resolution from compile-time to runtime. This book will be your one stop guide to write loosely coupled code using the latest features of Java 9 with frameworks such as Spring 5 and Google Guice. We begin by explaining what DI is and teaching you about IoC containers. Then you’ll learn about object compositions and their role in DI. You’ll find out how to build a modular application and learn how to use DI to focus your efforts on the business logic unique to your application and let the framework handle the infrastructure work to put it all together. Moving on, you’ll gain knowledge of Java 9’s new features and modular framework and how DI works in Java 9. Next, we’ll explore Spring and Guice, the popular frameworks for DI. You’ll see how to define injection keys and configure them at the framework-specific level. After that, you’ll find out about the different types of scopes available in both popular frameworks. You’ll see how to manage dependency of cross-cutting concerns while writing applications through aspect-oriented programming. Towards the end, you’ll learn to integrate any third-party library in your DI-enabled application and explore common pitfalls and recommendations to build a solid application with the help of best practices, patterns, and anti-patterns in DI.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

AOP introduction


While writing any software application, the best practice is to divide your code into multiple independent modules based on business use cases. For example, you write an Employee Service class for all employee-related functions, an HRService class for all HR-related functions, and so on and so forth.

In general, the whole application consists of a set of independent classes that span multiple verticals and doesn’t share the same class hierarchy. This diagram depicts this scenario: 

Irrespective of the independent nature of each vertical, there are a few common items you need to implement across all of them, such as transaction management, session management, audit logging, security, caching, or any such custom processing mechanism based on rules.

If you wish to implement these common services across verticals with a traditional approach, you need to put them into each of the methods in these classes manually. Taking an example of a logging mechanism, for this, you would need...