-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 38.8k
Spring Annotation Programming Model
Table of Contents
Over the years, the Spring Framework has continually evolved its support for annotations, meta-annotations, and composed annotations. This document is intended to aid developers (both end users of Spring as well as developers of the Spring Framework and Spring portfolio projects) in the development and use of annotations with Spring.
The primary goals of this document include explanations of the following:
- How to use annotations with Spring.
- How to develop annotations for use with Spring.
- How Spring finds annotations (i.e., how Spring's annotation search algorithms work).
This document does not aim to explain the semantics or configuration options for particular annotations in the Spring Framework. For details on a particular annotation, developers are encouraged to consult the corresponding Javadoc or applicable sections of the reference manual.
A meta-annotation is an annotation that is declared on another
annotation. An annotation is therefore meta-annotated if it is annotated with
another annotation. For example, any annotation that is declared to be
documented is meta-annotated with @Documented from the
java.lang.annotation package.
A stereotype annotation is an annotation that is used to declare the
role that a component plays within the application. For example, the
@Repository annotation in the Spring Framework is a marker for any class
that fulfills the role or stereotype of a repository (also known as
Data Access Object or DAO).
@Component is a generic stereotype for any Spring-managed component.
Any component annotated with @Component is a candidate for
component scanning. Similarly, any component annotated with an annotation
that is itself meta-annotated with @Component is also a candidate for
component scanning. For example, @Service is meta-annotated with
@Component.
Core Spring provides several stereotype annotations out of the box,
including but not limited to: @Component, @Service, @Repository,
@Controller, @RestController, and @Configuration. @Repository,
@Service, etc. are specializations of @Component.
A composed annotation is an annotation that is meta-annotated with one
or more annotations with the intent of combining the behavior associated with
those meta-annotations into a single custom annotation. For example, an
annotation named @TransactionalService that is meta-annotated with Spring's
@Transactional and @Service annotations is a composed annotation that
combines the semantics of @Transactional and @Service.
@TransactionalService is technically also a custom stereotype annotation.
The terms directly present, indirectly present, and present
have the same meanings as defined in the class-level Javadoc for
java.lang.reflect.AnnotatedElement in Java 8.
In Spring, an annotation is considered to be meta-present on an element
if the annotation is declared as a meta-annotation on some other annotation
which is present on the element. For example, given the aforementioned
@TransactionalService, we would say that @Transactional is meta-present
on any class that is directly annotated with @TransactionalService.
An attribute alias is an alias from one annotation attribute to another annotation attribute. Attributes within a set of aliases can be used interchangeably and are treated as equivalent. Attribute aliases can be categorized as follows.
-
Explicit Aliases: if two attributes in one annotation are declared as
aliases for each other via
@AliasFor, they are explicit aliases. -
Implicit Aliases: if two or more attributes in one annotation are
declared as explicit overrides for the same attribute in a meta-annotation
via
@AliasFor, they are implicit aliases. -
Transitive Implicit Aliases: given two or more attributes in one
annotation that are declared as explicit overrides for attributes in
meta-annotations via
@AliasFor, if the attributes effectively override the same attribute in a meta-annotation following the law of transitivity, they are transitive implicit aliases.
An attribute override is an annotation attribute that overrides (or shadows) an annotation attribute in a meta-annotation. Attribute overrides can be categorized as follows.
-
Implicit Overrides: given attribute
Ain annotation@Oneand attributeAin annotation@Two, if@Oneis meta-annotated with@Two, then attributeAin annotation@Oneis an implicit override for attributeAin annotation@Twobased solely on a naming convention (i.e., both attributes are namedA). -
Explicit Overrides: if attribute
Ais declared as an alias for attributeBin a meta-annotation via@AliasFor, thenAis an explicit override forB. -
Transitive Explicit Overrides: if attribute
Ain annotation@Oneis an explicit override for attributeBin annotation@TwoandBis an explicit override for attributeCin annotation@Three, thenAis a transitive explicit override forCfollowing the law of transitivity.
Many of the annotations within the Spring Framework and Spring portfolio
projects make use of the @AliasFor annotation for declaring attribute
aliases and attribute overrides. Common examples include @RequestMapping,
@GetMapping, and @PostMapping from Spring MVC as well as annotations
such as @SpringBootApplication and @SpringBootTest from Spring Boot.
The following sections provide code snippets to demonstrate these features.
Spring Framework 4.2 introduced first-class support for declaring and looking
up aliases for annotation attributes. The @AliasFor annotation can be used to
declare a pair of aliased attributes within a single annotation or to declare
an alias from one attribute in a custom composed annotation to an attribute in
a meta-annotation.
For example, @ContextConfiguration from the spring-test module is
declared as follows.
public @interface ContextConfiguration {
@AliasFor("locations")
String[] value() default {};
@AliasFor("value")
String[] locations() default {};
// ...
}The locations attribute is declared as an alias for the value
attribute, and vice versa. Consequently, the following declarations
of @ContextConfiguration are equivalent.
@ContextConfiguration("/test-config.xml")
public class MyTests { /* ... */ }@ContextConfiguration(value = "/test-config.xml")
public class MyTests { /* ... */ }@ContextConfiguration(locations = "/test-config.xml")
public class MyTests { /* ... */ }Similarly, composed annotations that override attributes from
meta-annotations can use @AliasFor for fine-grained control over exactly
which attributes are overridden within an annotation hierarchy. In fact, it is
even possible to declare an alias for the value attribute of a
meta-annotation.
For example, one can develop a composed annotation with a custom attribute override as follows.
@ContextConfiguration
public @interface MyTestConfig {
@AliasFor(annotation = ContextConfiguration.class, attribute = "value")
String[] xmlFiles();
// ...
}The above example demonstrates how developers can implement their own custom composed annotations; whereas, the following demonstrates that Spring itself makes use of this feature in many core Spring annotations.
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Documented
@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
public @interface GetMapping {
/**
* Alias for {@link RequestMapping#name}.
*/
@AliasFor(annotation = RequestMapping.class)
String name() default "";
/**
* Alias for {@link RequestMapping#value}.
*/
@AliasFor(annotation = RequestMapping.class)
String[] value() default {};
/**
* Alias for {@link RequestMapping#path}.
*/
@AliasFor(annotation = RequestMapping.class)
String[] path() default {};
// ...
}The Spring Composed project
is a collection of composed annotations for use with the Spring Framework
4.2.1 and higher. There you will find annotations such as @Get, @Post,
@Put, and @Delete that served as the inspiration for the @GetMapping,
@PostMapping, @PutMapping, and @DeleteMapping annotations that are
now part of Spring MVC and Spring WebFlux.
Feel free to check out spring-composed for further examples and inspiration
for how you can implement your own custom composed annotations, and for a
bit of geek humor and entertainment that further demonstrate the power of
@AliasFor, take a look at
Spring Polyglot.
The short answer is: no.
The value attributes in @Qualifier and in stereotype annotations (e.g., @Component, @Repository, @Controller, and any custom stereotype annotations) cannot be influenced by @AliasFor. The reason is that the special handling of these value attributes was in place years before @AliasFor was invented. Consequently, due to backward compatibility issues it is simply not possible to use @AliasFor with such value attributes.
- Document the general search algorithm(s) for annotations and meta-annotations on classes, interfaces, methods, fields, parameters, and annotations.
- What happens if an annotation is present on an element both locally and as a meta-annotation?
- How does the presence of
@Inheritedon an annotation (including custom composed annotations) affect the search algorithm?
- Document support for annotation attribute aliases configured via
@AliasFor.- What happens if an attribute and its alias are declared in an annotation instance (with the same value or with different values)?
- Typically an
AnnotationConfigurationExceptionwill be thrown.
- Typically an
- What happens if an attribute and its alias are declared in an annotation instance (with the same value or with different values)?
- Document support for composed annotations.
- Document support for meta-annotation attribute overrides in composed annotations.
- Document the algorithm used when looking up attributes, specifically explaining:
- implicit mapping based on naming convention (i.e., composed annotation declares an attribute with the exact same name and type as declared in the overridden meta-annotation)
- explicit mapping using
@AliasFor
- What happens if an attribute and one of its aliases are declared somewhere within the annotation hierarchy? Which one takes precedence?
- In general, how are conflicts involving annotation attributes resolved?
- Document the algorithm used when looking up attributes, specifically explaining: