Spring Framework
The Spring Framework is an application framework and inversion of control container for the Java platform. The framework's core features can be used by any Java application, but there are extensions for building web applications on top of the Java EE platform. Although the framework does not impose any specific programming model, it has become popular in the Java community as an addition to the Enterprise JavaBeans model. The Spring Framework is open source.
Version history
Version | Date | Notes |
0.9 | 2002 | |
1.0 | 2003 | |
2.0 | 2006 | |
3.0 | 2009 | |
4.0 | 2013 | |
5.0 | 2017 |
The first version was written by Rod Johnson, who released the framework with the publication of his book Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development in October 2002. The framework was first released under the Apache 2.0 license in June 2003. The first milestone release, 1.0, was released in March 2004 with further milestone releases in September 2004 and March 2005. The Spring 1.2.6 framework won a Jolt productivity award and a JAX Innovation Award in 2006. Spring 2.0 was released in October 2006, Spring 2.5 in November 2007, Spring 3.0 in December 2009, Spring 3.1 in December 2011, and Spring 3.2.5 in November 2013. Spring Framework 4.0 was released in December 2013. Notable improvements in Spring 4.0 included support for Java SE 8, Groovy 2, some aspects of Java EE 7, and WebSocket.
Spring Framework 4.2.0 was released on 31 July 2015 and was immediately upgraded to version 4.2.1, which was released on 01 Sept 2015. It is "compatible with Java 6, 7 and 8, with a focus on core refinements and modern web capabilities".
Spring Framework 4.3 has been released on 10 June 2016 and will be supported until 2020. It "will be the final generation within the general Spring 4 system requirements, ".
Spring 5 is announced to be built upon Reactive Streams compatible Reactor Core.
Modules
The Spring Framework includes several modules that provide a range of services:- Spring Core Container: this is the base module of Spring and provides spring containers.
- Aspect-oriented programming: enables implementing cross-cutting concerns.
- Authentication and authorization: configurable security processes that support a range of standards, protocols, tools and practices via the Spring Security sub-project.
- Convention over configuration: a rapid application development solution for Spring-based enterprise applications is offered in the Spring Roo module
- Data access: working with relational database management systems on the Java platform using Java Database Connectivity and object-relational mapping tools and with NoSQL databases
- Inversion of control container: configuration of application components and lifecycle management of Java objects, done mainly via dependency injection
- Messaging: configurative registration of message listener objects for transparent message-consumption from message queues via Java Message Service, improvement of message sending over standard JMS APIs
- Model–view–controller: an HTTP- and servlet-based framework providing hooks for extension and customization for web applications and RESTful Web services.
- Remote access framework: configurative remote procedure call -style marshalling of Java objects over networks supporting Java remote method invocation, CORBA and HTTP-based protocols including Web services
- Transaction management: unifies several transaction management APIs and coordinates transactions for Java objects
- Remote management: configurative exposure and management of Java objects for local or remote configuration via Java Management Extensions
- Testing: support classes for writing unit tests and integration tests
Inversion of control container (dependency injection)
Objects created by the container are also called managed objects or beans. The container can be configured by loading XML files or detecting specific Java annotations on configuration classes. These data sources contain the bean definitions that provide the information required to create the beans.
Objects can be obtained by means of either dependency lookup or dependency injection. Dependency lookup is a pattern where a caller asks the container object for an object with a specific name or of a specific type. Dependency injection is a pattern where the container passes objects by name to other objects, via either constructors, properties, or factory methods.
In many cases one need not use the container when using other parts of the Spring Framework, although using it will likely make an application easier to configure and customize. The Spring container provides a consistent mechanism to configure applications and integrates with almost all Java environments, from small-scale applications to large enterprise applications.
The container can be turned into a partially compliant EJB 3.0 container by means of the Pitchfork project. Some criticize the Spring Framework for not complying with standards. However, SpringSource doesn't see EJB 3 compliance as a major goal, and claims that the Spring Framework and the container allow for more powerful programming models.
The programmer does not directly create an object, but describe how they should be created, by defining it in the Spring configuration file. Similarly services and components are not called directly; instead a Spring configuration file defines which services and components must be called. This IoC is intended to increase the ease of maintenance and testing.
Aspect-oriented programming framework
The Spring Framework has its own Aspect-oriented programming framework that modularizes cross-cutting concerns in aspects. The motivation for creating a separate AOP framework comes from the belief that it should be possible to provide basic AOP features without too much complexity in either design, implementation, or configuration. The Spring AOP framework also takes full advantage of the Spring container.The Spring AOP framework is proxy pattern-based, and is configured at run time. This removes the need for a compilation step or load-time weaving. On the other hand, interception only allows for public method-execution on existing objects at a join point.
Compared to the AspectJ framework, Spring AOP is less powerful, but also less complicated. Spring 1.2 includes support to configure AspectJ aspects in the container. Spring 2.0 added more integration with AspectJ; for example, the pointcut language is reused and can be mixed with Spring AOP-based aspects. Further, Spring 2.0 added a Spring Aspects library that uses AspectJ to offer common Spring features such as declarative transaction management and dependency injection via AspectJ compile-time or load-time weaving. SpringSource also uses AspectJ AOP in other Spring projects such as Spring Roo and Spring Insight, with Spring Security also offering an AspectJ-based aspect library.
Spring AOP has been designed to make it able to work with cross-cutting concerns inside the Spring Framework. Any object which is created and configured by the container can be enriched using Spring AOP.
The Spring Framework uses Spring AOP internally for transaction management, security, remote access, and JMX.
Since version 2.0 of the framework, Spring provides two approaches to the AOP configuration:
- schema-based approach and
- @AspectJ-based annotation style.
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:aop="http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop"
xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc
http://www.springframework.org/schema/mvc/spring-mvc.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop
http://www.springframework.org/schema/aop/spring-aop.xsd">
The Spring team decided not to introduce new AOP-related terminology; therefore, in the Spring reference documentation and API, terms such as aspect, join point, advice, pointcut, introduction, target object, AOP proxy, and weaving all have the same meanings as in most other AOP frameworks.
Data access framework
Spring's data access framework addresses common difficulties developers face when working with databases in applications. Support is provided for all popular data access frameworks in Java: JDBC, iBatis/MyBatis, Hibernate, Java Data Objects, Java Persistence API, Oracle TopLink, Apache OJB, and Apache Cayenne, among others.For all of these supported frameworks, Spring provides these features
- Resource management - automatically acquiring and releasing database resources
- Exception handling - translating data access related exception to a Spring data access hierarchy
- Transaction participation - transparent participation in ongoing transactions
- Resource unwrapping - retrieving database objects from connection pool wrappers
- Abstraction for binary large object and character large object handling
Together with Spring's transaction management, its data access framework offers a flexible abstraction for working with data access frameworks. The Spring Framework doesn't offer a common data access API; instead, the full power of the supported APIs is kept intact. The Spring Framework is the only framework available in Java that offers managed data access environments outside of an application server or container.
While using Spring for transaction management with Hibernate, the following beans may have to be configured:
- A Data Source like
com.mchange.v2.c3p0.ComboPooledDataSource
ororg.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource
- A SessionFactory like
org.springframework.orm.hibernate3.LocalSessionFactoryBean
with a DataSource attribute - A HibernateProperties like
org.springframework.beans.factory.config.PropertiesFactoryBean
- A TransactionManager like
org.springframework.orm.hibernate3.HibernateTransactionManager
with a SessionFactory attribute
- An AOP configuration of cutting points.
- .
Transaction management
- working with local and global transactions
- working with nested transactions
- working with savepoints
- working in almost all environments of the Java platform
The Spring Framework ships a PlatformTransactionManager for a number of transaction management strategies:
- Transactions managed on a JDBC Connection
- Transactions managed on Object-relational mapping Units of Work
- Transactions managed via the JTA TransactionManager and UserTransaction
- Transactions managed on other resources, like object databases
- Programmatically, by using Spring's TransactionTemplate
- Configuratively, by using metadata like XML or Java annotations
Model–view–controller framework
The Spring Framework features its own model–view–controller web application framework, which wasn't originally planned. The Spring developers decided to write their own Web framework as a reaction to what they perceived as the poor design of the popular Jakarta Struts Web framework, as well as deficiencies in other available frameworks. In particular, they felt there was insufficient separation between the presentation and request handling layers, and between the request handling layer and the model.Like Struts, Spring MVC is a request-based framework. The framework defines strategy interfaces for all of the responsibilities that must be handled by a modern request-based framework. The goal of each interface is to be simple and clear so that it's easy for Spring MVC users to write their own implementations, if they so choose. MVC paves the way for cleaner front end code. All interfaces are tightly coupled to the Servlet API. This tight coupling to the Servlet API is seen by some as a failure on the part of the Spring developers to offer a high-level abstraction for Web-based applications. However, this coupling makes sure that the features of the Servlet API remain available to developers while also offering a high abstraction framework to ease working with it.
The DispatcherServlet class is the front controller of the framework and is responsible for delegating control to the various interfaces during the execution phases of an HTTP request.
The most important interfaces defined by Spring MVC, and their responsibilities, are listed below:
- Controller: comes between Model and View to manage incoming requests and redirect to proper response. Controller will map the http request to corresponding methods. It acts as a gate that directs the incoming information. It switches between going into model or view.
- HandlerAdapter: execution of objects that handle incoming requests
- HandlerInterceptor: interception of incoming requests comparable, but not equal to Servlet filters.
- HandlerMapping: selecting objects that handle incoming requests based on any attribute or condition internal or external to those requests
- LocaleResolver: resolving and optionally saving of the locale of an individual user
- MultipartResolver: facilitate working with file uploads by wrapping incoming requests
- View: responsible for returning a response to the client. Some requests may go straight to view without going to the model part; others may go through all three.
- ViewResolver: selecting a View based on a logical name for the view
java.util.Map
interface as a data-oriented abstraction for the Model where keys are expected to be string values.The ease of testing the implementations of these interfaces seems one important advantage of the high level of abstraction offered by Spring MVC. DispatcherServlet is tightly coupled to the Spring inversion of control container for configuring the web layers of applications. However, web applications can use other parts of the Spring Framework—including the container—and choose not to use Spring MVC.
A workflow of Spring MVC
When a user clicks a link or submits a form in their web-browser, the request goes to Spring DispatcherServlet. DispatcherServlet is a front-controller in spring MVC. It consults one or more handler mappings. DispatcherServlet has been chosen as an appropriate controller and forwards the request to it. The Controller processes the particular request and generates a result. It is known as Model. This information needs to be formatted in html or any front-end technology like JSP. This is the View of an application. All of the information is in the MODEL And VIEW object. When the controller is not coupled to a particular view, DispatcherServlet finds the actual JSP with the help of ViewResolver.Configuration of DispatcherServlet
DispatcherServlet must be configured in web.xmlRemote access framework
Spring's Remote Access framework is an abstraction for working with various RPC -based technologies available on the Java platform both for client connectivity and marshalling objects on servers. The most important feature offered by this framework is to ease configuration and usage of these technologies as much as possible by combining inversion of control and AOP.The framework also provides fault-recovery and some optimizations for client-side use of EJB remote stateless session beans.
Spring provides support for these protocols and products out of the box
- HTTP-based protocols
- * Hessian: binary serialization protocol, open-sourced and maintained by CORBA-based protocols
- * RMI : method invocations using RMI infrastructure yet specific to Spring
- * RMI : method invocations using RMI interfaces complying with regular RMI usage
- * RMI-IIOP : method invocations using RMI-IIOP/CORBA
- Enterprise JavaBean client integration
- * Local EJB stateless session bean connectivity: connecting to local stateless session beans
- * Remote EJB stateless session bean connectivity: connecting to remote stateless session beans
- SOAP
- * Integration with the Apache Axis Web services framework
Both client and server setup for all RPC-style protocols and products supported by the Spring Remote access framework is configured in the Spring Core container.
There is alternative open-source implementation of a remoting subsystem included into Spring Framework that is intended to support various schemes of remoting …
Convention-over-configuration rapid application development
[Spring Boot]
Spring Boot is Spring's convention-over-configuration solution for creating stand-alone, production-grade Spring-based Applications that you can "just run". It is preconfigured with the Spring team's "opinionated view" of the best configuration and use of the Spring platform and third-party libraries so you can get started with minimum fuss. Most Spring Boot applications need very little Spring configuration. Features:- Create stand-alone Spring applications
- Embed Tomcat or Jetty directly
- Provide opinionated 'starter' Project Object Models to simplify your Maven configuration
- Automatically configure Spring whenever possible
- Provide production-ready features such as metrics, health checks and externalized configuration
- Absolutely no code generation and no requirement for XML configuration.
Spring Roo
- Extensibility
- Java platform productivity
- Lock-in avoidance
- Runtime avoidance
- Usability
Batch framework
- logging/tracing
- transaction management
- job processing statistics
- job restart
Spring Batch executes a series of jobs; a job consists of many steps and each step consists of a READ-PROCESS-WRITE task or single operation task.
The "READ-PROCESS-WRITE" process consists of these steps: "read" data from a resource, "process" it, then "write" it to other resources. For example, a step may read data from a CSV file, process it, and write it into the database. Spring Batch provides many classes to read/write CSV, XML, and database.
For a "single" operation task, it means doing a single task only, like clean up the resources before or after a step is started or completed.
The steps can be chained together to run as a job.
Integration framework
is a framework for Enterprise application integration that provides reusable functions essential to messaging or event-driven architectures.- routers - routes a message to a message channel based on conditions
- transformers - converts/transforms/changes the message payload and creates a new message with transformed payload
- adapters - to integrate with other technologies and systems, JMS, XMPP, SMTP, IMAP, FTP
- filters - filters a message based on criteria. If the criteria are not met, the message is dropped
- service activators - invoke an operation on a service object
- management and auditing