]
Mark Struberg commented on CDI-237:
-----------------------------------
-1 for solving this on CDI level. One of the main goals of the beans.xml marker file is to
speed up scanning performance. Thus you have a chicken egg problem - especially in SE
environments.
David Blevins proposed a META-INF/scan.xml which could improve this situation which is
currently spread over various specs.
missing beans.xml in archive using javax.inject shouldn't
*silently* ignore injection sites
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Key: CDI-237
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-237
Project: CDI Specification Issues
Issue Type: Feature Request
Environment: N/A, any Java EE 6
Reporter: Craig Ringer
Priority: Minor
Labels: cdi, injection, injectionpoint, usability
It's common, especially for new users of Java EE and CDI, for confusion to arise
because of a missing or misplaced beans.xml file. Injection sites that should be injected
are null, interceptors don't run, etc. People experienced with CDI immediately spot
what's wrong, but if you haven't worked with EE much it can throw you quite
badly.
It's particularly problematic when beans.xml exists, but isn't where the server
expects it to be. This can happen when a jar-layout archive is deployed as a .war or vice
versa (something newbies can and will do), or when beans.xml is placed in META-INF/ for a
war archive where it's supposed to be in WEB-INF/ .
It would be very helpful if it were possible to efficiently detect an archive that uses
javax.inject.* annotations without a beans.xml file and issue a warning. To enhance the
usability of CDI and its accessibility to new developers, IMO the spec should encourage
this.
A deployment error when javax.inject.Inject etc are used without a beans.xml file
isn't appropriate, as there may be non-CDI code using those annotations, but a warning
would make a big difference to usability.
It's possible this is better done in an application-server specific context rather
than as anything to do with the CDI specification, since the AS is scanning the archive
during deployment anyway. If that's the case, it's probably best to move this
issue to the JBoss AS 7 JIRA.
If it's possible for a CDI impl to *efficiently* detect javax.inject.* and warn,
though, it'd be a good thing to encourage in the spec.
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