[JBoss JIRA] (CDI-37) Stateless scope
by arjan tijms (Jira)
[ https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-37?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.sys... ]
arjan tijms commented on CDI-37:
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After more than three years this issue is still open, might be a good time to make a decision about closing it or not ;)
> Stateless scope
> ---------------
>
> Key: CDI-37
> URL: https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-37
> Project: CDI Specification Issues
> Issue Type: Feature Request
> Components: Contexts
> Affects Versions: 1.0
> Reporter: Adam Warski
> Priority: Major
> Fix For: TBD
>
>
> From a discussion on weld-dev (http://lists.jboss.org/pipermail/weld-dev/2011-January/002825.html):
> Here's my use-case:
> I have some beans which are inherently stateless, e.g. "services" or factory methods. The only fields they have are injected. I am using these beans in normal-scoped passivation-capable beans, e.g. session or conversation scoped. In such case, they also have to be passivation-capable, which means either
> (a) be normal-scoped (proxyable)
> (b) implement Serializable and leave the bean dependent-scoped
> If I go with (a) this means that I'd have to put my bean in the request, session, conversation or application scope. However none of these choices make much sense, as they indicate the my beans holds request/session/etc-scoped data - which it doesn't, as it is stateless.
> So I am left with (b) - implement Serializable + dependent scope. But is that the right thing to do always? Firstly, if I have a lot of such stateless beans, which are injected one into another, serializing a simple session-scope bean may mean that half the beans in my application get serialized. Secondly, a developer looking at such a bean could wonder why is this bean serializable? Esp if it doesn't have any state?
> Hence what I'd like in fact is a proxyable scope (normal), which on serialization would only write the proxy information, on de-serialization would inject a new instance of the bean (or from a pool), and on injection would either behave as dependent (new instance), or take beans from a pool. Just as the EJB Stateless scope (except that I don't want to make my bean an EJB).
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5 years, 9 months