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https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-30?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.sys...
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John Ament updated CDI-30:
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Description:
In order to allow CDI to play well in the general ecosystem, it needs to have SPIs. These
SPIs need to allow other libraries to do things like register beans (CDI extensions), look
up a bean manager, and get managed versions of its classes.
CDI has no way currently to support a framework starting and stopping built in contexts.
These built in contexts are not really clear in how they are started, other than the
container is responsible for starting them. This means its near impossible for an
external library which is not Java EE aware to start these built in contexts. Being able
to reuse these contexts allow developers to build their beans once and reuse them in many
use cases.
These use cases may include:
1. Quartz Scheduler/CDI Integration. A Prototype of this is available in DeltaSpike,
where jobs can be managed beans, by overriding the InstanceJobFactory, and can have
contexts started via an annotation. To bring it a step further, Quartz, in order to
mirror Java EE capabilities, may want to say that during the execution of a job, an
instance of a request context is active. To do this, the developer should not need to do
anything, but instead Quartz may automatically register a job listener that starts and
stops the context (see:
http://www.quartz-scheduler.org/documentation/quartz-2.2.x/cookbook/JobLi...)
2. Camel-CDI. Camel may want to say that during the execution of a route, a request
context is active.
3. Netty/CDI (or any arbitrary network based server). During the reception of a message
over TCP, a request is active. Likewise, for the entire TCP connection a session context
is active.
4. Sparkjava/CDI. Assuming that sparkjava isn't running in a servlet container,
during the execution of an arbitrary reactive method call, a request context is available
for use.
was:Add management API for built in contexts allowing them to be reused as needed.
An API for managing built in contexts designed for other frameworks
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Key: CDI-30
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-30
Project: CDI Specification Issues
Issue Type: Feature Request
Components: Contexts
Affects Versions: 1.0
Reporter: Nicklas Karlsson
Assignee: John Ament
Fix For: 2.0 (discussion)
In order to allow CDI to play well in the general ecosystem, it needs to have SPIs.
These SPIs need to allow other libraries to do things like register beans (CDI
extensions), look up a bean manager, and get managed versions of its classes.
CDI has no way currently to support a framework starting and stopping built in contexts.
These built in contexts are not really clear in how they are started, other than the
container is responsible for starting them. This means its near impossible for an
external library which is not Java EE aware to start these built in contexts. Being able
to reuse these contexts allow developers to build their beans once and reuse them in many
use cases.
These use cases may include:
1. Quartz Scheduler/CDI Integration. A Prototype of this is available in DeltaSpike,
where jobs can be managed beans, by overriding the InstanceJobFactory, and can have
contexts started via an annotation. To bring it a step further, Quartz, in order to
mirror Java EE capabilities, may want to say that during the execution of a job, an
instance of a request context is active. To do this, the developer should not need to do
anything, but instead Quartz may automatically register a job listener that starts and
stops the context (see:
http://www.quartz-scheduler.org/documentation/quartz-2.2.x/cookbook/JobLi...)
2. Camel-CDI. Camel may want to say that during the execution of a route, a request
context is active.
3. Netty/CDI (or any arbitrary network based server). During the reception of a message
over TCP, a request is active. Likewise, for the entire TCP connection a session context
is active.
4. Sparkjava/CDI. Assuming that sparkjava isn't running in a servlet container,
during the execution of an arbitrary reactive method call, a request context is available
for use.
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