The servlet event bridge has an @Initialized ServletContextEvent.
For JSF 2 there is also the possibility of the startup system event.
The ordering is currently hardcoded into weld-int by placing the
WeldListener before application servlet listeners. But I recall seeing
a ContextNotActive in a custom ServletListener so I'm not sure that is
foolproof either, someone with better as-weld integration knowledge
should perhaps look it over.
On Wed, Oct 20, 2010 at 12:49 PM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Doing it in the CDI container startup callbacks is not correct as
the
container is not fully initialised. For Seam 3.0 you will need to use an EJB
3.1 singleton (which provides an application startup callback), or listen to
servlet callbacks (we may need to fix the ordering of the Seam servlet
listeners outside of JBoss AS/GF). Doing this through events also addresses
your "transient startup scope" as you can simply declare your bean
dependent, meaning it will be destroyed after the observer invocation is
complete.
We should standardise the events sent so that they can be called outside of
Servlet too. What are they currently?
On 20 Oct 2010, at 05:05, Dan Allen wrote:
> One of the popular features in the Seam 2 "container" is startup
components (which would be startup beans in CDI terminology). I'm trying to
determine the best way to approach this feature and where it should live
(i.e., Weld X and/or Seam 3, hence the x-post).
>
> While it's true that EJB 3.1 supports startup beans, it unnecessarily
links them to:
>
> - enterprise beans (my, where have we heard this before? cough
transactions cough)
> - singletons
>
> Seam 2 supports startup components that are instantiated (as in
@PostConstruct gets invoked) when the scope to which the component is bound
is activated. Supported scopes include application and session. I don't see
any reason why we can't support all (or most) scopes in Weld X/Seam 3.
>
> At first glance, you might think about initializing @ApplicationScoped
@Startup beans in an AfterDeploymentValidation observer (the
application-scope is active at that point) [1] (also see note). That's
certainly one way to go, though perhaps jumping the gun as some other
extensions may still report a deployment error. It also doesn't address the
remaining scopes.
>
> The better place to do eager initialization is perhaps the Seam 3 Servlet
module. This module bridges the Servlet context events to the CDI event bus,
providing the opportunity to initialize components bound to the relevant
scopes. However, my concern is that if those events fire before the CDI
implementation has started the scope, it's going to result in a
ContextNotActiveException (Nik, would you be able to provide insight into
whether this ordering issue has been address?).
>
> I'd also like to entertain the idea of having a transient startup scope
(@ApplicationStartupScoped?). Most of the time developers employ a
application-scoped startup bean, it's doing something like seeding a
database, creating directories or some other routine that's a one time deal.
It seems like a waste to have these beans hang around long after their job
is done. In fact, I anticipate it becoming the most commonly-used scope for
startup beans.
>
> After considering the options, it seems to me that long-term, this
feature would be more robust if it were part of the CDI specification. (Even
the JSF managed bean container supports eager bean initialization for
application-scoped beans). Or perhaps I'm missing a very straightforward way
to address it.
>
> I'm interested in hearing your suggestions. After I get feedback about
which project/module should tackle this problem, I'll create a JIRA for it.
>
> -Dan
>
> [1]
http://gist.github.com/635719
>
> Note: There's another issue. BeanManager#getReference() may only return a
proxy and not instantiate the bean, meaning @PostConstruct is not yet
called. In the linked gist, I worked around this problem by invoking
toString() on the reference.
>
> I'll mention that Resin has addressed @Startup support for managed beans:
http://caucho.com/resin-4.0/examples/ioc-binding/viewfile?file=WEB-INF/cl...
>
> --
> Dan Allen
> Principal Software Engineer, Red Hat | Author of Seam in Action
> Registered Linux User #231597
>
>
http://mojavelinux.com
>
http://mojavelinux.com/seaminaction
>
http://www.google.com/profiles/dan.j.allen
> _______________________________________________
> weld-dev mailing list
> weld-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/weld-dev
_______________________________________________
weld-dev mailing list
weld-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/weld-dev