18

I am wondering if the following is possible. For testing purposes, I wish for different mock classes to be declared in the application context for different tests. These are acceptance tests, using the Jersey REST client. Is there a way to dynamically declare a bean at runtime? Does Spring have an API to allow changes to the application context after the context has been loaded?

1 Answer 1

24

The common way to have different beans in the application context is using profiles. You can read about profiles in the following spring source posts:

About your first question, you can declare beans at runtime via BeanDefinitionRegistry.registerBeanDefinition() method, for example:

  BeanDefinitionBuilder builder = BeanDefinitionBuilder.rootBeanDefinition(SomeClass.class);
  builder.addPropertyReference("propertyName", "someBean");  // add dependency to other bean
  builder.addPropertyValue("propertyName", someValue);      // set property value
  DefaultListableBeanFactory factory = (DefaultListableBeanFactory) context.getBeanFactory();
  factory.registerBeanDefinition("beanName", builder.getBeanDefinition());

Is possible also to register a singleton bean instance (already configured) with

context.getBeanFactory().registerSingleton(beanName, singletonObject)

Finally, Spring don't provides a clear way to change a bean after refreshing the context, but the most common approachs are:

Sign up to request clarification or add additional context in comments.

Comments

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Start asking to get answers

Find the answer to your question by asking.

Ask question

Explore related questions

See similar questions with these tags.