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Spring boot annotations

Below are some commonly used annotations.

Core Spring Framework Annotations

@Configuration: This annotation is applied onto a class. The class annotated with @Configuration is used as a source of bean definitions and other configuration related stuff.

@Configuration  
public class AppConfig  
{  
    @Bean
    Vehicle getScientist() {  
        return new Scientist();  
    }  
}

@ComponentScan: It is used to tell spring containers which all packages and subpackages to be searched to create beans. This annotation is used along with @Configuration.

We have to specify the basePackages to look for. The spring container not only looks into the same package but all the sub packages of the base package. For example, if basePackage is com.jts, then it will not only look into com.jts package but also in all the packages that begins with com.jts, such as com.jts.controller, com.jts.service, com.jts.entity etc.

@ComponentScan(basePackages = "com.javatrainingschool")
@Configuration
public Class AppConfig {

//some code

}

@Required: It applies to the bean setter method. It indicates that the annotated bean must be populated at configuration time with the required property, else it throws an exception BeanInitilizationException.

Example

  1. public class Machine   
  2. {  
  3. private Integer cost;  
  4. @Required  
  5. public void setCost(Integer cost)   
  6. {  
  7. this.cost = cost;  
  8. }  
  9. public Integer getCost()   
  10. {  
  11. return cost;  
  12. }     
  13. }  

@Autowired: Spring provides annotation-based auto-wiring by providing @Autowired annotation. It is used to autowire spring bean on setter methods, instance variable, and constructor. When we use @Autowired annotation, the spring container auto-wires the bean by matching data-type.

Example

  1. @Component  
  2. public class Customer  
  3. {  
  4. private Person person;  
  5. @Autowired  
  6. public Customer(Person person)   
  7. {   
  8. this.person=person;  
  9. }  
  10. }  

}  

@Bean: It is a method-level annotation. It is an alternative of XML <bean> tag. It tells the method to produce a bean to be managed by Spring Container.

Example

  1. @Bean  
  2. public BeanExample beanExample()   
  3. {  
  4. return new BeanExample ();  
  5. }  

Spring Framework Stereotype Annotations

@Component: It is a class-level annotation. It is used to mark a Java class as a bean. A Java class annotated with @Component is found during the classpath. The Spring Framework pick it up and configure it in the application context as a Spring Bean.

Example

  1. @Component  
  2. public class Student  
  3. {  
  4. …….  
  5. }  

@Controller: The @Controller is a class-level annotation. It is a specialization of @Component. It marks a class as a web request handler. It is often used to serve web pages. By default, it returns a string that indicates which route to redirect. It is mostly used with @RequestMapping annotation.

Example

  1. @Controller  
  2. @RequestMapping(“books”)  
  3. public class BooksController   
  4. {  
  5. @RequestMapping(value = “/{name}”, method = RequestMethod.GET)  
  6. public Employee getBooksByName()   
  7. {  
  8. return booksTemplate;  
  9. }  
  10. }  

@Service: It is also used at class level. It tells the Spring that class contains the business logic.

Example

  1. package com.javatrainingschool;  
  2. @Service  
  3. public class TestService  
  4. {  
  5. public void service1()  
  6. {  
  7. //business code  
  8. }  
  9. }  

@Repository: It is a class-level annotation. The repository is a DAOs (Data Access Object) that access the database directly. The repository does all the operations related to the database.

  1. package com.javatrainingschool;  
  2. @Repository   
  3. public class TestRepository  
  4. {  
  5. public void delete()  
  6. {     
  7. //persistence code  
  8. }  
  9. }  

Spring Boot Annotations

  • @EnableAutoConfiguration: It auto-configures the bean that is present in the classpath and configures it to run the methods. The use of this annotation is reduced in Spring Boot 1.2.0 release because developers provided an alternative of the annotation, i.e. @SpringBootApplication.
  • @SpringBootApplication: It is a combination of three annotations @EnableAutoConfiguration, @ComponentScan, and @Configuration.

Spring MVC and REST Annotations

  • @RequestMapping: It is used to map the web requests. It has many optional elements like consumes, header, method, name, params, path, produces, and value. We use it with the class as well as the method.

Example

  1. @Controller  
  2. public class BooksController   
  3. {  
  4. @RequestMapping(“/computer-science/books”)  
  5. public String getAllBooks(Model model)  
  6. {  
  7. //application code  
  8. return “bookList”;  
  9. }  
  • @GetMapping: It maps the HTTP GET requests on the specific handler method. It is used to create a web service endpoint that fetches It is used instead of using: @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.GET)
  • @PostMapping: It maps the HTTP POST requests on the specific handler method. It is used to create a web service endpoint that creates It is used instead of using: @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
  • @PutMapping: It maps the HTTP PUT requests on the specific handler method. It is used to create a web service endpoint that creates or updates It is used instead of using: @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.PUT)
  • @DeleteMapping: It maps the HTTP DELETE requests on the specific handler method. It is used to create a web service endpoint that deletes a resource. It is used instead of using: @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.DELETE)
  • @PatchMapping: It maps the HTTP PATCH requests on the specific handler method. It is used instead of using: @RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.PATCH)
  • @RequestBody: It is used to bind HTTP request with an object in a method parameter. Internally it uses HTTP MessageConverters to convert the body of the request. When we annotate a method parameter with @RequestBody, the Spring framework binds the incoming HTTP request body to that parameter.
  • @ResponseBody: It binds the method return value to the response body. It tells the Spring Boot Framework to serialize a return an object into JSON and XML format.
  • @PathVariable: It is used to extract the values from the URI. It is most suitable for the RESTful web service, where the URL contains a path variable. We can define multiple @PathVariable in a method.
  • @RequestParam: It is used to extract the query parameters form the URL. It is also known as a query parameter. It is most suitable for web applications. It can specify default values if the query parameter is not present in the URL.
  • @RequestHeader: It is used to get the details about the HTTP request headers. We use this annotation as a method parameter. The optional elements of the annotation are name, required, value, defaultValue. For each detail in the header, we should specify separate annotations. We can use it multiple time in a method
  • @RestController: It can be considered as a combination of @Controller and @ResponseBody annotations. The @RestController annotation is itself annotated with the @ResponseBody annotation. It eliminates the need for annotating each method with @ResponseBody.
  • @RequestAttribute: It binds a method parameter to request attribute. It provides convenient access to the request attributes from a controller method. With the help of @RequestAttribute annotation, we can access objects that are populated on the server-side.