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Spring 5.0 Cookbook

You're reading from   Spring 5.0 Cookbook Recipes to build, test, and run Spring applications efficiently

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787128316
Length 670 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sherwin John C. Tragura Sherwin John C. Tragura
Author Profile Icon Sherwin John C. Tragura
Sherwin John C. Tragura
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Spring FREE CHAPTER 2. Learning Dependency Injection (DI) 3. Implementing MVC Design Patterns 4. Securing Spring MVC Applications 5. Cross-Cutting the MVC 6. Functional Programming 7. Reactive Programming 8. Reactive Web Applications 9. Spring Boot 2.0 10. The Microservices 11. Batch and Message-Driven Processes 12. Other Spring 5 Features 13. Testing Spring 5 Components

Defining eager and lazy spring beans


At this point, it is clear already how beans are instantiated inside Spring 5.0 containers. The practical definition of Inversion of Control and Dependency Injection design patterns has been established too. Two approaches to implementing a container have been illustrated with the previous recipes. This time we will provide a recipe on how to decide what form of instantiation the beans must undergo in a container.

Getting started

We need both ch02-xml and ch02-jc in this recipe since the bean loading strategy depends on what type of ApplicationContext container is being used. There are two bean loading strategies in the Spring 5.0 framework namely eager and lazy loading.

How to do it...

Let us illustrate the eager and lazy loading of beans in a context definition using these steps:

  1. In the case of the XML-based ApplicationContext, eager loading means all the beans in the definition will be loaded and initialized aggressively in the heap memory during start...
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