I have several beans that implement the same interface.
Each bean is annotated with
@Component
@Order(SORT_ORDER).
public class MyClass implements BeanInterface{
...
}
At one point I autowire a list of components and I expect a sorted list of beans.
The list of beans is not sorted according the orders I have set with the annotation.
I tried implementing the interface Ordered and the same behaviour occurs.
@Component
public class Factory{
@Autowired
private List<BeanInterface> list; // <- I expect a sorted list here
...
}
Am I doing anything wrong?
I found a solution to the issue, as you say, this annotation is not meant for that despite it would be a nice feature.
To make it work this way its just necessary to add the following code in the bean containing the sorted list.
@PostConstruct
public void init() {
Collections.sort(list,AnnotationAwareOrderComparator.INSTANCE);
}
Hope it helps.
Ordering autowired collections is supported since Spring 4.
See: Spring 4 Ordering Autowired Collections
Summary: if you add @Order(value=1)
, @Order(value=2)
... to your bean definitions, they will be injected in a collection ordered according to the value
parameter. This is not the same as declaring that you want the collection in natural order - for that you have to explicitly sort the list yourself after receiving it, as per Jordi P.S.'s answer.
The @Order
annotation is used to specify the order in which AOP advice is executed, it doesn't sort lists. To achieve sorting on your list have your BeanInterface
classes implement the Comparable interface and override the compareTo
method to specify how the objects should be sorted. Then you can sort the list using Collections.sort(list)
. Assuming BeanInterface
has a method called getSortOrder
that returns an Integer
object specifying the object's sort order, you could do something like this:
@Component
public class MyClass implements BeanInterface, Comparable<BeanInterface> {
public Integer getSortOrder() {
return sortOrder;
}
public int compareTo(BeanInterface other) {
return getSortOrder().compareTo(other.getSortOrder());
}
}
Then you can sort the list like this:
Collections.sort(list);
There is a jira issue about that feature in spring. I have added an implementation of beanfactory in the comment which im currently using to support that feature:
https://jira.springsource.org/browse/SPR-5574