Illarion Kovalchuk
Illarion Kovalchuk

Reputation: 5894

How to inject dependencies into HttpSessionListener, using Spring?

How to inject dependencies into HttpSessionListener, using Spring and without calls, like context.getBean("foo-bar") ?

Upvotes: 27

Views: 24242

Answers (3)

Teixi
Teixi

Reputation: 1097

With Spring 4.0 but also works with 3, I implemented the example detailed below, listening to ApplicationListener<InteractiveAuthenticationSuccessEvent> and injecting the HttpSession https://stackoverflow.com/a/19795352/2213375

Upvotes: 1

Yinzara
Yinzara

Reputation: 842

Since the Servlet 3.0 ServletContext has an "addListener" method, instead of adding your listener in your web.xml file you could add through code like so:

@Component
public class MyHttpSessionListener implements javax.servlet.http.HttpSessionListener, ApplicationContextAware {

    @Override
    public void setApplicationContext(ApplicationContext applicationContext) throws BeansException {
        if (applicationContext instanceof WebApplicationContext) {
            ((WebApplicationContext) applicationContext).getServletContext().addListener(this);
        } else {
            //Either throw an exception or fail gracefully, up to you
            throw new RuntimeException("Must be inside a web application context");
        }
    }           
}

which means you can inject normally into the "MyHttpSessionListener" and with this, simply the presence of the bean in your application context will cause the listener to be registered with the container

Upvotes: 31

axtavt
axtavt

Reputation: 242696

You can declare your HttpSessionListener as a bean in Spring context, and register a delegation proxy as an actual listener in web.xml, something like this:

public class DelegationListener implements HttpSessionListener {
    public void sessionCreated(HttpSessionEvent se) {
        ApplicationContext context = 
            WebApplicationContextUtils.getWebApplicationContext(
                se.getSession().getServletContext()
            );

        HttpSessionListener target = 
            context.getBean("myListener", HttpSessionListener.class);
        target.sessionCreated(se);
    }

    ...
}

Upvotes: 8

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