BeanFactoryPostProcessor and BeanPostProcessor in lifecycle events

BeanFactoryPostProcessor is an interface and beans that implement it are actually beans that undergo the Spring lifecycle (Example below) but these beans don’t take part of the other declared beans’ lifecycle.

public class CustomBeanFactory implements BeanFactoryPostProcessor {

    @Override
    public void postProcessBeanFactory(ConfigurableListableBeanFactory beanFactory) throws BeansException {
        for (String beanName : beanFactory.getBeanDefinitionNames()) {

            BeanDefinition beanDefinition = beanFactory.getBeanDefinition(beanName);

            // Manipulate the beanDefiniton or whatever you need to do

        }
    }
}

The differences about BeanFactoryPostProcessor and BeanPostProcessor:

  1. A bean implementing BeanFactoryPostProcessor is called when all bean definitions will have been loaded, but no beans will have been instantiated yet. This allows for overriding or adding properties even to eager-initializing beans. This will let you have access to all the beans that you have defined in XML or that are annotated (scanned via component-scan).
  2. A bean implementing BeanPostProcessor operate on bean (or object) instances which means that when the Spring IoC container instantiates a bean instance then BeanPostProcessor interfaces do their work.
  3. BeanFactoryPostProcessor implementations are “called” during startup of the Spring context after all bean definitions will have been loaded while BeanPostProcessor are “called” when the Spring IoC container instantiates a bean (i.e. during the startup for all the singleton and on demand for the proptotypes one)

Leave a Comment

Hata!: SQLSTATE[HY000] [1045] Access denied for user 'divattrend_liink'@'localhost' (using password: YES)