blob: ede77eb328d900a75eacb3bf13e351c629c4a5ab [file] [log] [blame]
/**
* Copyright (C) 2006 Google Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
* you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
* You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package com.google.inject;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.Map;
/**
* Fulfills requests for the object instances that make up your application,
* always ensuring that these instances are properly injected before they are
* returned. The {@code Injector} is the heart of the Guice framework,
* although you don't typically interact with it directly very often. This
* "behind-the-scenes" operation is what distinguishes the dependency
* injection pattern from its cousin, service locator.
*
* <p>The {@code Injector} API has a few additional features: it allows
* pre-constructed instances to have their fields and methods injected and
* offers programmatic introspection to support tool development.
*
* <p>Contains several default bindings:
*
* <ul>
* <li>This {@link Injector} instance itself
* <li>A {@code Provider<T>} for each binding of type {@code T}
* <li>The {@link java.util.logging.Logger} for the class being injected
* <li>The {@link Stage} in which the Injector was created
* </ul>
*
* Injectors are created using the facade class {@link Guice}.
*
* @author crazybob@google.com (Bob Lee)
*/
public interface Injector {
/**
* Injects dependencies into the fields and methods of an existing object.
* Ignores the presence or absence of an injectable constructor.
*
* <p>Whenever Guice creates an instance, it performs this injection
* automatically (after first performing constructor injection), so if you're
* able to let Guice create all your objects for you, you'll never need to
* use this method.
*/
void injectMembers(Object o);
/**
* Gets all explicit bindings.
*
* <p>This method is part of the Injector
* Introspection API and is primarily intended for use by tools.
*/
Map<Key<?>, Binding<?>> getBindings();
/**
* Gets a binding for the given key, or null if no binding for this key is
* found. Returns explicit bindings as well as those synthesized by the
* container such as bindings for converted constants, etc.
*
* <p>This method is part of the Injector Introspection API and is
* primarily intended for use by tools.
*/
<T> Binding<T> getBinding(Key<T> key);
/**
* Gets a binding for the given type, or null if no binding for this type is
* found. Returns explicit bindings as well as those synthesized by the
* container such as bindings for converted constants, etc.
*
* <p>This method is part of the Injector Introspection API and is
* primarily intended for use by tools.
*/
<T> Binding<T> getBinding(Class<T> type);
/**
* Finds all bindings to the given type. This method is part of the Injector
* Introspection API and is primarily intended for use by tools.
*/
<T> List<Binding<T>> findBindingsByType(TypeLiteral<T> type);
/**
* Returns the provider used to obtain instances for the given injection key.
* When feasible, it's generally preferable to avoid using this method, in
* favor of having Guice inject your dependencies ahead of time.
*/
<T> Provider<T> getProvider(Key<T> key);
/**
* Returns the provider used to obtain instances for the given injection key.
* When feasible, it's generally preferable to avoid using this method, in
* favor of having Guice inject your dependencies ahead of time.
*/
<T> Provider<T> getProvider(Class<T> type);
/**
* Returns the appropriate instance for the given injection key; equivalent to
* {@code getProvider(key).get()}. When feasible, it's generally preferable to
* avoid using this method, in favor of having Guice inject your dependencies
* ahead of time.
*/
<T> T getInstance(Key<T> key);
/**
* Returns the appropriate instance for the given type; equivalent to
* {@code getProvider(type).get()}. When feasible, it's generally preferable
* to avoid using this method, in favor of having Guice inject your
* dependencies ahead of time.
*/
<T> T getInstance(Class<T> type);
}