Showing posts with label Spring Interview Question. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Spring Interview Question. Show all posts

Monday, May 17, 2010

Spring Questions

What are the main benefits of aspect-oriented programming and why should developers hop on the bandwagon if they haven't already done so?



The main benefit of aspect-oriented programming is that it complements object-oriented programming. Object-oriented programming has spread into a very, very successful paradigm, and one of the great things about it is the way in which it helps you foster reuse and remove duplication. So, for example, if you have an account class and you [extend] from that savings account, checking account and credit account, you have a very nice way of using that hierarchy to encapsulate logic that you want to reuse.
Where it does, fall down, however, [is] in addressing what we call crosscutting concerns. Crosscutting concerns are pieces of functionality that may apply to a whole system that would, if they're implemented in the traditional object-oriented way, affect multiple classes and methods. Let's take, as an example, the notion of auditing. There is, of course, the ability to have helper functionality in a base class, like a base account class, that will, for example, run auditing behavior. But what happens if we say that every method that can lead to a change in the state of the savings account should be audited? There is no way in classic OO-modeling to avoid duplication in doing that. You will end up with the auditing code scattered between multiple methods. And, of course, it gets much worse when you say that auditing should apply to savings accounts, that it also should apply to different areas of functionality, such as inventories and addresses. The problem of duplication becomes still worse.
So aspect-oriented programming introduces the concept of an aspect. An aspect really is a way of modularizing the code that will apply a crosscutting concern. [With] the Spring Framework, the transaction management and security are delivered by an aspect approach, so users are not necessarily forced to explicitly work with OOP constructs, but they nevertheless benefit from this modularization of code that would otherwise be scattered.

Explain your role in the development of the Spring Framework. And could you briefly compare Spring to other frameworks, such as JavaServer Faces and WebWork?
The Spring Framework grew out of my first book on J2EE, Expert One-on-One J2EE Design and Development, which was published in late 2002. That book really helped to start what we might call the lightweight revolution in J2EE. It really argued that the traditional model was way too complex, and with the book I actually published 30,000 lines of code, which was originally intended to show my view on how things could be done in a simpler way through an application framework. But, of course, many readers became very interested in this and quickly I was persuaded to make it an open-source project. So development started in earnest in early 2003. Compared to other frameworks, Spring really created a niche for itself.
So Spring is what we call an application framework, and it actually addresses multiple architectural tiers. So if you look at frameworks [such as] Struts or WebWork, they more often than not just address one architectural layer. So Struts and WebWork are both Web frameworks. Compared to JSF, Spring and JSF are not really in the same space. JSF is essentially a component model for rendering Web resources, whereas Spring is more a framework that aims to bring an overall structure and coherency to your application as a whole. So Spring actually can be used with JSF. Spring does provide its own MVC [Model-View Controller] Web framework, which I guess can be regarded as being in the same space as Struts and WebWork, but, on the other hand, Spring is a modular framework.
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Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Spring Interview Question- 2 (mydeveloperconnection)


Q. Explain DI or IOC pattern.
A:  Dependency injection (DI) is a programming design pattern and architectural model, sometimes also referred to as inversion of control or IOC, although technically speaking, dependency injection specifically refers to an implementation of a particular form of IOC. Dependancy Injection describes the situation where one object uses a second object to provide a particular capacity. For example, being passed a database connection as an argument to the constructor instead of creating one internally. The term "Dependency injection" is a misnomer, since it is not a dependency that is injected, rather it is a provider of some capability or resource that is injected. There are three common forms of dependency injection: setter-, constructor- and interface-based injection. Dependency injection is a way to achieve loose coupling. Inversion of control (IOC) relates to the way in which an object obtains references to its dependencies. This is often done by a lookup method. The advantage of inversion of control is that it decouples objects from specific lookup mechanisms and implementations of the objects it depends on. As a result, more flexibility is obtained for production applications as well as for testing.

Q. What are the different IOC containers available?
A. Spring is an IOC container. Other IOC containers are HiveMind, Avalon, PicoContainer.

Q. What are the different types of dependency injection. Explain with examples.
A: There are two types of dependency injection: setter injection and constructor injection.
Setter Injection:  Normally in all the java beans, we will use setter and getter method to set and get the value of property as follows:

    public class namebean {
     String      name;  
     public void setName(String a) {
        name = a; }
     public String getName() {
        return name; }
    }
 
We will create an instance of the bean 'namebean' (say bean1) and set property as bean1.setName("tom"); Here in setter injection, we will set the property 'name'  in spring configuration file as showm below:

  
       tom
    

The subelement sets the 'name' property by calling the set method as setName("tom"); This process is called setter injection.
To set properties that reference other beans , subelement of is used as shown below,
 
  
      
  
 


 
Constructor injection:  For constructor injection, we use constructor with parameters as shown below,

 public class namebean {
     String name;
     public namebean(String a) {
        name = a;
     }   
}
 
We will set the property 'name' while creating an instance of the bean 'namebean' as namebean bean1 = new namebean("tom");
 
Here we use the element to set the the property by constructor injection as              My Bean Value     
 

Q. What is spring? What are the various parts of spring framework? What are the different persistence frameworks which could be used with spring?
A. Spring is an open source framework created to address the complexity of enterprise application development. One of the chief advantages of the Spring framework is its layered architecture, which allows you to be selective about which of its components you use while also providing a cohesive framework for J2EE application development. The Spring modules are built on top of the core container, which defines how beans are created, configured, and managed, as shown in the following figure. Each of the modules (or components) that comprise the Spring framework can stand on its own or be implemented jointly with one or more of the others. The functionality of each component is as follows:

The core container: The core container provides the essential functionality of the Spring framework. A primary component of the core container is the BeanFactory, an implementation of the Factory pattern. The BeanFactory applies the Inversion of Control (IOC) pattern to separate an application’s configuration and dependency specification from the actual application code.

Spring context: The Spring context is a configuration file that provides context information to the Spring framework. The Spring context includes enterprise services such as JNDI, EJB, e-mail, internalization, validation, and scheduling functionality.

Spring AOP: The Spring AOP module integrates aspect-oriented programming functionality directly into the Spring framework, through its configuration management feature. As a result you can easily AOP-enable any object managed by the Spring framework. The Spring AOP module provides transaction management services for objects in any Spring-based application. With Spring AOP you can incorporate declarative transaction management into your applications without relying on EJB components.

Spring DAO: The Spring JDBC DAO abstraction layer offers a meaningful exception hierarchy for managing the exception handling and error messages thrown by different database vendors. The exception hierarchy simplifies error handling and greatly reduces the amount of exception code you need to write, such as opening and closing connections. Spring DAO’s JDBC-oriented exceptions comply to its generic DAO exception hierarchy.

Spring ORM: The Spring framework plugs into several ORM frameworks to provide its Object Relational tool, including JDO, Hibernate, and iBatis SQL Maps. All of these comply to Spring’s generic transaction and DAO exception hierarchies.

Spring Web module: The Web context module builds on top of the application context module, providing contexts for Web-based applications. As a result, the Spring framework supports integration with Jakarta Struts. The Web module also eases the tasks of handling multi-part requests and binding request parameters to domain objects.

Spring MVC framework: The Model-View-Controller (MVC) framework is a full-featured MVC implementation for building Web applications. The MVC framework is highly configurable via strategy interfaces and accommodates numerous view technologies including JSP, Velocity, Tiles, iText, and POI.

Q. What is AOP? How does it relate with IOC? What are different tools to utilize AOP?
A:  Aspect-oriented programming, or AOP, is a programming technique that allows programmers to modularize crosscutting concerns, or behavior that cuts across the typical divisions of responsibility, such as logging and transaction management. The core construct of AOP is the aspect, which encapsulates behaviors affecting multiple classes into reusable modules. AOP and IOC are complementary technologies in that both apply a modular approach to complex problems in enterprise application development. In a typical object-oriented development approach you might implement logging functionality by putting logger statements in all your methods and Java classes. In an AOP approach you would instead modularize the logging services and apply them declaratively to the components that required logging. The advantage, of course, is that the Java class doesn't need to know about the existence of the logging service or concern itself with any related code. As a result, application code written using Spring AOP is loosely coupled. The best tool to utilize AOP to its capability is AspectJ. However AspectJ works at he byte code level and you need to use AspectJ compiler to get the aop features built into your compiled code. Nevertheless AOP functionality is fully integrated into the Spring context for transaction management, logging, and various other features.  In general any AOP framework control aspects in three possible ways:

Joinpoints: Points in a program's execution. For example, joinpoints could define calls to specific methods in a class
Pointcuts: Program constructs to designate joinpoints and collect specific context at those points
Advices: Code that runs upon meeting certain conditions. For example, an advice could log a message before executing a joinpoint
 
Q. What are the advantages of spring framework?
A. 
  1. Spring has layed architecture. Use what you need and leave you don't need now.
  2. Spring Enables POJO Programming. There is no behind the scene magic here. POJO programming enables continous integration and testability.
  3. Dependency Injection and Inversion of Control Simplifies JDBC (Read the first question.)
  4. Open source and no vendor lock-in.
Q. Can you name a tool which could provide the initial ant files and directory structure for a new spring project.
A: Appfuse or equinox.

Q. Explain BeanFactory in spring.
A: Bean factory is an implementation of the factory design pattern and its function is to create and dispense beans. As the bean factory knows about many objects within an application, it is able to create association between collaborating objects as they are instantiated. This removes the burden of configuration from the bean and the client. There are several implementation of BeanFactory. The most useful one is "org.springframework.beans.factory.xml.XmlBeanFactory" It loads its beans based on the definition contained in an XML file. To create an XmlBeanFactory, pass a InputStream to the constructor. The resource will provide the XML to the factory. BeanFactory  factory = new XmlBeanFactory(new FileInputStream("myBean.xml"));
This line tells the bean factory to read the bean definition from the XML file. The bean definition includes the description of beans and their properties. But the bean factory doesn't instantiate the bean yet. To retrieve a bean from a 'BeanFactory', the getBean() method is called. When getBean() method is called, factory will instantiate the bean and begin setting the bean's properties using dependency injection. myBean bean1 = (myBean)factory.getBean("myBean");

Q. Explain the role of ApplicationContext in spring.
A. While Bean Factory is used for simple applications, the Application Context is spring's more advanced container. Like 'BeanFactory' it can be used to load bean definitions, wire beans together and dispense beans upon request. It also provide


1) a means for resolving text messages, including support for internationalization.
2) a generic way to load file resources.
3) events to beans that are registered as listeners.
 
Because of additional functionality, 'Application Context' is preferred over a BeanFactory. Only when the resource is scarce like mobile devices, 'BeanFactory' is used. The three commonly used implementation of 'Application Context' are

1. ClassPathXmlApplicationContext : It Loads  context definition from an XML file located in the classpath, treating context definitions as classpath resources. The application context is loaded from the application's classpath by using the code
ApplicationContext    context = new ClassPathXmlApplicationContext("bean.xml");
2. FileSystemXmlApplicationContext : It loads context definition from an XML file in the filesystem. The application context is loaded from the file system by using the code
ApplicationContext    context = new FileSystemXmlApplicationContext("bean.xml");
3. XmlWebApplicationContext : It loads context definition from an XML file contained within a web application.
 
Q. How does Spring supports DAO in hibernate?
A. Spring’s HibernateDaoSupport class is a convenient super class for Hibernate DAOs. It has handy methods you can call to get a Hibernate Session, or a SessionFactory. The most convenient method is getHibernateTemplate(), which returns a HibernateTemplate. This template wraps Hibernate checked exceptions with runtime exceptions, allowing your DAO interfaces to be Hibernate exception-free.
Example:

public class UserDAOHibernate extends HibernateDaoSupport {
 
public User getUser(Long id) {
return (User) getHibernateTemplate().get(User.class, id);
}
public void saveUser(User user) {
getHibernateTemplate().saveOrUpdate(user);
if (log.isDebugEnabled()) {
log.debug(“userId set to: “ + user.getID());
}
}
public void removeUser(Long id) {
Object user = getHibernateTemplate().load(User.class, id);
getHibernateTemplate().delete(user);
}
 
}
 

Q. What are the id generator classes in hibernate?
A:  increment: It generates identifiers of type long, short or int that are unique only when no other process is inserting data into the same table. It should not the used in the clustered environment.
identity: It supports identity columns in DB2, MySQL, MS SQL Server, Sybase and HypersonicSQL. The returned identifier is of type long, short or int.
sequence: The sequence generator uses a sequence in DB2, PostgreSQL, Oracle, SAP DB, McKoi or a generator in Interbase. The returned identifier is of type long, short or int
hilo: The hilo generator uses a hi/lo algorithm to efficiently generate identifiers of type long, short or int, given a table and column (by default hibernate_unique_key and next_hi respectively) as a source of hi values. The hi/lo algorithm generates identifiers that are unique only for a particular database. Do not use this generator with connections enlisted with JTA or with a user-supplied connection.
seqhilo: The seqhilo generator uses a hi/lo algorithm to efficiently generate identifiers of type long, short or int, given a named database sequence.
uuid: The uuid generator uses a 128-bit UUID algorithm to generate identifiers of type string, unique within a network (the IP address is used). The UUID is encoded as a string of hexadecimal digits of length 32.
guid: It uses a database-generated GUID string on MS SQL Server and MySQL.
native: It picks identity, sequence or hilo depending upon the capabilities of the underlying database.
assigned: lets the application to assign an identifier to the object before save() is called. This is the default strategy if no element is specified.
select: retrieves a primary key assigned by a database trigger by selecting the row by some unique key and retrieving the primary key value.
foreign: uses the identifier of another associated object. Usually used in conjunction with a primary key association.

Q. How is a typical spring implementation look like?
A. For a typical Spring Application we need the following files
 

1. An interface that defines the functions.
2. An Implementation that contains properties, its setter and getter methods, functions etc.,
3. A XML file called Spring configuration file.
4. Client program that uses the function.

 
Q. How do you define hibernate mapping file in spring?
A. Add the hibernate mapping file entry in mapping resource inside Spring’s applicationContext.xml file in the web/WEB-INF directory.


   
        org/appfuse/model/User.hbm.xml
   

 

Q. How do you configure spring in a web application?
A. It is very easy to configure any J2EE-based web application to use Spring. At the very least, you can simply add Spring’s ContextLoaderListener to your web.xml file:


    org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener


 
Q. Can you have xyz.xml file instead of applicationcontext.xml?
A. ContextLoaderListener is a ServletContextListener that initializes when your webapp starts up. By default, it looks for Spring’s configuration file at WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml. You can change this default value by specifying a element named “contextConfigLocation.” Example:
 


    org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener
 
   
        contextConfigLocation        /WEB-INF/xyz.xml   

 
   

 

 
Q. How do you configure your database driver in spring?
A. Using datasource "org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource". Example:


   
        org.hsqldb.jdbcDriver
   

   
        jdbc:hsqldb:db/appfuse
   

    sa
   

 

Q. How can you configure JNDI instead of datasource in spring applicationcontext.xml?
A. Using "org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean". Example:


   
        java:comp/env/jdbc/appfuse
   


 
Q. What are the key benifits of Hibernate?
A:  These are the key benifits of Hibernate:
  • Transparent persistence based on POJOs without byte code processing 
  • Powerful object-oriented hibernate query language
  • Descriptive O/R Mapping through mapping file.
  • Automatic primary key generation 
  • Hibernate cache : Session Level, Query and Second level cache.
  • Performance: Lazy initialization, Outer join fetching, Batch fetching
Q. What is hibernate session and session factory? How do you configure sessionfactory in spring configuration file?
A. Hibernate Session is the main runtime interface between a Java application and Hibernate. SessionFactory allows applications to create hibernate session by reading hibernate configurations file hibernate.cfg.xml.

// Initialize the Hibernate environment
Configuration cfg = new Configuration().configure();
// Create the session factory
SessionFactory factory = cfg.buildSessionFactory();
// Obtain the new session object
Session session = factory.openSession();
 
The call to Configuration().configure() loads the hibernate.cfg.xml configuration file and initializes the Hibernate environment. Once the configuration is initialized, you can make any additional modifications you desire programmatically. However, you must make these modifications prior to creating the SessionFactory instance. An instance of SessionFactory is typically created once and used to create all sessions related to a given context.
The main function of the Session is to offer create, read and delete operations for instances of mapped entity classes. Instances may exist in one of three states:

transient: never persistent, not associated with any Session
persistent: associated with a unique Session
detached: previously persistent, not associated with any Session
 
A Hibernate Session object represents a single unit-of-work for a given data store and is opened by a SessionFactory instance. You must close Sessions when all work for a transaction is completed. The following illustrates a typical Hibernate session:
Session session = null;
UserInfo user = null;
Transaction tx = null;
try {
   session = factory.openSession();
   tx = session.beginTransaction();
   user = (UserInfo)session.load(UserInfo.class, id);
   tx.commit();
} catch(Exception e) {
   if (tx != null) {
      try {
         tx.rollback();
      } catch (HibernateException e1) {
         throw new DAOException(e1.toString()); }
   } throw new DAOException(e.toString());
} finally {
   if (session != null) {
      try {
         session.close();
      } catch (HibernateException e) { }
   }
}

Q. What is the difference between hibernate get and load methods?
A. The load() method is older; get() was added to Hibernate’s API due to user request. The difference is trivial:
The following Hibernate code snippet retrieves a User object from the database:  User user = (User) session.get(User.class, userID);
The get() method is special because the identifier uniquely identifies a single instance of a class. Hence it’s common for applications to use the identifier as a convenient handle to a persistent object. Retrieval by identifier can use the cache when retrieving an object, avoiding a database hit if the object is already cached.
Hibernate also provides a load() method:  User user = (User) session.load(User.class, userID);
If load() can’t find the object in the cache or database, an exception is thrown. The load() method never returns null. The get() method returns
null if the object can’t be found. The load() method may return a proxy instead of a real persistent instance. A proxy is a placeholder instance of a runtime-generated subclass (through cglib or Javassist) of a mapped persistent class, it can initialize itself if any method is called that is not the mapped database identifier getter-method. On the other hand, get() never returns a proxy. Choosing between get() and load() is easy: If you’re certain the persistent object exists, and nonexistence would be considered exceptional, load() is a good option. If you aren’t certain there is a persistent instance with the given
identifier, use get() and test the return value to see if it’s null. Using load() has a further implication: The application may retrieve a valid reference (a proxy) to a
persistent instance without hitting the database to retrieve its persistent state. So load() might not throw an exception when it doesn’t find the persistent object
in the cache or database; the exception would be thrown later, when the proxy is accessed.

Q. What type of transaction management is supported in hibernate?
A. Hibernate communicates with the database via a JDBC Connection; hence it must support both managed and non-managed transactions.
    non-managed in web containers:


   
       
   

 
    managed in application server using JTA:


   
       
   

 

Q. What is lazy loading and how do you achieve that in hibernate?
A. Lazy setting decides whether to load child objects while loading the Parent Object. You need to specify parent class.Lazy = true in hibernate mapping file. By default the lazy loading of the child objects is true. This make sure that the child objects are not loaded unless they are explicitly invoked in the application by calling getChild() method on parent. In this case hibernate issues a fresh database call to load the child when getChild() is actully called on the Parent object. But in some cases you do need to load the child objects when parent is loaded. Just make the lazy=false and hibernate will load the child when parent is loaded from the database. Examples: Address child of User class can be made lazy if it is not required frequently. But you may need to load the Author object for Book parent whenever you deal with the book for online bookshop.
Hibernate does not support lazy initialization for detached objects. Access to a lazy association outside of the context of an open Hibernate session will result in an exception.

Q. What are the different fetching strategy in Hibernate?
A. Hibernate3 defines the following fetching strategies:

Join fetching - Hibernate retrieves the associated instance or collection in the same SELECT, using an OUTER JOIN.
Select fetching - a second SELECT is used to retrieve the associated entity or collection. Unless you explicitly disable lazy fetching by specifying lazy="false", this second select will only be executed when you actually access the association.
Subselect fetching - a second SELECT is used to retrieve the associated collections for all entities retrieved in a previous query or fetch. Unless you explicitly disable lazy fetching by specifying lazy="false", this second select will only be executed when you actually access the association.Batch fetching - an optimization strategy for select fetching - Hibernate retrieves a batch of entity instances or collections in a single SELECT, by specifying a list of primary keys or foreign keys.
For more details read short primer on fetching strategy at http://www.hibernate.org/315.html
 
Q. What are different types of cache hibernate supports ?
A. Caching is widely used for optimizing database applications. Hibernate uses two different caches for objects: first-level cache and second-level cache. First-level cache is associated with the Session object, while second-level cache is associated with the Session Factory object. By default, Hibernate uses first-level cache on a per-transaction basis. Hibernate uses this cache mainly to reduce the number of SQL queries it needs to generate within a given transaction. For example, if an object is modified several times within the same transaction, Hibernate will generate only one SQL UPDATE statement at the end of the transaction, containing all the modifications. To reduce database traffic, second-level cache keeps loaded objects at the Session Factory level between transactions. These objects are available to the whole application, not just to the user running the query. This way, each time a query returns an object that is already loaded in the cache, one or more database transactions potentially are avoided. In addition, you can use a query-level cache if you need to cache actual query results, rather than just persistent objects. The query cache should always be used in conjunction with the second-level cache. Hibernate supports the following open-source cache implementations out-of-the-box:

  • EHCache is a fast, lightweight, and easy-to-use in-process cache. It supports read-only and read/write caching, and memory- and disk-based caching. However, it does not support clustering.
  • OSCache is another open-source caching solution. It is part of a larger package, which also provides caching functionalities for JSP pages or arbitrary objects. It is a powerful and flexible package, which, like EHCache, supports read-only and read/write caching, and memory- and disk-based caching. It also provides basic support for clustering via either JavaGroups or JMS.
  • SwarmCache is a simple cluster-based caching solution based on JavaGroups. It supports read-only or nonstrict read/write caching (the next section explains this term). This type of cache is appropriate for applications that typically have many more read operations than write operations.
  • JBoss TreeCache is a powerful replicated (synchronous or asynchronous) and transactional cache. Use this solution if you really need a true transaction-capable caching architecture.
  • Commercial Tangosol Coherence cache.
Q. What are the different caching strategies?
A. The following four caching strategies are available:
  • Read-only: This strategy is useful for data that is read frequently but never updated. This is by far the simplest and best-performing cache strategy.
  • Read/write: Read/write caches may be appropriate if your data needs to be updated. They carry more overhead than read-only caches. In non-JTA environments, each transaction should be completed when Session.close() or Session.disconnect() is called.
  • Nonstrict read/write: This strategy does not guarantee that two transactions won't simultaneously modify the same data. Therefore, it may be most appropriate for data that is read often but only occasionally modified.
  • Transactional: This is a fully transactional cache that may be used only in a JTA environment.
Q. How do you configure 2nd level cach in hibernate?
A. To activate second-level caching, you need to define the hibernate.cache.provider_class property in the hibernate.cfg.xml file as follows:
   
        org.hibernate.cache.EHCacheProvider
   

By default, the second-level cache is activated and uses the EHCache provider.
To use the query cache you must first enable it by setting the property hibernate.cache.use_query_cache to true in hibernate.properties.

Q. What is the difference between sorted and ordered collection in hibernate?
A. A sorted collection is sorted in-memory using java comparator, while order collection is ordered at the database level using order by clause.

Q. What are the types of inheritence models and describe how they work like vertical inheritence and horizontal?
A. There are three types of inheritance mapping in hibernate :


Example: Let us take the simple example of 3 java classes. Class Manager and Worker are inherited from Employee Abstract class.
1. Table per concrete class with unions : In this case there will be 2 tables. Tables: Manager, Worker [all common attributes will be duplicated]
2. Table per class hierarchy: Single Table can be mapped to a class hierarchy. There will be only one table in database called 'Employee' that will represent all the attributes required for all 3 classes. But it needs some discriminating column to differentiate between Manager and worker;
3. Table per subclass: In this case there will be 3 tables represent Employee, Manager and Worker
 

Spring Interview Question-1 (javabeat)


1) What is Spring?

Spring is a lightweight inversion of control and aspect-oriented container framework.

2) Explain Spring?

  • Lightweight : Spring is lightweight when it comes to size and transparency. The basic version of spring framework is around 1MB. And the processing overhead is also very negligible.
  • Inversion of control (IoC) : Loose coupling is achieved in spring using the technique Inversion of Control. The objects give their dependencies instead of creating or looking for dependent objects.
  • Aspect oriented (AOP) : Spring supports Aspect oriented programming and enables cohesive development by separating application business logic from system services.
  • Container : Spring contains and manages the life cycle and configuration of application objects.
  • Framework : Spring provides most of the intra functionality leaving rest of the coding to the developer.

3) What are the different modules in Spring framework?

  • The Core container module
  • Application context module
  • AOP module (Aspect Oriented Programming)
  • JDBC abstraction and DAO module
  • O/R mapping integration module (Object/Relational)
  • Web module
  • MVC framework module

4) What is the structure of Spring framework?

5) What is the Core container module?

This module is provides the fundamental functionality of the spring framework. In this module BeanFactory is the heart of any spring-based application. The entire framework was built on the top of this module. This module makes the Spring container.

6) What is Application context module?

The Application context module makes spring a framework. This module extends the concept of BeanFactory, providing support for internationalization (I18N) messages, application lifecycle events, and validation. This module also supplies many enterprise services such JNDI access, EJB integration, remoting, and scheduling. It also provides support to other framework


7) What is AOP module?

The AOP module is used for developing aspects for our Spring-enabled application. Much of the support has been provided by the AOP Alliance in order to ensure the interoperability between Springand other AOP frameworks. This module also introduces metadataprogramming to Spring. Using Spring’s metadata support, we will be able to add annotations to our source code that instructSpring on where and how to apply aspects.

8) What is JDBC abstraction and DAO module?

Using this module we can keep up the database code clean and simple, and prevent problems that result from a failure to close database resources. A new layer of meaningful exceptions on top of the error messages given by several database servers is bought in this module. In addition, this module uses Spring’s AOP moduleto provide transaction management services for objects in a Spring application.

9) What are object/relational mapping integration module?

Spring also supports for using of an object/relational mapping (ORM) tool over straight JDBC by providing the ORM module. Spring provide support to tie into several popular ORM frameworks, including HibernateJDO, and iBATIS SQL Maps. Spring’s transaction management supports each of these ORM frameworks as well as JDBC.

10) What is web module?

This module is built on the application context module, providing a context that is appropriate for web-based applications. This module also contains support for several web-oriented tasks such as transparently handling multipart requests for file uploads and programmatic binding of request parameters to your business objects. It also contains integration support with Jakarta Struts.

11) What is web module?

Spring comes with a full-featured MVC framework for building web applications. Although Spring can easily be integrated with other MVC frameworks, such as Struts, Spring’s MVC framework uses IoC to provide for a cleanseparation of controller logic from business objects. It also allows you to declaratively bind request parameters to your business objects. It also can take advantage of any of Spring’s other services, such as I18N messaging andvalidation.

12) What is a BeanFactory?

A BeanFactory is an implementation of the factory pattern that applies Inversion of Control to separate the application’s configuration and dependencies from the actual application code.

13) What is AOP Alliance?

AOP Alliance is an open-source project whose goal is to promote adoption of AOP and interoperability among different AOP implementations by defining a common set of interfaces and components.

14) What is Spring configuration file?

Spring configuration file is an XML file. This file contains the classes information and describes how these classes are configured and introduced to each other.

15) What does a simple spring application contain?

These applications are like any Java application. They are made up of several classes, each performing a specific purpose within the application. But these classes are configured and introduced to each other through an XML file. This XML file describes how to configure the classes, known as the Spring configuration file.

16) What is XMLBeanFactory?

BeanFactory has many implementations in Spring. But one of the most useful one isorg.springframework.beans.factory.xml.XmlBeanFactory, which loads its beans based on the definitions contained in an XML file. To create an XmlBeanFactory, pass a java.io.InputStream to the constructor. TheInputStream will provide the XML to the factory. For example, the following code snippet uses a java.io.FileInputStream to provide a bean definition XML file to XmlBeanFactory.


 BeanFactory factory = new XmlBeanFactory(new FileInputStream("beans.xml"));

To retrieve the bean from a BeanFactory, call the getBean() method by passing the name of the bean you want to retrieve.


 MyBean myBean = (MyBean) factory.getBean("myBean");

17) What are important ApplicationContext implementations in spring framework?

  • ClassPathXmlApplicationContext – This context loads a context definition from an XML file located in the class path, treating context definition files as class path resources.
  • FileSystemXmlApplicationContext – This context loads a context definition from an XML file in the filesystem.
  • XmlWebApplicationContext – This context loads the context definitions from an XML file contained within a web application.

18) Explain Bean lifecycle in Spring framework?

  1. The spring container finds the bean’s definition from the XML file and instantiates the bean.
  2. Using the dependency injection, spring populates all of the properties as specified in the bean definition.
  3. If the bean implements the BeanNameAware interface, the factory calls setBeanName() passing the bean’s ID.
  4. If the bean implements the BeanFactoryAware interface, the factory calls setBeanFactory(), passing an instance of itself.
  5. If there are any BeanPostProcessors associated with the bean, their post- ProcessBeforeInitialization()methods will be called.
  6. If an init-method is specified for the bean, it will be called.
  7. Finally, if there are any BeanPostProcessors associated with the bean, theirpostProcessAfterInitialization() methods will be called.

19) What is bean wiring?

Combining together beans within the Spring container is known as bean wiring or wiring. When wiring beans, you should tell the container what beans are needed and how the container should use dependency injection to tie them together.

20) How do add a bean in spring application?

 
 
  
  
 

21) What are singleton beans and how can you create prototype beans?

Beans defined in spring framework are singleton beans. There is an attribute in bean tag named ‘singleton’ if specified true then bean becomes singleton and if set to false then the bean becomes a prototype bean. By default it is set to true. So, all the beans in spring framework are by default singleton beans.


 
    singleton=”false”/>
 

22) What are the important beans lifecycle methods?

There are two important bean lifecycle methods. The first one is setup which is called when the bean is loaded in to the container. The second method is the teardown method which is called when the bean is unloaded from the container.

23) How can you override beans default lifecycle methods?

The bean tag has two more important attributes with which you can define your own custom initialization and destroy methods. Here I have shown a small demonstration. Two new methods fooSetup and fooTeardown are to be added to your Foo class.


 
          init-method=”fooSetup” destroy=”fooTeardown”/>
 

24) What are Inner Beans?

When wiring beans, if a bean element is embedded to a property tag directly, then that bean is said to the Inner Bean. The drawback of this bean is that it cannot be reused anywhere else.

25) What are the different types of bean injections?

There are two types of bean injections.
  1. By setter
  2. By constructor

26) What is Auto wiring?

You can wire the beans as you wish. But spring framework also does this work for you. It can auto wire the related beans together. All you have to do is just set the autowire attribute of bean tag to an autowire type.


 
          Autowire=”autowire type”/>
 

27) What are different types of Autowire types?

There are four different types by which autowiring can be done.
    • byName
    • byType
    • constructor
    • autodetect

28) What are the different types of events related to Listeners?

There are a lot of events related to ApplicationContext of spring framework. All the events are subclasses oforg.springframework.context.Application-Event. They are
  • ContextClosedEvent – This is fired when the context is closed.
  • ContextRefreshedEvent – This is fired when the context is initialized or refreshed.
  • RequestHandledEvent – This is fired when the web context handles any request.

29) What is an Aspect?

An aspect is the cross-cutting functionality that you are implementing. It is the aspect of your application you are modularizing. An example of an aspect is logging. Logging is something that is required throughout an application. However, because applications tend to be broken down into layers based on functionality, reusing a logging module through inheritance does not make sense. However, you can create a logging aspect and apply it throughout your application using AOP.

30) What is a Jointpoint?

A joinpoint is a point in the execution of the application where an aspect can be plugged in. This point could be a method being called, an exception being thrown, or even a field being modified. These are the points where your aspect’s code can be inserted into the normal flow of your application to add new behavior.

31) What is an Advice?

Advice is the implementation of an aspect. It is something like telling your application of a new behavior. Generally, and advice is inserted into an application at joinpoints.

32) What is a Pointcut?

A pointcut is something that defines at what joinpoints an advice should be applied. Advices can be applied at any joinpoint that is supported by the AOP framework. These Pointcuts allow you to specify where the advice can be applied.

33) What is an Introduction in AOP?

An introduction allows the user to add new methods or attributes to an existing class. This can then be introduced to an existing class without having to change the structure of the class, but give them the new behavior and state.

34) What is a Target?

A target is the class that is being advised. The class can be a third party class or your own class to which you want to add your own custom behavior. By using the concepts of AOP, the target class is free to center on its major concern, unaware to any advice that is being applied.

35) What is a Proxy?

A proxy is an object that is created after applying advice to a target object. When you think of client objects the target object and the proxy object are the same.

36) What is meant by Weaving?

The process of applying aspects to a target object to create a new proxy object is called as Weaving. The aspects are woven into the target object at the specified joinpoints.

37) What are the different points where weaving can be applied?

  • Compile Time
  • Classload Time
  • Runtime

38) What are the different advice types in spring?

  • Around : Intercepts the calls to the target method
  • Before : This is called before the target method is invoked
  • After : This is called after the target method is returned
  • Throws : This is called when the target method throws and exception
  • Around : org.aopalliance.intercept.MethodInterceptor
  • Before : org.springframework.aop.BeforeAdvice
  • After : org.springframework.aop.AfterReturningAdvice
  • Throws : org.springframework.aop.ThrowsAdvice

39) What are the different types of AutoProxying?

  • BeanNameAutoProxyCreator
  • DefaultAdvisorAutoProxyCreator
  • Metadata autoproxying

40) What is the Exception class related to all the exceptions that are thrown in spring applications?

DataAccessException - org.springframework.dao.DataAccessException

41) What kind of exceptions those spring DAO classes throw?

The spring’s DAO class does not throw any technology related exceptions such as SQLException. They throw exceptions which are subclasses of DataAccessException.

42) What is DataAccessException?

DataAccessException is a RuntimeException. This is an Unchecked Exception. The user is not forced to handle these kinds of exceptions.

43) How can you configure a bean to get DataSource from JNDI?



 dataSource" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean">
      <property name="jndiName">
        java:comp/env/jdbc/myDatasource
     
 

44) How can you create a DataSource connection pool?



 
    
               ${db.driver}
           
           
              ${db.url}
           
           
             ${db.username}
           
           
            ${db.password}
           
 

45) How JDBC can be used more efficiently in spring framework?

JDBC can be used more efficiently with the help of a template class provided by spring framework called asJdbcTemplate.

46) How JdbcTemplate can be used?

With use of Spring JDBC framework the burden of resource management and error handling is reduced a lot. So it leaves developers to write the statements and queries to get the data to and from the database.


 JdbcTemplate template = new JdbcTemplate(myDataSource);

A simple DAO class looks like this.


 public class StudentDaoJdbc implements StudentDao {
          private JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;

 public void setJdbcTemplate(JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate) {
           this.jdbcTemplate = jdbcTemplate;
 }
 more..
 }

The configuration is shown below.


 
    
        
    
 
 
           
               
    
 
 
           
        
    
 

47) How do you write data to backend in spring using JdbcTemplate?

The JdbcTemplate uses several of these callbacks when writing data to the database. The usefulness you will find in each of these interfaces will vary. There are two simple interfaces. One is PreparedStatementCreator and the other interface is BatchPreparedStatementSetter.

48) Explain about PreparedStatementCreator?

PreparedStatementCreator is one of the most common used interfaces for writing data to database. The interface has one method createPreparedStatement().


 PreparedStatement createPreparedStatement(Connection conn)
 throws SQLException;

When this interface is implemented, we should create and return a PreparedStatement from the Connection argument, and the exception handling is automatically taken care off. When this interface is implemented, another interfaceSqlProvider is also implemented which has a method called getSql() which is used to provide sql strings to JdbcTemplate.

49) Explain about BatchPreparedStatementSetter?

If the user what to update more than one row at a shot then he can go for BatchPreparedStatementSetter. This interface provides two methods


 setValues(PreparedStatement ps, int i) throws SQLException;
 
 int getBatchSize();

The getBatchSize() tells the JdbcTemplate class how many statements to create. And this also determines how manytimes setValues() will be called.

50) Explain about RowCallbackHandler and why it is used?

In order to navigate through the records we generally go for ResultSet. But spring provides an interface that handles this entire burden and leaves the user to decide what to do with each row. The interface provided by spring isRowCallbackHandler. There is a method processRow() which needs to be implemented so that it is applicable for each and everyrow.


 void processRow(java.sql.ResultSet rs);