Solution 1: Spring way
The simplest answer is to follow how spring sub projects (boot,data...) implements this type of requirement. They usually define a custom composed annotation which enable the feature and define a set of packages to scan.
For example given this annotation :
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Import({MyInterfaceScanRegistrar.class})
public @interface MyInterfaceScan {
String[] value() default {};
}
Where value defines the packages to scan and @Import enables the MyInterfaceScan detection.
Then create the ImportBeanDefinitionRegistrar. This class will be able to create bean definition
Interface to be implemented by types that register additional bean
definitions when processing @Configuration classes. Useful when
operating at the bean definition level (as opposed to @Bean
method/instance level) is desired or necessary.
public class MyInterfaceScanRegistrar implements ImportBeanDefinitionRegistrar, EnvironmentAware {
private Environment environment;
@Override
public void setEnvironment(Environment environment) {
this.environment = environment;
}
@Override
public void registerBeanDefinitions(AnnotationMetadata metadata, BeanDefinitionRegistry registry) {
// Get the MyInterfaceScan annotation attributes
Map<String, Object> annotationAttributes = metadata.getAnnotationAttributes(MyInterfaceScan.class.getCanonicalName());
if (annotationAttributes != null) {
String[] basePackages = (String[]) annotationAttributes.get("value");
if (basePackages.length == 0){
// If value attribute is not set, fallback to the package of the annotated class
basePackages = new String[]{((StandardAnnotationMetadata) metadata).getIntrospectedClass().getPackage().getName()};
}
// using these packages, scan for interface annotated with MyCustomBean
ClassPathScanningCandidateComponentProvider provider = new ClassPathScanningCandidateComponentProvider(false, environment){
// Override isCandidateComponent to only scan for interface
@Override
protected boolean isCandidateComponent(AnnotatedBeanDefinition beanDefinition) {
AnnotationMetadata metadata = beanDefinition.getMetadata();
return metadata.isIndependent() && metadata.isInterface();
}
};
provider.addIncludeFilter(new AnnotationTypeFilter(MyCustomBean.class));
// Scan all packages
for (String basePackage : basePackages) {
for (BeanDefinition beanDefinition : provider.findCandidateComponents(basePackage)) {
// Do the stuff about the bean definition
// For example, redefine it as a bean factory with custom atribute...
// then register it
registry.registerBeanDefinition(generateAName() , beanDefinition);
System.out.println(beanDefinition);
}
}
}
}
}
This is the core of the logic. The bean definition can be manipulated and redefined as a bean factory with attributes or redefined using a generated class from an interface.
MyCustomBean is a simple annotation:
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface MyCustomBean {
}
Which could annotate an interface:
@MyCustomBean
public interface Class1 {
}
Solution 2: extract component scan
The code which would extract packages define in @ComponentScan will be more complicated.
You should create a BeanDefinitionRegistryPostProcessor and mimic the ConfigurationClassPostProcessor:
Iterate over the bean registry for bean definitions with a declared class having the ComponentScan attribute eg (extracted from ConfigurationClassPostProcessor.):
public void postProcessBeanDefinitionRegistry(BeanDefinitionRegistry registry) {
List<BeanDefinitionHolder> configCandidates = new ArrayList<BeanDefinitionHolder>();
String[] candidateNames = registry.getBeanDefinitionNames();
for (String beanName : candidateNames) {
if (ConfigurationClassUtils.checkConfigurationClassCandidate(beanDef, this.metadataReaderFactory)) {
// Extract component scan
}
}
}
Extract these attributes as Spring do
Set<AnnotationAttributes> componentScans = AnnotationConfigUtils.attributesForRepeatable(
sourceClass.getMetadata(), ComponentScans.class, ComponentScan.class);
Then scan the packages and register the bean definition like the first solution