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If you examine the example application for the Struts 2 Themes tutorial you'll see this code in the EditAction ActionSupport class

Code Block
java
java
titleEditAction Class Hard-Coded Dependencyjava
private EditService editService = new EditServiceInMemory();

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Spring provides a mechanism to manage dependencies by injecting them at run time. Struts 2 ActionSupport classes—like any other Java class—can be injected with a dependent object by the Spring framework. So instead of having the above code, I would have this statement in EditAction.

Code Block
java
java
titleEditAction Class No Hard-Coded Dependencyjava
    private EditService editService ;

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In your ActionSupport class you must have a set method for the dependent object that follows standard Java bean naming conventions. If you examine the EditAction class for this tutorial's application you'll see this set method.

Code Block
java
java
1title Set Method For EditService Objectjava
public void setEditService(EditService editService) {
		
   this.editService = editService;
		
}

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To make our application "Spring aware" we need to add this line to web.xml.

Code Block
xml
xml
titleSpring Listener In web.xmlxml
<listener>
	<listener-class>org.springframework.web.context.ContextLoaderListener</listener-class>
</listener>

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In the Spring configuration file we create a bean node for those objects we want Spring to create an instance of and inject into our ActionSupport class. In the example application is this applicationContext.xml.

Code Block
xml
xml
titleSpring Configuration Filexml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
       xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
       xsi:schemaLocation="
            http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
            http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd">

<bean id="editService" class="org.apache.struts.edit.service.EditServiceInMemory" />

</beans>

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Using the above methodology, the Struts 2 framework will still manage the creation of the ActionSupport class. If you prefer you can configure the application so that Spring will create the ActionSupport class also. To support this technique you need to add a bean node to the Spring configuration file for the ActionSupport class.

Code Block
xml
xml
titleSpring Configuration For ActionSupport Class Managed By Springxml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
       xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
       xsi:schemaLocation="
            http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
            http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd">
            

<bean id="editService" class="org.apache.struts.edit.service.EditServiceInMemory" />

<bean id="editAction" class="org.apache.struts.edit.action.EditAction" scope="prototype">

	<property name="editService" ref="editService" />
	
</bean>

</beans>

Note in the above that there is an editAction bean  bean and its editService property  property is set to the editService bean bean. Since we are having Spring manage the EditAction class  class we must specify any properties of EditAction that  that we want Spring to inject. Please remember that actions must be created on each request, they cannot be singletons - this is the default scope that's why it must be changed to prototype.

In the struts.xml configuration  configuration file you must specify the Spring id value for the class attribute of the action node. This tells Struts to get a bean with that id value from Spring for the Action class.

Code Block
xml
xml
titleStruts Configuration For Spring Managed ActionSupport Classxml
<action name="edit" class="editAction" method="input">
	<result name="input">/edit.jsp</result>
</action>

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