Confluence 2.9 : Accessing Confluence Components From Plugin Modules
This page last changed on Jun 12, 2008 by mjensen.
Confluence is built around Spring, an open-source component framework for for Java. If you are familiar with Spring, then you may only wish to know that Confluence plugin modules (and their implementing classes) are autowired by name. Thus, if you want to access a Confluence component from your plugin, just include the appropriate setter method in your implementing class. If you want to write Confluence plugins but are unfamiliar with Spring, the rest of this page should give you more than enough information on how to have your plugin interact with Confluence. Interacting with ConfluenceWhen you are writing anything but the simplest Confluence plugin, you will need to interact with the Confluence application itself in order to retrieve, change or store information. This document describes how this can be done. Manager ObjectsAt the core of Confluence is a group of "Manager" objects. For example, the pageManager is in charge of Confluence pages, the spaceManager of spaces, the attachmentManager of attachments, and so on. Dependency InjectionTraditionally, in a component-based system, components are retrieved from some kind of central repository. For example, in an EJB-based system, you would retrieve the bean from the application server's JNDI repository. Confluence works the other way round. When a plugin module is instantiated, Confluence determines which components the module needs, and delivers them to it. Confluence determines which components a module needs by reflecting on the module's methods. Any method with a signature that matches a standard JavaBeans-style setter of the same name as a Confluence component will have that component passed to it when the module is initialised. So, if your plugin module needs to access the pageManager, all you need to do is put the following setter method on your module's implementing class: public void setPageManager(PageManager pageManager) { this.pageManager = pageManager; } Manager ClassesThere are several dozen managers for different areas of functionality in Confluence. The following table lists some of the more commonly used ones:
Note that these are all interfaces. The actual implementation will be injected in your class by Spring, if you include the appropriate setter method in your class as described above. Do not directly use implementations or cast the injected class to a particular implementation. Implementation classes are subject to change across versions without warning. Where possible, interface methods will be marked as deprecated for two major versions before being removed. Service ClassesManagers in Confluence are responsible for the data integrity of their domain, but they are not generally responsible for validation or security. Invalid calls will typically result in a runtime exception. Historically, this wasn't a major problem, but as time went by there was more duplication of this functionality across actions, remote API methods and plugins. In recent releases, a service layer is being introduced in Confluence to address this. The services will follow a command pattern, where the service is responsible for creating a command that can then be validated and executed. The following nascent services are available:
These simpler services don't follow the command pattern, nor do they perform any data modification. They are generally used to simplify other functionality:
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Document generated by Confluence on Aug 07, 2008 19:08 |