/* * Copyright 2002-2008 the original author or authors. * * 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 org.springframework.scheduling.quartz; import org.quartz.Job; import org.quartz.JobExecutionContext; import org.quartz.JobExecutionException; import org.quartz.SchedulerException; import org.springframework.beans.BeanWrapper; import org.springframework.beans.MutablePropertyValues; import org.springframework.beans.PropertyAccessorFactory; /** * Simple implementation of the Quartz Job interface, applying the * passed-in JobDataMap and also the SchedulerContext as bean property * values. This is appropriate because a new Job instance will be created * for each execution. JobDataMap entries will override SchedulerContext * entries with the same keys. * * <p>For example, let's assume that the JobDataMap contains a key * "myParam" with value "5": The Job implementation can then expose * a bean property "myParam" of type int to receive such a value, * i.e. a method "setMyParam(int)". This will also work for complex * types like business objects etc. * * <p>Note: The QuartzJobBean class itself only implements the standard * Quartz {@link org.quartz.Job} interface. Let your subclass explicitly * implement the Quartz {@link org.quartz.StatefulJob} interface to * mark your concrete job bean as stateful. * * <p>This version of QuartzJobBean requires Quartz 1.5 or higher, * due to the support for trigger-specific job data. * * <p><b>Note that as of Spring 2.0 and Quartz 1.5, the preferred way * to apply dependency injection to Job instances is via a JobFactory:</b> * that is, to specify {@link SpringBeanJobFactory} as Quartz JobFactory * (typically via * {@link SchedulerFactoryBean#setJobFactory} SchedulerFactoryBean's "jobFactory" property}). * This allows to implement dependency-injected Quartz Jobs without * a dependency on Spring base classes. * * @author Juergen Hoeller * @since 18.02.2004 * @see org.quartz.JobExecutionContext#getMergedJobDataMap() * @see org.quartz.Scheduler#getContext() * @see JobDetailBean#setJobDataAsMap * @see SimpleTriggerBean#setJobDataAsMap * @see CronTriggerBean#setJobDataAsMap * @see SchedulerFactoryBean#setSchedulerContextAsMap * @see SpringBeanJobFactory * @see SchedulerFactoryBean#setJobFactory */ public abstract class QuartzJobBean implements Job { /** * This implementation applies the passed-in job data map as bean property * values, and delegates to <code>executeInternal</code> afterwards. * @see #executeInternal */ public final void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException { try { BeanWrapper bw = PropertyAccessorFactory.forBeanPropertyAccess(this); MutablePropertyValues pvs = new MutablePropertyValues(); pvs.addPropertyValues(context.getScheduler().getContext()); pvs.addPropertyValues(context.getMergedJobDataMap()); bw.setPropertyValues(pvs, true); } catch (SchedulerException ex) { throw new JobExecutionException(ex); } executeInternal(context); } /** * Execute the actual job. The job data map will already have been * applied as bean property values by execute. The contract is * exactly the same as for the standard Quartz execute method. * @see #execute */ protected abstract void executeInternal(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException; }