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Add explicit note on JSpecify support in Spring Framework 6.2 vs 7.0

Closes gh-34551
pull/34656/head
Juergen Hoeller 9 months ago
parent
commit
5877a38fa1
  1. 13
      framework-docs/modules/ROOT/pages/core/beans/annotation-config/autowired.adoc

13
framework-docs/modules/ROOT/pages/core/beans/annotation-config/autowired.adoc

@ -444,9 +444,9 @@ through Java 8's `java.util.Optional`, as the following example shows: @@ -444,9 +444,9 @@ through Java 8's `java.util.Optional`, as the following example shows:
}
----
You can also use a `@Nullable` annotation (of any kind in any package -- for example,
`javax.annotation.Nullable` from JSR-305) or just leverage Kotlin built-in null-safety
support:
You can also use a parameter-level `@Nullable` annotation (of any kind in any package --
for example, `javax.annotation.Nullable` from JSR-305) or just leverage Kotlin built-in
null-safety support:
[tabs]
======
@ -477,6 +477,13 @@ Kotlin:: @@ -477,6 +477,13 @@ Kotlin::
----
======
[NOTE]
====
A type-level `@Nullable` annotation such as from JSpecify is not supported in Spring
Framework 6.2 yet. You need to upgrade to Spring Framework 7.0 where the framework
detects type-level annotations and consistently declares JSpecify in its own codebase.
====
You can also use `@Autowired` for interfaces that are well-known resolvable
dependencies: `BeanFactory`, `ApplicationContext`, `Environment`, `ResourceLoader`,
`ApplicationEventPublisher`, and `MessageSource`. These interfaces and their extended

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