public String generateBeanName(BeanDefinition definition, BeanDefinitionRegistry registry) {
if (definition instanceof AnnotatedBeanDefinition) {
String beanName = determineBeanNameFromAnnotation((AnnotatedBeanDefinition) definition);
if (StringUtils.hasText(beanName)) {
// Explicit bean name found.
return beanName;
}
}
// Fallback: generate a unique default bean name.
return buildDefaultBeanName(definition);
}
/**
* Derive a default bean name from the given bean definition.
* <p>The default implementation simply builds a decapitalized version
* of the short class name: e.g. "mypackage.MyJdbcDao" -> "myJdbcDao".
* <p>Note that inner classes will thus have names of the form
* "outerClassName.innerClassName", which because of the period in the
* name may be an issue if you are autowiring by name.
* @param definition the bean definition to build a bean name for
* @return the default bean name (never <code>null</code>)
*/
protected String buildDefaultBeanName(BeanDefinition definition) {
String shortClassName = ClassUtils.getShortName(definition.getBeanClassName());
return Introspector.decapitalize(shortClassName);
}
/**
* Utility method to take a string and convert it to normal Java variable
* name capitalization. This normally means converting the first
* character from upper case to lower case, but in the (unusual) special
* case when there is more than one character and both the first and
* second characters are upper case, we leave it alone.
* <p>
* Thus "FooBah" becomes "fooBah" and "X" becomes "x", but "URL" stays
* as "URL".
*
* @param name The string to be decapitalized.
* @return The decapitalized version of the string.
*/
public static String decapitalize(String name) {
if (name == null || name.length() == 0) {
return name;
}
if (name.length() > 1 && Character.isUpperCase(name.charAt(1)) &&
Character.isUpperCase(name.charAt(0))){
return name;
}
char chars[] = name.toCharArray();
chars[0] = Character.toLowerCase(chars[0]);
return new String(chars);
}