Ember applications utilize the dependency injection ("DI") design pattern to declare and instantiate classes of objects and dependencies between them. Applications and application instances each serve a role in Ember's DI implementation.
An Ember.Application
serves as a "registry" for dependency declarations.
Factories (i.e. classes) are registered with an application,
as well as rules about "injecting" dependencies that are applied when objects are instantiated.
An Ember.ApplicationInstance
serves as the "owner" for objects that are instantiated from registered factories.
Application instances provide a means to "look up" (i.e. instantiate and / or retrieve) objects.
Note: Although an
Application
serves as the primary registry for an app, eachApplicationInstance
can also serve as a registry. Instance-level registrations are useful for providing instance-level customizations, such as A/B testing of a feature.
Factory Registrations
A factory can represent any part of your application, like a route, template, or custom class.
Every factory is registered with a particular key.
For example, the index template is registered with the key template:index
,
and the application route is registered with the key route:application
.
Registration keys have two segments split by a colon (:
).
The first segment is the framework factory type, and the second is the name of the particular factory.
Hence, the index
template has the key template:index
.
Ember has several built-in factory types, such as service
, route
, template
, and component
.
You can create your own factory type by simply registering a factory with the new type.
For example, to create a user
type,
you'd simply register your factory with application.register('user:user-to-register')
.
Factory registrations must be performed either in application or application instance initializers (with the former being much more common).
For example, an application initializer could register a Logger
factory with the key logger:main
:
export function initialize(application) {
var Logger = Ember.Object.extend({
log(m) {
console.log(m);
}
});
application.register('logger:main', Logger);
}
export default {
name: 'logger',
initialize: initialize
};
Registering Already Instantiated Objects
By default, Ember will attempt to instantiate a registered factory when it is looked up.
When registering an already instantiated object instead of a class,
use the instantiate: false
option to avoid attempts to re-instantiate it during lookups.
In the following example, the logger
is a plain JavaScript object that should
be returned "as is" when it's looked up:
export function initialize(application) {
var logger = {
log(m) {
console.log(m);
}
};
application.register('logger:main', logger, { instantiate: false });
}
export default {
name: 'logger',
initialize: initialize
};
Registering Singletons vs. Non-Singletons
By default, registrations are treated as "singletons". This simply means that an instance will be created when it is first looked up, and this same instance will be cached and returned from subsequent lookups.
When you want fresh objects to be created for every lookup,
register your factories as non-singletons using the singleton: false
option.
In the following example, the Message
class is registered as a non-singleton:
export function initialize(application) {
var Message = Ember.Object.extend({
text: ''
});
application.register('notification:message', Message, { singleton: false });
}
export default {
name: 'notification',
initialize: initialize
};
Factory Injections
Once a factory is registered, it can be "injected" where it is needed.
Factories can be injected into whole "types" of factories with type injections. For example:
export function initialize(application) {
var Logger = Ember.Object.extend({
log(m) {
console.log(m);
}
});
application.register('logger:main', Logger);
application.inject('route', 'logger', 'logger:main');
}
export default {
name: 'logger',
initialize: initialize
};
As a result of this type injection,
all factories of the type route
will be instantiated with the property logger
injected.
The value of logger
will come from the factory named logger:main
.
Routes in this example application can now access the injected logger:
export default Ember.Route.extend({
activate() {
// The logger property is injected into all routes
this.get('logger').log('Entered the index route!');
}
});
Injections can also be made on a specific factory by using its full key:
application.inject('route:index', 'logger', 'logger:main');
In this case, the logger will only be injected on the index route.
Injections can be made onto any class that requires instantiation. This includes all of Ember's major framework classes, such as components, helpers, routes, and the router.
Ad Hoc Injections
Dependency injections can also be declared directly on Ember classes using Ember.inject
.
Currently, Ember.inject
supports injecting controllers (via Ember.inject.controller
)
and services (via Ember.inject.service
).
The following code injects the shopping-cart
service on the cart-contents
component as the property cart
:
export default Ember.Component.extend({
cart: Ember.inject.service('shopping-cart')
});
If you'd like to inject a service with the same name as the property, simply leave off the service name (the dasherized version of the name will be used):
export default Ember.Component.extend({
shoppingCart: Ember.inject.service()
});
Factory Instance Lookups
The vast majority of Ember registrations and lookups are performed implicitly.
In the rare cases in which you want to perform an explicit lookup of an instance of a registered factory, you can do so on an application instance in its associated instance initializer. For example:
export function initialize(applicationInstance) {
var logger = applicationInstance.lookup('logger:main');
logger.log('Hello from the instance initializer!');
}
export default {
name: 'logger',
initialize: initialize
};