Both elements serve an entirely different purpose.
<context:component-scan />
is, as the name implies, for component scanning. It by default scans for all beans with the @Component
annotation (or "sub"annotations like @Controller
, @Service
etc.). It will only register instances of those classes in the application context as beans. That is all.
<mvc:annotation-driven />
is for bootstrapping Spring MVC and it registers, amongst others, a RequestMappingHandlerMapping
and RequestMappingHandlerAdapter
. The first links requests to a certain method (the @RequestMapping
annotation on methods in a @Controller
annotated class). The last knows how to execute methods annotated with @RequestMaping
.
Now <mvc:annotation-driven />
does nothing for scanning or detecting @Controllers
if there are none in the application context then no request mappings are made. Now you have several ways of registering those beans in the application context and one of them is the aforementioned <context:component-scan />
.
Basically a @Controller
without <mvc:annotation-driven />
is, well, pretty useless as it does nothing but take up memory. It will not be bound to incoming requests, it just hangs around in the application context. It is just another bean like all other beans and nothing special is being done to it. (Recent, but deprecated, versions of Spring register the DefaultAnnotationHandlerMapping
which processes the @Controller
, this is however deprecated).
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