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Comment: Migrated to Confluence 5.3

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  1. Using Spring to get the service for your class (e.g. YourAppClass) (recommended)
    1. Add the ToolManager bean to the bean for YourAppClass
      Code Block
      xml
      xml
      <bean id="org.sakaiproject.yourapp.logic.YourAppClass"
      		class="org.sakaiproject.yourapp.logic.impl.YourAppClassImpl">
      	<property name="toolManager"
      		ref="org.sakaiproject.tool.api.ToolManager" />
      </bean>
      
    2. Add a variable and setter to YourAppClass to use the service in like so:
      Code Block
      java
      java
      private ToolManager toolManager;
      public void setToolManager(ToolManager toolManager) {
      	this.toolManager = toolManager;
      }
      
  2. Using the cover Component Manager to get the service
    • Note: This is not the recommended method, you should be using Spring to inject the service
    1. Setup a variable to hold the instance from the cover Use the CM cover to get the service
      Code Block
      java
      java
      import org.sakaiproject.component.cover.ComponentManager;
      import org.sakaiproject.tool.api.ToolManager;
      ...
        private ToolManager toolManager;
      
      Get access to the service using the cover
      Code Block
      javajava
      
      ...
          toolManager = org.sakaiproject.tool.cover.ToolManager.getInstance((ToolManager) ComponentManager.get(ToolManager.class);
      

Getting the current context for the current request (current user most likely)

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