At the root context of the namespace is a binding with the name “comp”, which is bound to a subtree reserved for component-related bindings. The name “comp” is short for component. There are no other bindings at the root context. However, the root context is reserved for the future expansion of the policy, specifically for naming resources that are tied not to the component itself but to other types of entities such as users or departments. For example, future policies might allow you to name users and organizations/departments by using names such as “java:user/alice” and “java:org/engineering”.
In the “comp” context, there are two bindings: “env” and “UserTransaction”. The name “env” is bound to a subtree that is reserved for the component’s environment-related bindings, as defined by its deployment descriptor. “env” is short for environment. The J2EE recommends (but does not require) the following structure for the “env” namespace.
So the binding you did from spring or, for example, from a tomcat context descriptor go by default under java:comp/env/
For example, if your configuration is:
<bean id="someId" class="org.springframework.jndi.JndiObjectFactoryBean"> <property name="jndiName" value="foo"/> </bean>
Then you can access it directly using:
Context ctx = new InitialContext(); DataSource ds = (DataSource)ctx.lookup("java:comp/env/foo");
or you could make an intermediate step so you don’t have to specify “java:comp/env” for every resource you retrieve:
Context ctx = new InitialContext(); Context envCtx = (Context)ctx.lookup("java:comp/env"); DataSource ds = (DataSource)envCtx.lookup("foo");