I apologize in advance if this is well-known.
Let $X$ be a Banach space. Let's call only for this post that $X$ is self-injective if for every closed subspaces \begin{equation} A\subseteq B\subseteq X \tag{*}\label{eq:1} \end{equation} and bounded linear $T:A\to X$, there exists an extension $\widetilde{T}:B\to X$. The difference from the definition of injectivity is the restriction \eqref{eq:1} that $A$, $B$ must be subspaces of $X$. We can define $\lambda$-self-injectivity similarly.
Clearly, injective and separably injective Banach spaces are self-injective in this sense.
Question: Are there other self-injective (especially $1$-self-injective) Banach spaces? Is there a characterization of self-injectivity?
edit/update: Thanks to Jesus Castillo's answer, the common terminology for these spaces is extensible. If I'm allowed, I'd like to be a voluntary advertiser of a group of interesting problems, which I'm eager to learn the answers. The snippet below is from the copy of the book (p.331-332) on books.google.com co-authored by Jesus Castillo.