diff options
author | wisberg <wisberg> | 2002-12-31 17:51:48 +0000 |
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committer | wisberg <wisberg> | 2002-12-31 17:51:48 +0000 |
commit | 897e1f63b9790c079f20dd66bd0d15f4b840bcb8 (patch) | |
tree | 5487d807e56521fe6b3111ecb1a36d8bfed7d1ae /docs/faq/faq.xml | |
parent | 647f96893dd613e7c079a79ef25fa1610d64d8ab (diff) | |
download | aspectj-897e1f63b9790c079f20dd66bd0d15f4b840bcb8.tar.gz aspectj-897e1f63b9790c079f20dd66bd0d15f4b840bcb8.zip |
- combined the two call/execution entries
- added Erik's entry wrt advising constructor calls
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/faq/faq.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/faq/faq.xml | 149 |
1 files changed, 88 insertions, 61 deletions
diff --git a/docs/faq/faq.xml b/docs/faq/faq.xml index 63dc386e2..477804911 100644 --- a/docs/faq/faq.xml +++ b/docs/faq/faq.xml @@ -22,17 +22,15 @@ 2002 Palo Alto Research Center, Incorporated. All rights reserved. </para> <!-- todo Update me! --> - <para>Last updated on the web November 26, 2002. + <para>Last updated December 31, 2002. </para> <para> For a list of recently-updated FAQ entries, see <xref linkend="q:faqchanges"/> AspectJ 1.1 is currently in development, and some answers may change after it is released; - for more information, see the - <ulink url="http://aspectj.org/doc/readme11/index.html">AspectJ 1.1 README</ulink>. - This is a web-only distribution of the FAQ; the 1.0 documentation bundle - contains an earlier version. + for more information, see the README + included with the AspectJ 1.1 distribution. </para> <qandaset defaultlabel="number"> <qandadiv id="overview" xreflabel="Overview"> @@ -1940,6 +1938,38 @@ ajc -bootclasspath c:\jdk1.2\jre\lib\rt.jar \ </para> </question> <answer> + <para> + Briefly, there are two interesting times when a constructor or method is + run. Those times are when it is called, and when it actually + executes. + </para> + <para> + The main difference is that a call join point happens outside of + the object (for non-static methods) or class (for static methods + and constructors), and that an execution join point happens inside + the object or class. This means that the <literal>within</literal> + and <literal>withincode</literal> pointcuts pick them out + differently: A call join point is picked out within the caller, + while an execution join point is picked + out where it is actually defined. + </para> + <para> + A call join point is the ``outermost'' join point for a particular + call. Once a call join point proceeds, then a number of different + things happen. For non-static methods, for example, method + dispatch happens, which will cause one method execution join point + -- perhaps more, if there are super calls. For constructors, the + super constructor is called, and fields are initialized, and then + various constructor execution join points will occur. + </para> + <para> + A call join point matches only the ``external'' calls of a method + or constructor, based on a signature, and it does not pick out + calls made with <literal>super</literal>, or + <literal>this</literal> constructor calls. + </para> + <para>Here's more detail: + </para> <para>Consider method execution in Java as (1) the initial call from this object to some method on the target object with a particular signature; and (2) the execution of the actual code @@ -2007,46 +2037,6 @@ ajc -bootclasspath c:\jdk1.2\jre\lib\rt.jar \ </answer> </qandaentry> <qandaentry> - <question id="q:compareccallandexecution" - xreflabel="Q:What is the difference between call and execution?"> - <para> - What is the difference between call and execution? - </para> - </question> - <answer> - <para> - There are two interesting times when a constructor or method is - run. Those times are when it is called, and when it actually - executes. - </para> - <para> - The main difference is that a call join point happens outside of - the object (for non-static methods) or class (for static methods - and constructors), and that an execution join point happens inside - the object or class. This means that the <literal>within</literal> - and <literal>withincode</literal> pointcuts pick them out - differently: A call join point is picked out within the caller, - while an execution join point is picked - out where it is actually defined. - </para> - <para> - A call join point is the ``outermost'' join point for a particular - call. Once a call join point proceeds, then a number of different - things happen. For non-static methods, for example, method - dispatch happens, which will cause one method execution join point - -- perhaps more, if there are super calls. For constructors, the - super constructor is called, and fields are initialized, and then - various constructor execution join points will occur. - </para> - <para> - A call join point matches only the ``external'' calls of a method - or constructor, based on a signature, and it does not pick out - calls made with <literal>super</literal>, or - <literal>this</literal> constructor calls. - </para> - </answer> - </qandaentry> - <qandaentry> <question id="q:recursiveentrypoints" xreflabel="Q:How do I say that I want the topmost entrypoint in a recursive call?"> <para>How do I say that I want the topmost entrypoint in a @@ -2143,6 +2133,57 @@ class Test extends Super implements I { </answer> </qandaentry> <qandaentry> + <question id="q:adviseconstructors" + xreflabel="Q:How do I work with an object right when it is created?"> + <para>How do I work with an object right when it is created? + </para> + </question> + <answer> + <para> + You can advise some form of constructor join point. + Constructors are tricky in Java, and that's exposed in AspectJ. + Here are some rules of thumb: + <itemizedlist> + <listitem> + <para>If you want the join point on the "outside" of object creation, + use after returning from call to the constructor: + </para> + <programlisting> + after() returning (Foo newlyCreatedObject): call(Foo.new(..)) { ... } + </programlisting> + <para> + You might be tempted to use "this" or "target" to expose the new object, but remember + that if you're on the "outside" of object creation, the object itself might not be + created yet... it only exists "on the way out", when you return the object. + </para> + </listitem> + <listitem> + <para>If you want the join point inside a particular constructor, use: + </para> + <programlisting> + after(Foo newlyCreatedObject) returning: this(newlyCreatedObject) && execution(Foo.new(..)) { ... } + </programlisting> + <para> + Remember, though, that if you use "before" advice here, the body of the constructor + will not have run, and so the object may be somewhat uninitialized. + </para> + </listitem> + <listitem> + <para> + In the rare case that there are all sorts of constructors for the object that call + each other with <literal>this(...)</literal> and you want exactly one join point + for each initialization of <literal>Foo</literal>, regardless of the path of + constructors it takes, then use: + </para> + <programlisting> + after(Foo f) returning: this(f) && initialization(Foo.new(..)) { ... } + </programlisting> + </listitem> + </itemizedlist> + </para> + </answer> + </qandaentry> + <qandaentry> <question id="q:andingpointcuts" xreflabel="Q:I want advice to run at two pointcuts, but it doesn't run at all."> <para> @@ -3120,23 +3161,9 @@ If it seems to be a bug in the compiler, </question> <answer> <para> - Entries changed since the earlier September 13 version: + Entries changed since the earlier November 26 version: <itemizedlist> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:ajdocneeds13"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:idebugs"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:ajcbugs"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:searchingsite"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:bytecodeweaving"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:differences"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:schedule"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:aopinjava"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:aspectjandj2ee"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:applets"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:packagedeclares"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:writingbugsandemails"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:andingpointcuts"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:idesupportplans"/></para></listitem> - <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:opensource"/></para></listitem> + <listitem><para><xref linkend="q:adviseconstructors"/></para></listitem> </itemizedlist> </para> </answer> |