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path: root/docs/progGuideDB/examples.xml
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<chapter id="examples" xreflabel="Examples">
  <title>Examples</title>

  <sect1 id="examples-intro">
    <title>Introduction</title>

    <para>
      This chapter consists entirely of examples of AspectJ use.
    </para>

    <para>The examples can be grouped into four categories:</para>

    <simplelist columns="2" type="horiz">
      <member><emphasis role="bold">technique</emphasis></member>
      <member>Examples which illustrate how to use one or more features of the
        language. </member>

      <member><emphasis role="bold">development</emphasis></member>
      <member>Examples of using AspectJ during the development phase of a
        project. </member>

      <member><emphasis role="bold">production</emphasis></member>
      <member>Examples of using AspectJ to provide functionality in an
        application. </member>

      <member><emphasis role="bold">reusable</emphasis></member>
      <member>Examples of reuse of aspects and pointcuts.</member>
    </simplelist>

  </sect1>

<!-- ============================== -->

  <sect1 id="examples-howto">
    <title>Obtaining, Compiling and Running the Examples</title>

    <para>
      The examples source code is part of the AspectJ distribution which may be
      downloaded from the AspectJ project page ( <ulink
      url="http://eclipse.org/aspectj" /> ).
    </para>

    <para>
      Compiling most examples is straightforward. Go the
      <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples</filename>
      directory, and look for a <filename>.lst</filename> file in one of
      the example subdirectories. Use the <literal>-arglist</literal>
      option to <literal>ajc</literal> to compile the example. For
      instance, to compile the telecom example with billing, type
    </para>

<programlisting>
ajc -argfile telecom/billing.lst
</programlisting>

    <para>
      To run the examples, your classpath must include the AspectJ run-time
      Java archive (<literal>aspectjrt.jar</literal>). You may either set the
      <literal>CLASSPATH</literal> environment variable or use the
      <literal>-classpath</literal> command line option to the Java
      interpreter:
    </para>

<programlisting>
(In Unix use a : in the CLASSPATH)
java -classpath ".:<replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/lib/aspectjrt.jar" telecom.billingSimulation
</programlisting>

<programlisting>
(In Windows use a ; in the CLASSPATH)
java -classpath ".;<replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/lib/aspectjrt.jar" telecom.billingSimulation
</programlisting>

  </sect1>


<!--  ============================================================ -->

  <sect1 id="examples-basic">
    <title>Basic Techniques</title>

    <para>
      This section presents two basic techniques of using AspectJ, one each
      from the two fundamental ways of capturing crosscutting concerns:
      with dynamic join points and advice, and with static
      introduction. Advice changes an application's behavior. Introduction
      changes both an application's behavior and its structure.
    </para>

    <para>
      The first example, <xref linkend="examples-joinPoints" />, is about
      gathering and using information about the join point that has
      triggered some advice. The second example, <xref
      linkend="examples-roles" />, concerns a crosscutting view of an
      existing class hierarchy. </para>

<!--  ======================================== -->

    <sect2 id="examples-joinPoints">
      <title>Join Points and <literal>thisJoinPoint</literal></title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/tjp</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
        A join point is some point in the execution of a program together
        with a view into the execution context when that point occurs. Join
        points are picked out by pointcuts.  When a program reaches a join
        point, advice on that join point may run in addition to (or instead
        of) the join point itself.
      </para>

      <para>
        When using a pointcut that picks out join points of a single kind
        by name, typicaly the the advice will know exactly what kind of
        join point it is associated with.  The pointcut may even publish
        context about the join point.  Here, for example, since the only
        join points picked out by the pointcut are calls of a certain
        method, we can get the target value and one of the argument values
        of the method calls directly.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
before(Point p, int x): target(p)
                     && args(x)
                     && call(void setX(int)) {
    if (!p.assertX(x)) {
        System.out.println("Illegal value for x"); return;
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

     <para>
       But sometimes the shape of the join point is not so clear.  For
       instance, suppose a complex application is being debugged, and we
       want to trace when any method of some class is executed.  The
       pointcut
     </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
pointcut execsInProblemClass(): within(ProblemClass)
                             && execution(* *(..));
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        will pick out each execution join point of every method defined
        within <classname>ProblemClass</classname>.  Since advice executes
        at each join point picked out by the pointcut, we can reasonably
        ask which join point was reached.
      </para>

      <para>
        Information about the join point that was matched is available to
        advice through the special variable
        <varname>thisJoinPoint</varname>, of type <ulink
        url="../api/org/aspectj/lang/JoinPoint.html"><classname>org.aspectj.lang.JoinPoint</classname></ulink>.
        Through this object we can access information such as</para>

      <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
        <listitem>
          the kind of join point that was matched
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          the source location of the code associated with the join point
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          normal, short and long string representations of the
          current join point
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          the actual argument values of the join point
        </listitem>
        <listitem>
          the signature of the member associated with the join point
        </listitem>
        <listitem>the currently executing object</listitem>
        <listitem>the target object</listitem>
        <listitem>
          an object encapsulating the static information about the join
          point. This is also available through the special variable
          <varname>thisJoinPointStaticPart</varname>.</listitem>
      </itemizedlist>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>Demo</classname> class</title>

        <para>The class <classname>tjp.Demo</classname> in
          <filename>tjp/Demo.java</filename> defines two methods
          <literal>foo</literal> and <literal>bar</literal> with different
          parameter lists and return types. Both are called, with suitable
          arguments, by <classname>Demo</classname>'s
          <function>go</function> method which was invoked from within its
          <function>main</function> method.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public class Demo {
    static Demo d;

    public static void main(String[] args){
        new Demo().go();
    }

    void go(){
        d = new Demo();
        d.foo(1,d);
        System.out.println(d.bar(new Integer(3)));
    }

    void foo(int i, Object o){
        System.out.println("Demo.foo(" + i + ", " + o + ")\n");
    }

    String bar (Integer j){
        System.out.println("Demo.bar(" + j + ")\n");
        return "Demo.bar(" + j  + ")";
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <literal>GetInfo</literal> aspect</title>

        <para>
          This aspect uses around advice to intercept the execution of
          methods <literal>foo</literal> and <literal>bar</literal> in
          <classname>Demo</classname>, and prints out information garnered
          from <literal>thisJoinPoint</literal> to the console.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
aspect GetInfo {

   static final void println(String s){ System.out.println(s); }

   pointcut goCut(): cflow(this(Demo) && execution(void go()));

   pointcut demoExecs(): within(Demo) && execution(* *(..));

   Object around(): demoExecs() && !execution(* go()) && goCut() {
      println("Intercepted message: " +
          thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature().getName());
      println("in class: " +
          thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature().getDeclaringType().getName());
      printParameters(thisJoinPoint);
      println("Running original method: \n" );
      Object result = proceed();
      println("  result: " + result );
      return result;
   }

   static private void printParameters(JoinPoint jp) {
      println("Arguments: " );
      Object[] args = jp.getArgs();
      String[] names = ((CodeSignature)jp.getSignature()).getParameterNames();
      Class[] types = ((CodeSignature)jp.getSignature()).getParameterTypes();
      for (int i = 0; i < args.length; i++) {
         println("  "  + i + ". " + names[i] +
             " : " +            types[i].getName() +
             " = " +            args[i]);
      }
   }
}
]]></programlisting>

        <sect4>
          <title>Defining the scope of a pointcut</title>

          <para>The pointcut <function>goCut</function> is defined as

<programlisting><![CDATA[
cflow(this(Demo)) && execution(void go())
]]></programlisting>

            so that only executions made in the control flow of
            <literal>Demo.go</literal> are intercepted. The control flow
            from the method <literal>go</literal> includes the execution of
            <literal>go</literal> itself, so the definition of the around
            advice includes <literal>!execution(* go())</literal> to
            exclude it from the set of executions advised. </para>
        </sect4>

        <sect4>
          <title>Printing the class and method name</title>

          <para>
            The name of the method and that method's defining class are
            available as parts of the <ulink
            url="../api/org/aspectj/lang/Signature.html">org.aspectj.lang.Signature</ulink>
            object returned by calling <literal>getSignature()</literal> on
            either <literal>thisJoinPoint</literal> or
            <literal>thisJoinPointStaticPart</literal>.
          </para>
        </sect4>

        <sect4>
          <title>Printing the parameters</title>

          <para>
            The static portions of the parameter details, the name and
            types of the parameters, can be accessed through the <ulink
              url="../api/org/aspectj/lang/reflect/CodeSignature.html"><literal>org.aspectj.lang.reflect.CodeSignature</literal></ulink>
            associated with the join point. All execution join points have code
            signatures, so the cast to <literal>CodeSignature</literal>
            cannot fail. </para>

          <para>
            The dynamic portions of the parameter details, the actual
            values of the parameters, are accessed directly from the
            execution join point object.
          </para>
        </sect4>
      </sect3>
    </sect2>

<!-- ============================== -->

    <sect2 id="examples-roles">
      <title>Roles and Views</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/introduction</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
        Like advice, inter-type declarations are members of an aspect. They
        declare members that act as if they were defined on another class.
        Unlike advice, inter-type declarations affect not only the behavior
        of the application, but also the structural relationship between an
        application's classes.
      </para>

      <para>
        This is crucial: Publically affecting the class structure of an
        application makes these modifications available to other components
        of the application.
      </para>

      <para>
        Aspects can declare inter-type

        <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
          <listitem>fields</listitem>
          <listitem>methods</listitem>
          <listitem>constructors</listitem>
        </itemizedlist>

        and can also declare that target types

        <itemizedlist spacing="compact">
          <listitem>implement new interfaces</listitem>
          <listitem>extend new classes</listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>

      <para>
        This example provides three illustrations of the use of inter-type
        declarations to encapsulate roles or views of a class. The class
        our aspect will be dealing with, <classname>Point</classname>, is a
        simple class with rectangular and polar coordinates. Our inter-type
        declarations will make the class <classname>Point</classname>, in
        turn, cloneable, hashable, and comparable. These facilities are
        provided by AspectJ without having to modify the code for the class
        <classname>Point</classname>.
      </para>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>Point</classname> class</title>

        <para>The <classname>Point</classname> class defines geometric points
          whose interface includes polar and rectangular coordinates, plus some
          simple operations to relocate points. <classname>Point</classname>'s
          implementation has attributes for both its polar and rectangular
          coordinates, plus flags to indicate which currently reflect the
          position of the point. Some operations cause the polar coordinates to
          be updated from the rectangular, and some have the opposite effect.
          This implementation, which is in intended to give the minimum number
          of conversions between coordinate systems, has the property that not
          all the attributes stored in a <classname>Point</classname> object
          are necessary to give a canonical representation such as might be
          used for storing, comparing, cloning or making hash codes from
          points. Thus the aspects, though simple, are not totally trivial.
        </para>

        <para>
          The diagram below gives an overview of the aspects and their
          interaction with the class <classname>Point</classname>.</para>

        <para>
          <inlinemediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="aspects.gif"/>
            </imageobject>
          </inlinemediaobject>
        </para>
        <para></para>

      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>CloneablePoint</classname> aspect</title>

        <para>
          This first aspect is responsible for
          <classname>Point</classname>'s implementation of the
          <classname>Cloneable</classname> interface.  It declares that
          <literal>Point implements Cloneable</literal> with a
          <literal>declare parents</literal> form, and also publically
          declares a specialized <literal>Point</literal>'s
          <literal>clone()</literal> method.  In Java, all objects inherit
          the method <literal>clone</literal> from the class
          <classname>Object</classname>, but an object is not cloneable
          unless its class also implements the interface
          <classname>Cloneable</classname>.  In addition, classes
          frequently have requirements over and above the simple
          bit-for-bit copying that <literal>Object.clone</literal> does. In
          our case, we want to update a <classname>Point</classname>'s
          coordinate systems before we actually clone the
          <classname>Point</classname>. So our aspect makes sure that
          <literal>Point</literal> overrides
          <literal>Object.clone</literal> with a new method that does what
          we want.
        </para>

        <para>
          We also define a test <literal>main</literal> method in the
          aspect for convenience.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect CloneablePoint {

   declare parents: Point implements Cloneable;

   public Object Point.clone() throws CloneNotSupportedException {
      // we choose to bring all fields up to date before cloning.
      makeRectangular();
      makePolar();
      return super.clone();
   }

   public static void main(String[] args){
      Point p1 = new Point();
      Point p2 = null;

      p1.setPolar(Math.PI, 1.0);
      try {
         p2 = (Point)p1.clone();
      } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) {}
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1 );
      System.out.println("p2 =" + p2 );

      p1.rotate(Math.PI / -2);
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1 );
      System.out.println("p2 =" + p2 );
   }
}
]]></programlisting>
      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>ComparablePoint</classname> aspect</title>

        <para>
          <classname>ComparablePoint</classname> is responsible for
          <literal>Point</literal>'s implementation of the
          <literal>Comparable</literal> interface. </para>

        <para>
          The interface <classname>Comparable</classname> defines the
          single method <literal>compareTo</literal> which can be use to define
          a natural ordering relation among the objects of a class that
          implement it.
        </para>

        <para>
          <classname>ComparablePoint</classname> uses <literal>declare
          parents</literal> to declare that <literal>Point implements
          Comparable</literal>, and also publically declares the
          appropriate <literal>compareTo(Object)</literal> method: A
          <classname>Point</classname> <literal>p1</literal> is said to be
          less than another <classname>Point</classname><literal>
          p2</literal> if <literal>p1</literal> is closer to the
          origin.
        </para>

        <para>
          We also define a test <literal>main</literal> method in the
          aspect for convenience.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect ComparablePoint {

   declare parents: Point implements Comparable;

   public int Point.compareTo(Object o) {
      return (int) (this.getRho() - ((Point)o).getRho());
   }

   public static void main(String[] args){
      Point p1 = new Point();
      Point p2 = new Point();

      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));

      p1.setRectangular(2,5);
      p2.setRectangular(2,5);
      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));

      p2.setRectangular(3,6);
      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));

      p1.setPolar(Math.PI, 4);
      p2.setPolar(Math.PI, 4);
      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));

      p1.rotate(Math.PI / 4.0);
      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));

      p1.offset(1,1);
      System.out.println("p1 =?= p2 :" + p1.compareTo(p2));
   }
}
]]></programlisting>
      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>HashablePoint</classname> aspect</title>

        <para>
          Our third aspect is responsible for <literal>Point</literal>'s
          overriding of <literal>Object</literal>'s
          <literal>equals</literal> and <literal>hashCode</literal> methods
          in order to make <literal>Point</literal>s hashable.
        </para>

        <para>
          The method <literal>Object.hashCode</literal> returns an unique
          integer, suitable for use as a hash table key. Different
          implementations are allowed return different integers, but must
          return distinct integers for distinct objects, and the same integer
          for objects that test equal. But since the default implementation
          of <literal>Object.equal</literal> returns <literal>true</literal>
          only when two objects are identical, we need to redefine both
          <function>equals</function> and <function>hashCode</function> to work
          correctly with objects of type <classname>Point</classname>. For
          example, we want two <classname>Point</classname> objects to test
          equal when they have the same <literal>x</literal> and
          <literal>y</literal> values, or the same <literal>rho</literal> and
          <literal>theta</literal> values, not just when they refer to the same
          object. We do this by overriding the methods
          <literal>equals</literal> and <literal>hashCode</literal> in the
          class <classname>Point</classname>.
        </para>

        <para>
          So <classname>HashablePoint</classname> declares
          <literal>Point</literal>'s <literal>hashCode</literal> and
          <literal>equals</literal> methods, using
          <classname>Point</classname>'s rectangular coordinates to
          generate a hash code and to test for equality. The
          <literal>x</literal> and <literal>y</literal> coordinates are
          obtained using the appropriate get methods, which ensure the
          rectangular coordinates are up-to-date before returning their
          values.
        </para>

        <para>
          And again, we supply a <literal>main</literal> method in the
          aspect for testing.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect HashablePoint {

   public int Point.hashCode() {
      return (int) (getX() + getY() % Integer.MAX_VALUE);
   }

   public boolean Point.equals(Object o) {
      if (o == this) { return true; }
      if (!(o instanceof Point)) { return false; }
      Point other = (Point)o;
      return (getX() == other.getX()) && (getY() == other.getY());
   }

   public static void main(String[] args) {
      Hashtable h = new Hashtable();
      Point p1 = new Point();

      p1.setRectangular(10, 10);
      Point p2 = new Point();

      p2.setRectangular(10, 10);

      System.out.println("p1 = " + p1);
      System.out.println("p2 = " + p2);
      System.out.println("p1.hashCode() = " + p1.hashCode());
      System.out.println("p2.hashCode() = " + p2.hashCode());

      h.put(p1, "P1");
      System.out.println("Got: " + h.get(p2));
   }
}
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>
    </sect2>
  </sect1>

<!--  ============================================================ -->
<!--  ============================================================ -->

  <sect1 id="examples-development">
    <title>Development Aspects</title>

    <sect2>
      <title>Tracing using aspects</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/tracing</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
        Writing a class that provides tracing functionality is easy: a
        couple of functions, a boolean flag for turning tracing on and
        off, a choice for an output stream, maybe some code for
        formatting the output -- these are all elements that
        <classname>Trace</classname> classes have been known to
        have. <classname>Trace</classname> classes may be highly
        sophisticated, too, if the task of tracing the execution of a
        program demands it.
      </para>

      <para>
        But developing the support for tracing is just one part of the
        effort of inserting tracing into a program, and, most likely, not
        the biggest part. The other part of the effort is calling the
        tracing functions at appropriate times. In large systems, this
        interaction with the tracing support can be overwhelming.  Plus,
        tracing is one of those things that slows the system down, so
        these calls should often be pulled out of the system before the
        product is shipped. For these reasons, it is not unusual for
        developers to write ad-hoc scripting programs that rewrite the
        source code by inserting/deleting trace calls before and after
        the method bodies.
      </para>

      <para>
        AspectJ can be used for some of these tracing concerns in a less
        ad-hoc way.  Tracing can be seen as a concern that crosscuts the
        entire system and as such is amenable to encapsulation in an
        aspect.  In addition, it is fairly independent of what the system
        is doing. Therefore tracing is one of those kind of system
        aspects that can potentially be plugged in and unplugged without
        any side-effects in the basic functionality of the system.
      </para>

      <sect3>
        <title>An Example Application</title>

        <para>
          Throughout this example we will use a simple application that
          contains only four classes. The application is about shapes. The
          <classname>TwoDShape</classname> class is the root of the shape
          hierarchy:
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public abstract class TwoDShape {
    protected double x, y;
    protected TwoDShape(double x, double y) {
        this.x = x; this.y = y;
    }
    public double getX() { return x; }
    public double getY() { return y; }
    public double distance(TwoDShape s) {
        double dx = Math.abs(s.getX() - x);
        double dy = Math.abs(s.getY() - y);
        return Math.sqrt(dx*dx + dy*dy);
    }
    public abstract double perimeter();
    public abstract double area();
    public String toString() {
        return (" @ (" + String.valueOf(x) + ", " + String.valueOf(y) + ") ");
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        <classname>TwoDShape</classname> has two subclasses,
        <classname>Circle</classname> and <classname>Square</classname>:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public class Circle extends TwoDShape {
    protected double r;
    public Circle(double x, double y, double r) {
        super(x, y); this.r = r;
    }
    public Circle(double x, double y) { this(  x,   y, 1.0); }
    public Circle(double r)           { this(0.0, 0.0,   r); }
    public Circle()                   { this(0.0, 0.0, 1.0); }
    public double perimeter() {
        return 2 * Math.PI * r;
    }
    public double area() {
        return Math.PI * r*r;
    }
    public String toString() {
        return ("Circle radius = " + String.valueOf(r) + super.toString());
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public class Square extends TwoDShape {
    protected double s;    // side
    public Square(double x, double y, double s) {
        super(x, y); this.s = s;
    }
    public Square(double x, double y) { this(  x,   y, 1.0); }
    public Square(double s)           { this(0.0, 0.0,   s); }
    public Square()                   { this(0.0, 0.0, 1.0); }
    public double perimeter() {
        return 4 * s;
    }
    public double area() {
        return s*s;
    }
    public String toString() {
        return ("Square side = " + String.valueOf(s) + super.toString());
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        To run this application, compile the classes. You can do it with or
        without ajc, the AspectJ compiler. If you've installed AspectJ, go
        to the directory
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples</filename>
        and type:
      </para>

<programlisting>
ajc -argfile tracing/notrace.lst
</programlisting>

      <para>To run the program, type</para>

<programlisting>
java tracing.ExampleMain
</programlisting>

      <para>(we don't need anything special on the classpath since this is pure
      Java code).  You should see the following output:</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
c1.perimeter() = 12.566370614359172
c1.area() = 12.566370614359172
s1.perimeter() = 4.0
s1.area() = 1.0
c2.distance(c1) = 4.242640687119285
s1.distance(c1) = 2.23606797749979
s1.toString(): Square side = 1.0 @ (1.0, 2.0)
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>
    <sect3>
      <title>Tracing&mdash;Version 1</title>

      <para>
        In a first attempt to insert tracing in this application, we will
        start by writing a <classname>Trace</classname> class that is
        exactly what we would write if we didn't have aspects.  The
        implementation is in <filename>version1/Trace.java</filename>.  Its
        public interface is:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public class Trace {
    public static int TRACELEVEL = 0;
    public static void initStream(PrintStream s) {...}
    public static void traceEntry(String str) {...}
    public static void traceExit(String str) {...}
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        If we didn't have AspectJ, we would have to insert calls to
        <literal>traceEntry</literal> and <literal>traceExit</literal> in
        all methods and constructors we wanted to trace, and to initialize
        <literal>TRACELEVEL</literal> and the stream. If we wanted to trace
        all the methods and constructors in our example, that would amount
        to around 40 calls, and we would hope we had not forgotten any
        method. But we can do that more consistently and reliably with the
        following aspect (found in
        <filename>version1/TraceMyClasses.java</filename>):
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
aspect TraceMyClasses {
    pointcut myClass(): within(TwoDShape) || within(Circle) || within(Square);
    pointcut myConstructor(): myClass() && execution(new(..));
    pointcut myMethod(): myClass() && execution(* *(..));

    before (): myConstructor() {
        Trace.traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
    after(): myConstructor() {
        Trace.traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }

    before (): myMethod() {
        Trace.traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
    after(): myMethod() {
        Trace.traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
}]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        This aspect performs the tracing calls at appropriate
        times. According to this aspect, tracing is performed at the
        entrance and exit of every method and constructor defined within
        the shape hierarchy.
      </para>

      <para>
        What is printed at before and after each of the traced join points
        is the signature of the method executing. Since the signature is
        static information, we can get it through
        <literal>thisJoinPointStaticPart</literal>.
      </para>

      <para>
        To run this version of tracing, go to the directory
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples</filename>
        and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  ajc -argfile tracing/tracev1.lst
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        Running the main method of
        <classname>tracing.version1.TraceMyClasses</classname> should produce
        the output:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double)
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Square(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Square(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.Square(double, double)
  <-- tracing.Square(double, double)
  --> double tracing.Circle.perimeter()
  <-- double tracing.Circle.perimeter()
c1.perimeter() = 12.566370614359172
  --> double tracing.Circle.area()
  <-- double tracing.Circle.area()
c1.area() = 12.566370614359172
  --> double tracing.Square.perimeter()
  <-- double tracing.Square.perimeter()
s1.perimeter() = 4.0
  --> double tracing.Square.area()
  <-- double tracing.Square.area()
s1.area() = 1.0
  --> double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
  <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
c2.distance(c1) = 4.242640687119285
  --> double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
  <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
s1.distance(c1) = 2.23606797749979
  --> String tracing.Square.toString()
    --> String tracing.TwoDShape.toString()
    <-- String tracing.TwoDShape.toString()
  <-- String tracing.Square.toString()
s1.toString(): Square side = 1.0 @ (1.0, 2.0)
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        When <filename>TraceMyClasses.java</filename> is not provided to
        <command>ajc</command>, the aspect does not have any affect on the
        system and the tracing is unplugged.
      </para>
    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Tracing&mdash;Version 2</title>

      <para>
        Another way to accomplish the same thing would be to write a
        reusable tracing aspect that can be used not only for these
        application classes, but for any class. One way to do this is to
        merge the tracing functionality of
        <literal>Trace&mdash;version1</literal> with the crosscutting
        support of <literal>TraceMyClasses&mdash;version1</literal>. We end
        up with a <literal>Trace</literal> aspect (found in
        <filename>version2/Trace.java</filename>) with the following public
        interface
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
abstract aspect Trace {

    public static int TRACELEVEL = 2;
    public static void initStream(PrintStream s) {...}
    protected static void traceEntry(String str) {...}
    protected static void traceExit(String str) {...}
    abstract pointcut myClass();
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        In order to use it, we need to define our own subclass that knows
        about our application classes, in
        <filename>version2/TraceMyClasses.java</filename>:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect TraceMyClasses extends Trace {
    pointcut myClass(): within(TwoDShape) || within(Circle) || within(Square);

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        Trace.TRACELEVEL = 2;
        Trace.initStream(System.err);
        ExampleMain.main(args);
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        Notice that we've simply made the pointcut
        <literal>classes</literal>, that was an abstract pointcut in the
        super-aspect, concrete. To run this version of tracing, go to the
        directory <filename>examples</filename> and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  ajc -argfile tracing/tracev2.lst
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        The file tracev2.lst lists the application classes as well as this
        version of the files Trace.java and TraceMyClasses.java. Running
        the main method of
        <classname>tracing.version2.TraceMyClasses</classname> should
        output exactly the same trace information as that from version 1.
      </para>

      <para>
        The entire implementation of the new <classname>Trace</classname>
        class is:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
abstract aspect Trace {

    // implementation part

    public static int TRACELEVEL = 2;
    protected static PrintStream stream = System.err;
    protected static int callDepth = 0;

    public static void initStream(PrintStream s) {
        stream = s;
    }
    protected static void traceEntry(String str) {
        if (TRACELEVEL == 0) return;
        if (TRACELEVEL == 2) callDepth++;
        printEntering(str);
    }
    protected static void traceExit(String str) {
        if (TRACELEVEL == 0) return;
        printExiting(str);
        if (TRACELEVEL == 2) callDepth--;
    }
    private static void printEntering(String str) {
        printIndent();
        stream.println("--> " + str);
    }
    private static void printExiting(String str) {
        printIndent();
        stream.println("<-- " + str);
    }
    private static void printIndent() {
        for (int i = 0; i < callDepth; i++)
            stream.print("  ");
    }

    // protocol part

    abstract pointcut myClass();

    pointcut myConstructor(): myClass() && execution(new(..));
    pointcut myMethod(): myClass() && execution(* *(..));

    before(): myConstructor() {
        traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
    after(): myConstructor() {
        traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }

    before(): myMethod() {
        traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
    after(): myMethod() {
        traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature());
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        This version differs from version 1 in several subtle ways. The
        first thing to notice is that this <classname>Trace</classname>
        class merges the functional part of tracing with the crosscutting
        of the tracing calls. That is, in version 1, there was a sharp
        separation between the tracing support (the class
        <classname>Trace</classname>) and the crosscutting usage of it (by
        the class <classname>TraceMyClasses</classname>). In this version
        those two things are merged. That's why the description of this
        class explicitly says that "Trace messages are printed before and
        after constructors and methods are," which is what we wanted in the
        first place. That is, the placement of the calls, in this version,
        is established by the aspect class itself, leaving less opportunity
        for misplacing calls.</para>

      <para>
        A consequence of this is that there is no need for providing
        <literal>traceEntry</literal> and <literal>traceExit</literal> as
        public operations of this class. You can see that they were
        classified as protected. They are supposed to be internal
        implementation details of the advice.
      </para>

      <para>
        The key piece of this aspect is the abstract pointcut classes that
        serves as the base for the definition of the pointcuts constructors
        and methods. Even though <classname>classes</classname> is
        abstract, and therefore no concrete classes are mentioned, we can
        put advice on it, as well as on the pointcuts that are based on
        it. The idea is "we don't know exactly what the pointcut will be,
        but when we do, here's what we want to do with it." In some ways,
        abstract pointcuts are similar to abstract methods. Abstract
        methods don't provide the implementation, but you know that the
        concrete subclasses will, so you can invoke those methods.
      </para>
    </sect3>
    </sect2>
  </sect1>

<!--  ============================================================ -->
<!--  ============================================================ -->

  <sect1 id="examples-production">
    <title>Production Aspects</title>

    <!--  ==================== -->

    <sect2><!-- A Bean Aspect -->
      <title>A Bean Aspect</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/bean</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
        This example examines an aspect that makes Point objects into 
        Java beans with bound properties.
      </para>

      <para>
        Java beans are reusable software components that can be visually
        manipulated in a builder tool. The requirements for an object to be
        a bean are few. Beans must define a no-argument constructor and
        must be either <classname>Serializable</classname> or
        <classname>Externalizable</classname>. Any properties of the object
        that are to be treated as bean properties should be indicated by
        the presence of appropriate <literal>get</literal> and
        <literal>set</literal> methods whose names are
        <literal>get</literal><emphasis>property</emphasis> and
        <literal>set </literal><emphasis>property</emphasis> where
        <emphasis>property</emphasis> is the name of a field in the bean
        class. Some bean properties, known as bound properties, fire events
        whenever their values change so that any registered listeners (such
        as, other beans) will be informed of those changes. Making a bound
        property involves keeping a list of registered listeners, and
        creating and dispatching event objects in methods that change the
        property values, such as set<emphasis>property</emphasis>
        methods.
      </para>

      <para>
        <classname>Point</classname> is a simple class representing points
        with rectangular coordinates. <classname>Point</classname> does not
        know anything about being a bean: there are set methods for
        <literal>x</literal> and <literal>y</literal> but they do not fire
        events, and the class is not serializable. Bound is an aspect that
        makes <classname>Point</classname> a serializable class and makes
        its <literal>get</literal> and <literal>set</literal> methods
        support the bound property protocol.
      </para>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <classname>Point</classname> class</title>

      <para>
        The <classname>Point</classname> class is a very simple class with
        trivial getters and setters, and a simple vector offset method.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
class Point {

  protected int x = 0;
  protected int y = 0;

  public int getX() {
    return x;
  }

  public int getY() {
    return y;
  }

  public void setRectangular(int newX, int newY) {
    setX(newX);
    setY(newY);
  }

  public void setX(int newX) {
    x = newX;
  }

  public void setY(int newY) {
    y = newY;
  }

  public void offset(int deltaX, int deltaY) {
    setRectangular(x + deltaX, y + deltaY);
  }

  public String toString() {
    return "(" + getX() + ", " + getY() + ")" ;
  }
}
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <classname>BoundPoint</classname> aspect</title>

      <para>
        The <classname>BoundPoint</classname> aspect is responsible for
        <literal>Point</literal>'s "beanness". The first thing it does is
        privately declare that each <literal>Point</literal> has a
        <literal>support</literal> field that holds reference to an
        instance of <classname>PropertyChangeSupport</classname>.  

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  private PropertyChangeSupport Point.support = new PropertyChangeSupport(this);
]]></programlisting>

        The property change support object must be constructed with a
        reference to the bean for which it is providing support, so it is
        initialized by passing it <literal>this</literal>, an instance of
        <classname>Point</classname>.  Since the <literal>support</literal>
        field is private declared in the aspect, only the code in the
        aspect can refer to it.
      </para>

      <para>
        The aspect also declares <literal>Point</literal>'s methods for
        registering and managing listeners for property change events,
        which delegate the work to the property change support object:

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  public void Point.addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener){
    support.addPropertyChangeListener(listener);
  }
  public void Point.addPropertyChangeListener(String propertyName,
                                              PropertyChangeListener listener){

    support.addPropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
  }
  public void Point.removePropertyChangeListener(String propertyName,
                                                 PropertyChangeListener listener) {
    support.removePropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
  }
  public void Point.removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener) {
    support.removePropertyChangeListener(listener);
  }
  public void Point.hasListeners(String propertyName) {
    support.hasListeners(propertyName);
  }
]]></programlisting>
      </para>

      <para>
        The aspect is also responsible for making sure
        <classname>Point</classname> implements the
        <classname>Serializable</classname> interface:

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  declare parents: Point implements Serializable;
]]></programlisting>

        Implementing this interface in Java does not require any methods to
        be implemented. Serialization for <classname>Point</classname>
        objects is provided by the default serialization method.
      </para>

      <para>
        The <function>setters</function> pointcut picks out calls to the
        <literal>Point</literal>'s <literal>set</literal> methods: any
        method whose name begins with "<literal>set</literal>" and takes
        one parameter. The around advice on <literal>setters()</literal>
        stores the values of the <literal>X</literal> and
        <literal>Y</literal> properties, calls the original
        <literal>set</literal> method and then fires the appropriate
        property change event according to which set method was
        called. 
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
aspect BoundPoint {
  private PropertyChangeSupport Point.support = new PropertyChangeSupport(this);

  public void Point.addPropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener){
    support.addPropertyChangeListener(listener);
  }
  public void Point.addPropertyChangeListener(String propertyName,
                                              PropertyChangeListener listener){

    support.addPropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
  }
  public void Point.removePropertyChangeListener(String propertyName,
                                                 PropertyChangeListener listener) {
    support.removePropertyChangeListener(propertyName, listener);
  }
  public void Point.removePropertyChangeListener(PropertyChangeListener listener) {
    support.removePropertyChangeListener(listener);
  }
  public void Point.hasListeners(String propertyName) {
    support.hasListeners(propertyName);
  }

  declare parents: Point implements Serializable;

  pointcut setter(Point p): call(void Point.set*(*)) && target(p);

  void around(Point p): setter(p) {
        String propertyName =
      thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature().getName().substring("set".length());
        int oldX = p.getX();
        int oldY = p.getY();
        proceed(p);
        if (propertyName.equals("X")){
      firePropertyChange(p, propertyName, oldX, p.getX());
        } else {
      firePropertyChange(p, propertyName, oldY, p.getY());
        }
  }

  void firePropertyChange(Point p,
                          String property,
                          double oldval,
                          double newval) {
        p.support.firePropertyChange(property,
                                 new Double(oldval),
                                 new Double(newval));
  }
}
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The Test Program</title>

      <para>
        The test program registers itself as a property change listener to
        a <literal>Point</literal> object that it creates and then performs
        simple manipulation of that point: calling its set methods and the
        offset method. Then it serializes the point and writes it to a file
        and then reads it back. The result of saving and restoring the
        point is that a new point is created.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class Demo implements PropertyChangeListener {

    static final String fileName = "test.tmp";

    public void propertyChange(PropertyChangeEvent e){
      System.out.println("Property " + e.getPropertyName() + " changed from " +
         e.getOldValue() + " to " + e.getNewValue() );
    }

    public static void main(String[] args){
      Point p1 = new Point();
      p1.addPropertyChangeListener(new Demo());
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1);
      p1.setRectangular(5,2);
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1);
      p1.setX( 6 );
      p1.setY( 3 );
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1);
      p1.offset(6,4);
      System.out.println("p1 =" + p1);
      save(p1, fileName);
      Point p2 = (Point) restore(fileName);
      System.out.println("Had: " + p1);
      System.out.println("Got: " + p2);
      }
    ...
  }
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Compiling and Running the Example</title>

      <para>
        To compile and run this example, go to the examples directory and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
ajc -argfile bean/files.lst
java bean.Demo
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>
    </sect2>

    <!--  ==================== -->

    <sect2>
      <title>The Subject/Observer Protocol</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
	<filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/observer</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
        This demo illustrates how the Subject/Observer design pattern can be
        coded with aspects. 
      </para>

      <para>
         The demo consists of the following: A colored label is a
         renderable object that has a color that cycles through a set of
         colors, and a number that records the number of cycles it has been
         through. A button is an action item that records when it is
         clicked.
      </para>

      <para>
        With these two kinds of objects, we can build up a Subject/Observer
        relationship in which colored labels observe the clicks of buttons;
        that is, where colored labels are the observers and buttons are the
        subjects.
      </para>

      <para>
        The demo is designed and implemented using the Subject/Observer
        design pattern. The remainder of this example explains the classes
        and aspects of this demo, and tells you how to run it.
      </para>

    <sect3>
      <title>Generic Components</title>

      <para>
        The generic parts of the protocol are the interfaces
        <classname>Subject</classname> and <classname>Observer</classname>,
        and the abstract aspect
        <classname>SubjectObserverProtocol</classname>. The
        <classname>Subject</classname> interface is simple, containing
        methods to add, remove, and view <classname>Observer</classname>
        objects, and a method for getting data about state changes:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
    interface Subject {
      void addObserver(Observer obs);
      void removeObserver(Observer obs);
      Vector getObservers();
      Object getData();
  }
]]></programlisting>

      <para> 
        The <classname>Observer</classname> interface is just as simple,
        with methods to set and get <classname>Subject</classname> objects,
        and a method to call when the subject gets updated.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  interface Observer {
      void setSubject(Subject s);
      Subject getSubject();
      void update();
  }
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        The <classname>SubjectObserverProtocol</classname> aspect contains
        within it all of the generic parts of the protocol, namely, how to
        fire the <classname>Observer</classname> objects' update methods
        when some state changes in a subject.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  abstract aspect SubjectObserverProtocol {

      abstract pointcut stateChanges(Subject s);

      after(Subject s): stateChanges(s) {
          for (int i = 0; i < s.getObservers().size(); i++) {
              ((Observer)s.getObservers().elementAt(i)).update();
          }
      }

      private Vector Subject.observers = new Vector();
      public void   Subject.addObserver(Observer obs) {
          observers.addElement(obs);
          obs.setSubject(this);
      }
      public void   Subject.removeObserver(Observer obs) {
          observers.removeElement(obs);
          obs.setSubject(null);
      }
      public Vector Subject.getObservers() { return observers; }

      private Subject Observer.subject = null;
      public void     Observer.setSubject(Subject s) { subject = s; }
      public Subject  Observer.getSubject() { return subject; }

  }
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        Note that this aspect does three things. It define an abstract
        pointcut that extending aspects can override. It defines advice
        that should run after the join points of the pointcut. And it
        declares an inter-tpye field and two inter-type methods so that
        each <literal>Observer</literal> can hold onto its <literal>Subject</literal>. 
      </para>
    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Application Classes</title>

      <para>
        <classname>Button</classname> objects extend
        <classname>java.awt.Button</classname>, and all they do is make
        sure the <literal>void click()</literal> method is called whenever
        a button is clicked.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class Button extends java.awt.Button {

      static final Color  defaultBackgroundColor = Color.gray;
      static final Color  defaultForegroundColor = Color.black;
      static final String defaultText = "cycle color";

      Button(Display display) {
          super();
          setLabel(defaultText);
          setBackground(defaultBackgroundColor);
          setForeground(defaultForegroundColor);
          addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
                  public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e) {
                      Button.this.click();
                  }
              });
          display.addToFrame(this);
      }

      public void click() {}

  }
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        Note that this class knows nothing about being a Subject.
      </para>

      <para>
        ColorLabel objects are labels that support the void colorCycle()
        method. Again, they know nothing about being an observer.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class ColorLabel extends Label {

      ColorLabel(Display display) {
          super();
          display.addToFrame(this);
      }

      final static Color[] colors = {Color.red, Color.blue,
                                     Color.green, Color.magenta};
      private int colorIndex = 0;
      private int cycleCount = 0;
      void colorCycle() {
          cycleCount++;
          colorIndex = (colorIndex + 1) % colors.length;
          setBackground(colors[colorIndex]);
          setText("" + cycleCount);
      }
  }
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        Finally, the <classname>SubjectObserverProtocolImpl</classname>
        implements the subject/observer protocol, with
        <classname>Button</classname> objects as subjects and
        <classname>ColorLabel</classname> objects as observers:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
package observer;

import java.util.Vector;

aspect SubjectObserverProtocolImpl extends SubjectObserverProtocol {

    declare parents: Button implements Subject;
    public Object Button.getData() { return this; }

    declare parents: ColorLabel implements Observer;
    public void    ColorLabel.update() {
        colorCycle();
    }

    pointcut stateChanges(Subject s):
        target(s) &&
        call(void Button.click());

}]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        It does this by assuring that <classname>Button</classname> and
        <classname>ColorLabel</classname> implement the appropriate
        interfaces, declaring that they implement the methods required by
        those interfaces, and providing a definition for the abstract
        <literal>stateChanges</literal> pointcut. Now, every time a
        <classname>Button</classname> is clicked, all
        <classname>ColorLabel</classname> objects observing that button
        will <literal>colorCycle</literal>.
      </para>
    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Compiling and Running</title>

      <para> 
        <classname>Demo</classname> is the top class that starts this
        demo. It instantiates a two buttons and three observers and links
        them together as subjects and observers. So to run the demo, go to
        the <filename>examples</filename> directory and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  ajc -argfile observer/files.lst
  java observer.Demo
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>
    </sect2>

    <!--  ==================== -->

    <sect2>
      <title>A Simple Telecom Simulation</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/telecom</filename>.)
      </para>

      <para>
	This example illustrates some ways that dependent concerns can be
	encoded with aspects. It uses an example system comprising a simple
	model of telephone connections to which timing and billing features
	are added using aspects, where the billing feature depends upon the
	timing feature.
      </para>

      <sect3>
	<title>The Application</title>

	<para>
	  The example application is a simple simulation of a telephony
	  system in which customers make, accept, merge and hang-up both
	  local and long distance calls. The application architecture is in
	  three layers.
	</para>

	<itemizedlist>
	  <listitem>
	    <para>
	      The basic objects provide basic functionality to simulate
	      customers, calls and connections (regular calls have one
	      connection, conference calls have more than one).
	    </para>
	  </listitem>

	  <listitem>
	    <para>
	      The timing feature is concerned with timing the connections
	      and keeping the total connection time per customer. Aspects
	      are used to add a timer to each connection and to manage the
	      total time per customer.
	    </para>
	  </listitem>

	  <listitem>
	    <para>
	      The billing feature is concerned with charging customers for
	      the calls they make. Aspects are used to calculate a charge
	      per connection and, upon termination of a connection, to add
	      the charge to the appropriate customer's bill. The billing
	      aspect builds upon the timing aspect: it uses a pointcut
	      defined in Timing and it uses the timers that are associated
	      with connections.
	    </para>
	  </listitem>
	</itemizedlist>

        <para>
          The simulation of system has three configurations: basic, timing
          and billing. Programs for the three configurations are in classes
          <classname>BasicSimulation</classname>,
          <classname>TimingSimulation</classname> and
          <classname>BillingSimulation</classname>. These share a common
          superclass <classname>AbstractSimulation</classname>, which
          defines the method run with the simulation itself and the method
          wait used to simulate elapsed time.
        </para>
      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The Basic Objects</title>

        <para>
          The telecom simulation comprises the classes
          <classname>Customer</classname>, <classname>Call</classname> and
          the abstract class <classname>Connection</classname> with its two
          concrete subclasses <classname>Local</classname> and
          <classname>LongDistance</classname>. Customers have a name and a
          numeric area code. They also have methods for managing
          calls. Simple calls are made between one customer (the caller)
          and another (the receiver), a <classname>Connection</classname>
          object is used to connect them. Conference calls between more
          than two customers will involve more than one connection. A
          customer may be involved in many calls at one time.

          <inlinemediaobject>
            <imageobject>
              <imagedata fileref="telecom.gif"/>
            </imageobject>
          </inlinemediaobject>
        </para>

      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>Customer</classname> class</title>

        <para>
          <classname>Customer</classname> has methods
          <literal>call</literal>, <literal>pickup</literal>,
          <literal>hangup</literal> and <literal>merge</literal> for
          managing calls.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public class Customer {

      private String name;
      private int areacode;
      private Vector calls = new Vector();

      protected void removeCall(Call c){
          calls.removeElement(c);
      }

      protected void addCall(Call c){
          calls.addElement(c);
      }

      public Customer(String name, int areacode) {
          this.name = name;
          this.areacode = areacode;
      }

      public String toString() {
          return name + "(" + areacode + ")";
      }

      public int getAreacode(){
          return areacode;
      }

      public boolean localTo(Customer other){
          return areacode == other.areacode;
      }

      public Call call(Customer receiver) {
          Call call = new Call(this, receiver);
          addCall(call);
          return call;
      }

      public void pickup(Call call) {
          call.pickup();
          addCall(call);
      }

      public void hangup(Call call) {
          call.hangup(this);
          removeCall(call);
      }

      public void merge(Call call1, Call call2){
          call1.merge(call2);
          removeCall(call2);
      }
  }
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <classname>Call</classname> class</title>

      <para>
        Calls are created with a caller and receiver who are customers. If
        the caller and receiver have the same area code then the call can
        be established with a <classname>Local</classname> connection (see
        below), otherwise a <classname>LongDistance</classname> connection
        is required.  A call comprises a number of connections between
        customers. Initially there is only the connection between the
        caller and receiver but additional connections can be added if
        calls are merged to form conference calls.
      </para>
    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <classname>Connection</classname> class</title>

      <para>
        The class <classname>Connection</classname> models the physical
        details of establishing a connection between customers. It does
        this with a simple state machine (connections are initially
        <literal>PENDING</literal>, then <literal>COMPLETED</literal> and
        finally <literal>DROPPED</literal>). Messages are printed to the
        console so that the state of connections can be
        observed. Connection is an abstract class with two concrete
        subclasses: <classname>Local</classname> and
        <classname>LongDistance</classname>.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  abstract class Connection {

      public static final int PENDING = 0;
      public static final int COMPLETE = 1;
      public static final int DROPPED = 2;

      Customer caller, receiver;
      private int state = PENDING;

      Connection(Customer a, Customer b) {
          this.caller = a;
          this.receiver = b;
      }

      public int getState(){
          return state;
      }

      public Customer getCaller() { return caller; }

      public Customer getReceiver() { return receiver; }

      void complete() {
          state = COMPLETE;
          System.out.println("connection completed");
      }

      void drop() {
          state = DROPPED;
          System.out.println("connection dropped");
      }

      public boolean connects(Customer c){
          return (caller == c || receiver == c);
      }

  }
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <literal>Local</literal> and <literal>LongDistance</literal> classes</title>

      <para>
        The two kinds of connections supported by our simulation are
        <literal>Local</literal> and <literal>LongDistance</literal>
        connections.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class Local extends Connection {
      Local(Customer a, Customer b) {
          super(a, b);
          System.out.println("[new local connection from " +
             a + " to " + b + "]");
      }
  }
]]></programlisting>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class LongDistance extends Connection {
      LongDistance(Customer a, Customer b) {
          super(a, b);
          System.out.println("[new long distance connection from " +
              a + " to " + b + "]");
      }
  }
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Compiling and Running the Basic Simulation</title>

      <para>
        The source files for the basic system are listed in the file
        <filename>basic.lst</filename>. To build and run the basic system,
        in a shell window, type these commands:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
ajc -argfile telecom/basic.lst
java telecom.BasicSimulation
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The Timing aspect</title>

      <para>
        The <classname>Timing</classname> aspect keeps track of total
        connection time for each <classname>Customer</classname> by
        starting and stopping a timer associated with each connection. It
        uses some helper classes:
      </para>

      <sect4>
        <title>The <classname>Timer</classname> class</title>

        <para>
          A <classname>Timer</classname> object simply records the current
          time when it is started and stopped, and returns their difference
          when asked for the elapsed time. The aspect
          <classname>TimerLog</classname> (below) can be used to cause the
          start and stop times to be printed to standard output.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  class Timer {
      long startTime, stopTime;

      public void start() {
          startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
          stopTime = startTime;
      }

      public void stop() {
          stopTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
      }

      public long getTime() {
          return stopTime - startTime;
      }
  }
]]></programlisting>

        </sect4>
      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>TimerLog</classname> aspect</title>

        <para>
          The <classname>TimerLog</classname> aspect can be included in a
          build to get the timer to announce when it is started and
          stopped.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect TimerLog {

    after(Timer t): target(t) && call(* Timer.start())  {
      System.err.println("Timer started: " + t.startTime);
    }

    after(Timer t): target(t) && call(* Timer.stop()) {
      System.err.println("Timer stopped: " + t.stopTime);
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>

      <sect3>
        <title>The <classname>Timing</classname> aspect</title>

        <para>
          The <classname>Timing</classname> aspect is declares an
          inter-type field <literal>totalConnectTime</literal> for 
          <classname>Customer</classname> to store the accumulated connection
          time per <classname>Customer</classname>.  It also declares that
          each <classname>Connection</classname> object has a timer. 

<programlisting><![CDATA[
    public long Customer.totalConnectTime = 0;
    private Timer Connection.timer = new Timer();
]]></programlisting>

          Two pieces of after advice ensure that the timer is started when
          a connection is completed and and stopped when it is dropped. The
          pointcut <literal>endTiming</literal> is defined so that it can
          be used by the <classname>Billing</classname> aspect.
        </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect Timing {

    public long Customer.totalConnectTime = 0;

    public long getTotalConnectTime(Customer cust) {
        return cust.totalConnectTime;
    }
    private Timer Connection.timer = new Timer();
    public Timer getTimer(Connection conn) { return conn.timer; }

    after (Connection c): target(c) && call(void Connection.complete()) {
        getTimer(c).start();
    }

    pointcut endTiming(Connection c): target(c) &&
        call(void Connection.drop());

    after(Connection c): endTiming(c) {
        getTimer(c).stop();
        c.getCaller().totalConnectTime += getTimer(c).getTime();
        c.getReceiver().totalConnectTime += getTimer(c).getTime();
    }
}]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>The <literal>Billing</literal> aspect</title>

      <para>
        The Billing system adds billing functionality to the telecom
        application on top of timing.
      </para>

      <para>
        The <classname>Billing</classname> aspect declares that each
        <classname>Connection</classname> has a <literal>payer</literal>
        inter-type field to indicate who initiated the call and therefore
        who is responsible to pay for it. It also declares the inter-type
        method <literal>callRate</literal> of
        <classname>Connection</classname> so that local and long distance
        calls can be charged differently. The call charge must be
        calculated after the timer is stopped; the after advice on pointcut
        <literal>Timing.endTiming</literal> does this, and
        <classname>Billing</classname> is declared to be more precedent
        than <classname>Timing</classname> to make sure that this advice
        runs after <classname>Timing</classname>'s advice on the same join
        point.  Finally, it declares inter-type methods and fields for
        <classname>Customer</classname> to handle the
        <literal>totalCharge</literal>. 
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
public aspect Billing {
    // precedence required to get advice on endtiming in the right order
    declare precedence: Billing, Timing;

    public static final long LOCAL_RATE = 3;
    public static final long LONG_DISTANCE_RATE = 10;

    public Customer Connection.payer;
    public Customer getPayer(Connection conn) { return conn.payer; }

    after(Customer cust) returning (Connection conn):
        args(cust, ..) && call(Connection+.new(..)) {
        conn.payer = cust;
    }

    public abstract long Connection.callRate();

    public long LongDistance.callRate() { return LONG_DISTANCE_RATE; }
    public long Local.callRate() { return LOCAL_RATE; }

    after(Connection conn): Timing.endTiming(conn) {
        long time = Timing.aspectOf().getTimer(conn).getTime();
        long rate = conn.callRate();
        long cost = rate * time;
        getPayer(conn).addCharge(cost);
    }

    public long Customer.totalCharge = 0;
    public long getTotalCharge(Customer cust) { return cust.totalCharge; }

    public void Customer.addCharge(long charge){
        totalCharge += charge;
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

    </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Accessing the inter-type state</title>

      <para>
        Both the aspects <classname>Timing</classname> and
        <classname>Billing</classname> contain the definition of operations
        that the rest of the system may want to access. For example, when
        running the simulation with one or both aspects, we want to find
        out how much time each customer spent on the telephone and how big
        their bill is. That information is also stored in the classes, but
        they are accessed through static methods of the aspects, since the
        state they refer to is private to the aspect.
      </para>

      <para>
        Take a look at the file
        <filename>TimingSimulation.java</filename>. The most important
        method of this class is the method
        <filename>report(Customer)</filename>, which is used in the method
        run of the superclass
        <classname>AbstractSimulation</classname>. This method is intended
        to print out the status of the customer, with respect to the
        <classname>Timing</classname> feature.
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  protected void report(Customer c){
      Timing t = Timing.aspectOf();
      System.out.println(c + " spent " + t.getTotalConnectTime(c));
  }
]]></programlisting>
      </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Compiling and Running</title>

      <para>
        The files timing.lst and billing.lst contain file lists for the
        timing and billing configurations. To build and run the application
        with only the timing feature, go to the directory examples and
        type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  ajc -argfile telecom/timing.lst
  java telecom.TimingSimulation
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        To build and run the application with the timing and billing
        features, go to the directory examples and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  ajc -argfile telecom/billing.lst
  java telecom.BillingSimulation
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>

    <sect3>
      <title>Discussion</title>

      <para>
        There are some explicit dependencies between the aspects Billing
        and Timing:

        <itemizedlist>
          <listitem>
            <para>
              Billing is declared more precedent than Timing so that Billing's
              after advice runs after that of Timing when they are on the
              same join point.
            </para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>
              Billing uses the pointcut Timing.endTiming.
            </para>
          </listitem>

          <listitem>
            <para>
              Billing needs access to the timer associated with a connection.
            </para>
          </listitem>
        </itemizedlist>
      </para>
    </sect3>
    </sect2>
  </sect1>

<!--  ============================================================ -->
<!--  ============================================================ -->

  <sect1 id="examples-reusable">
    <title>Reusable Aspects</title>

    <sect2>
      <title>Tracing using Aspects, Revisited</title>

      <para>
        (The code for this example is in
        <filename><replaceable>InstallDir</replaceable>/examples/tracing</filename>.)
      </para>

      <sect3>
        <title>Tracing&mdash;Version 3</title>

        <para>
          One advantage of not exposing the methods traceEntry and
          traceExit as public operations is that we can easily change their
          interface without any dramatic consequences in the rest of the
          code.
        </para>

	<para>
	  Consider, again, the program without AspectJ. Suppose, for
	  example, that at some point later the requirements for tracing
	  change, stating that the trace messages should always include the
	  string representation of the object whose methods are being
	  traced. This can be achieved in at least two ways. One way is
	  keep the interface of the methods <literal>traceEntry</literal>
	  and <literal>traceExit</literal> as it was before,
	</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  public static void traceEntry(String str);
  public static void traceExit(String str);
]]></programlisting>

	<para>
	  In this case, the caller is responsible for ensuring that the
	  string representation of the object is part of the string given
	  as argument.  So, calls must look like:
	</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  Trace.traceEntry("Square.distance in " + toString());
]]></programlisting>

	<para>
	  Another way is to enforce the requirement with a second argument
	  in the trace operations, e.g.
	</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  public static void traceEntry(String str, Object obj);
  public static void traceExit(String str, Object obj);
]]></programlisting>

	<para>
	  In this case, the caller is still responsible for sending the
	  right object, but at least there is some guarantees that some
	  object will be passed. The calls will look like:
	</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  Trace.traceEntry("Square.distance", this);
]]></programlisting>

	<para>
	  In either case, this change to the requirements of tracing will
	  have dramatic consequences in the rest of the code -- every call
	  to the trace operations traceEntry and traceExit must be changed!
	</para>

	<para>
	  Here's another advantage of doing tracing with an aspect. We've
	  already seen that in version 2 <literal>traceEntry</literal> and
	  <literal>traceExit</literal> are not publicly exposed. So
	  changing their interfaces, or the way they are used, has only a
	  small effect inside the <classname>Trace</classname>
	  class. Here's a partial view at the implementation of
	  <classname>Trace</classname>, version 3. The differences with
	  respect to version 2 are stressed in the comments:
	</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
abstract aspect Trace {

    public static int TRACELEVEL = 0;
    protected static PrintStream stream = null;
    protected static int callDepth = 0;

    public static void initStream(PrintStream s) {
        stream = s;
    }

    protected static void traceEntry(String str, Object o) {
        if (TRACELEVEL == 0) return;
        if (TRACELEVEL == 2) callDepth++;
        printEntering(str + ": " + o.toString());
    }

    protected static void traceExit(String str, Object o) {
        if (TRACELEVEL == 0) return;
        printExiting(str + ": " + o.toString());
        if (TRACELEVEL == 2) callDepth--;
    }

    private static void printEntering(String str) {
        printIndent();
        stream.println("Entering " + str);
    }

    private static void printExiting(String str) {
        printIndent();
        stream.println("Exiting " + str);
    }

    private static void printIndent() {
        for (int i = 0; i < callDepth; i++)
            stream.print("  ");
    }

    abstract pointcut myClass(Object obj);

    pointcut myConstructor(Object obj): myClass(obj) && execution(new(..));
    pointcut myMethod(Object obj): myClass(obj) &&
        execution(* *(..)) && !execution(String toString());

    before(Object obj): myConstructor(obj) {
        traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature(), obj);
    }
    after(Object obj): myConstructor(obj) {
        traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature(), obj);
    }

    before(Object obj): myMethod(obj) {
        traceEntry("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature(), obj);
    }
    after(Object obj): myMethod(obj) {
        traceExit("" + thisJoinPointStaticPart.getSignature(), obj);
    }
}
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        As you can see, we decided to apply the first design by preserving
        the interface of the methods <literal>traceEntry</literal> and
        <literal>traceExit</literal>. But it doesn't matter&mdash;we could
        as easily have applied the second design (the code in the directory
        <filename>examples/tracing/version3</filename> has the second
        design).  The point is that the effects of this change in the
        tracing requirements are limited to the
        <classname>Trace</classname> aspect class.
      </para>

      <para>
        One implementation change worth noticing is the specification of
        the pointcuts. They now expose the object. To maintain full
        consistency with the behavior of version 2, we should have included
        tracing for static methods, by defining another pointcut for static
        methods and advising it. We leave that as an exercise.
      </para>

      <para>
        Moreover, we had to exclude the execution join point of the method
        <filename>toString</filename> from the <literal>methods</literal>
        pointcut. The problem here is that <literal>toString</literal> is
        being called from inside the advice.  Therefore if we trace it, we
        will end up in an infinite recursion of calls. This is a subtle
        point, and one that you must be aware when writing advice. If the
        advice calls back to the objects, there is always the possibility
        of recursion. Keep that in mind!
      </para>

      <para>
        In fact, esimply excluding the execution join point may not be
        enough, if there are calls to other traced methods within it -- in
        which case, the restriction should be
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
&& !cflow(execution(String toString()))
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        excluding both the execution of toString methods and all join
        points under that execution.
      </para>

      <para>
        In summary, to implement the change in the tracing requirements we
        had to make a couple of changes in the implementation of the
        <classname>Trace</classname> aspect class, including changing the
        specification of the pointcuts. That's only natural. But the
        implementation changes were limited to this aspect. Without
        aspects, we would have to change the implementation of every
        application class.
      </para>

      <para>
        Finally, to run this version of tracing, go to the directory
        <filename>examples</filename> and type:
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
ajc -argfile tracing/tracev3.lst
]]></programlisting>

      <para>
        The file tracev3.lst lists the application classes as well as this
        version of the files <filename>Trace.java</filename> and
        <filename>TraceMyClasses.java</filename>. To run the program, type
      </para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
java tracing.version3.TraceMyClasses
]]></programlisting>

      <para>The output should be:</para>

<programlisting><![CDATA[
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.Circle(double)
  <-- tracing.Circle(double)
  --> tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  <-- tracing.TwoDShape(double, double)
  --> tracing.Square(double, double, double)
  <-- tracing.Square(double, double, double)
  --> tracing.Square(double, double)
  <-- tracing.Square(double, double)
  --> double tracing.Circle.perimeter()
  <-- double tracing.Circle.perimeter()
c1.perimeter() = 12.566370614359172
  --> double tracing.Circle.area()
  <-- double tracing.Circle.area()
c1.area() = 12.566370614359172
  --> double tracing.Square.perimeter()
  <-- double tracing.Square.perimeter()
s1.perimeter() = 4.0
  --> double tracing.Square.area()
  <-- double tracing.Square.area()
s1.area() = 1.0
  --> double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
  <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
c2.distance(c1) = 4.242640687119285
  --> double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getX()
    --> double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
    <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.getY()
  <-- double tracing.TwoDShape.distance(TwoDShape)
s1.distance(c1) = 2.23606797749979
  --> String tracing.Square.toString()
    --> String tracing.TwoDShape.toString()
    <-- String tracing.TwoDShape.toString()
  <-- String tracing.Square.toString()
s1.toString(): Square side = 1.0 @ (1.0, 2.0)
]]></programlisting>

      </sect3>
    </sect2>
  </sect1>
</chapter>