AspectJ Browser Introduction AJBrowser presents a GUI for compiling programs with ajc and navigating crosscutting structure. The AspectJ Browser can edit program source files, compile using the AspectJ compiler ajc run a program, and graphically navigate the program's crosscutting structure. For more information on ajc, see . Launch the browser from the command line either by typing "ajbrowser" to invoke the script in {aspectj}/bin (if AspectJ is installed correctly) or by using the aspectjtools.jar directly, and specifying no arguments or some number of build configuration files (suffix .lst): java -jar aspectj1.1/lib/aspectjtools.jar aspectj1.1/doc/examples/spacewar/debug.lst Building Programs Build Configurations A build configuration is a set of files to compile for a program (and optionally some additional compile arguments). Because ajc requires all sources to be specified (at least using the -sourceroots option), most users create .lst files that list the files to compile (one argument per line, globbing permitted - for more details, see ). To work with a particular program, select the corresponding ".lst" build configuration file from the GUI using the File menu, "open" item, or by using the "Open Build Configuration" button ( ). You can populate the build list from the command line by passing any number of ".lst" paths. (However, if you pass in any non-".lst" arguments, it will run the command-line compiler directly.) To switch between build configurations, select, add, or remove them using the corresponding toolbar buttons. Global build options are stored in an .ajbrowser file in your HOME directory. Edit these from the GUI by clicking the "Options" button or selecting the Tools menu item "Options...". This is how to set classpath, aspectpath, etc. The following sections walk through a build. Compiling a Program Build Configuration To compile click the "Build" button ( ), or or use the tools menu. You may select from different build configurations in the GUI (see label 1 in the graphic below). (If you get classpath or other errors, set up the global build options as described above.) Navigating Program Structure Select nodes in the program structure by clicking them (see label 2). If one node is related to one or more other nodes by an association the name of the association will appear below that node and will be displayed in italics. Links to other structure nodes appear in blue below the association. If there is no corresponding source for the link it will appear light-blue. Example: Exploring the "Spacewar" sample code Launch ajbrowser Choose "File -> Open" or click the "Open Build Configuration" button ( ) and select the configuration file for debugging the spacewar example, in examples/spacewar/debug.lst. Click the "Build" button ( ) to compile. The left pane should fill with a spacewar declaration tree. If there is a compiler error, the clickable error message shows up as in label 4. Note: If you did not set up your classpath, the compile will fail with a message that you need to install aspectjrt.jar on your compile classpath. To do that, select "Tools -> Options" or click the "Options" button ( ). Click the Build Options tab to view the Build Paths pane. Edit the classpath entry to use your install location. For example, if you ran from the base Aspectj directory, the classpath need only include lib/aspectjrt.jar (though the browser may populate the classpath with the bootclasspath and classpath initially.) Be sure to use the lib/aspectjrt.jar that came with the browser. Different structure views: The structure tree at the left can display different orderings and granularity for structure: The package hierarchy view shows the traditional hierarchy of package, class, and members. The inheritance view shows the hierarchy from topmost parent classes through subclasses to members. The crosscutting view shows the aspect members and the code they affect. Additional buttons in the pane can be used to change the granularity and filter out items. Whenever you select an item in the tree view, the source pane scrolls to that item. If you select a leaf item representing another program element, then the tree selection will go to the corresponding node. (See below for how to use two panes to maintain your place.) When working with aspects, it helps to be able to navigate between different program elements: When looking at a method, find the advice that affects it. When looking at a pointcut, find the advice that uses it. When looking at advice, find what it advises - e.g., method calls or executions, initializers, etc. When looking at a type, find any aspects that declare members or supertypes of the type, or vice-versa. You can view the advice on a particular method using the default, hierarchical view. Navigate to the tree item for spacewar.Registry.register(SpaceObject) in the debug.lst config file. Now, in the lower, file view, you can see and navigate to the advice using the subtree whose parent is the method affected by relation. You can also use crosscutting view to see the advice using a pointcut or the methods affected by advice. For example, to see what advice uses a particular pointcut, navigate to the tree item for the pointcut spacewar.Debug.allConstructorsCut() in the debug.lst config file. You can see and navigate to the advice that uses the pointcut using the pointcut used by relation. As an example of seeing the methods affected by advice, while still in the same view, select the first before advice in spacewar.Debug. It has relation sub-trees for both uses pointcut and affects constructions. The affects relations will list different kinds of join points - constructor or method calls, etc. Note that the AspectJ browser can only display static structure (whether hierarchical or crosscutting). That means that dynamicly-determined pointcuts (like cflow(pointcut)) will not be shown as picking out static points in source code. Displayable pointcuts roughly correspond to those that can be used in a declare error statement. Running Programs The browser supports a limited form of running compiled programs. To run programs that have been built, click the run button or select one of the run menu items in the project menu. You can run in the same VM or spawn a new process; the latter is generally better for GUI programs. Both require that any classpath you set be specified using platform-specific paths and path separators (the compiler might be more tolerant). Output and error streams will be merged into the streams of the browser (using separate threads, so it may take a few seconds for the pipe threads to gain control.) Errors should be detected and displayed in a dialog. The GUI does not support killing a running program, so if your program might hang, be sure to save your files since you may need to kill the browser itself to kill its child processes. Isolating problems running the AspectJ browser If you have problems with the browser not solved by the documentation, please try to see if you have the same problems when running ajc directly on the command line. If the problem occurs on the command line also, then the problem is not in the browser. (It may be in the compiler; please send bug reports.) If the problem does not occur on the command line, then it may lie in the parameters you are supplying in the build options. If the build options look correct and the problem only occurs when building from the browser, then please submit a bug report. Known issues with the AspectJ browser For the most up-to-date information on known problems, see the bug database for unresolved compiler bugs or IDE bugs . Memory and forking: Users email most about the browser task running out of memory. This is not a problem with the browser; some compiles take a lot of memory, often more than similar compiles using javac. The browser does not support forking, so the only solution is to edit the java command line or script that launches the browser to add memory. Editing build configuration files: this is not currently supported. The structure model is incomplete after incremental compiles. To get a complete structure model requires a full build. If you change the output directory, you must do a full build. Limitations The AJBrowser expects the package and directory structure to match. If they do not it will be unable to browse to the corresponding file. The "Run" feature launches applications in the same VM. As a result, if a Swing application is disposed the AJBrowser will be disposed as well. AspectJ Browser questions and bugs You can send email to aspectj-users@dev.eclipse.org. (Do join the list to participate!) We also welcome any bug reports, patches, and feature requests; you can submit them to the bug database at http://bugs.eclipse.org/bugs using the AspectJ product and IDE component.