[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TAP5-1510?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
]
Igor Drobiazko reassigned TAP5-1510:
------------------------------------
Assignee: Igor Drobiazko
> The @Advise annotation limits advice to just a specific interface type
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: TAP5-1510
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/TAP5-1510
> Project: Tapestry 5
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: tapestry-ioc
> Affects Versions: 5.3.0, 5.2.5
> Reporter: Howard M. Lewis Ship
> Assignee: Igor Drobiazko
>
> @Advise requires that you specify a service interface (there's no default value). This
is much more limiting than the advise method naming prefix, which will match all services
(subject to the use of @Match), without regard to service interface.
> Further, inside ModuleImpl:
> private boolean markerMatched(ServiceDef serviceDef, Markable markable)
> {
> if (!serviceDef.getServiceInterface().equals(markable.getServiceInterface()))
> return false;;
> here, the Markable is the AdvisorDef2 instance generated from the @Advise annotation.
This is an exact comparison; I believe this should be:
> if (! markable.getServiceInterface().isAssignableFrom(serviceDef.getServiceInterface()))
return false;
> That, combined with a default of Object.class for @Advisor.serviceInterface would do
the trick ... the @Advise.serviceInterface acts as an umbrella over any services' service
interface.
> ..... ok, did more research and more stepping with the debugger. The above should be
fixed, but it's only the second case of matching, the primary match should be based on the
@Match annotation ... but that's broken too:
> Frrom DefaultModuleDefImpl:
> private <T extends Annotation> String[] extractPatterns(T annotation, String
id, Method method)
> {
> if(annotation != null)
> return new String[]{};
>
> Match match = method.getAnnotation(Match.class);
> if (match == null)
> return new String[]
> { id };
> return match.value();
> }
> Here, the annotation is the @Advise annotation; I don't get why it returns empty string
array; we should still see if there's a @Match annotation. Looking at the code, I can't see
any reason why we would return that empty string array, the presense of the @Advise annotation
(or for a decorator method, the @Decorate annotation) has no purpose I can figure out.
> In my situation, my advise method was not invoked because
> a) Primary check (by service id) failed, because the @Match annotation was ignored
> b) Secondary check (by service type and marker annotations) failed, because of inexact
match on service interface
> So, the end result is the @Advise is only useful to advise a specific service interface,
which is the opposite of what method advice is about ... it's supposed to match against a
swath of services, adapting the advise to whatever methods are present in those services.
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