Compiler Notes
The initial implementations of AspectJ have all been compiler-based implementations. Certain elements of AspectJ’s semantics are difficult to implement without making modifications to the virtual machine, which a compiler-based implementation cannot do. One way to deal with this problem would be to specify only the behavior that is easiest to implement. We have chosen a somewhat different approach, which is to specify an ideal language semantics, as well as a clearly defined way in which implementations are allowed to deviate from that semantics. This makes it possible to develop conforming AspectJ implementations today, while still making it clear what later, and presumably better, implementations should do tomorrow.
According to the AspectJ language semantics, the declaration
before(): get(int Point.x) { System.out.println("got x"); }
should advise all accesses of a field of type int
and name x
from
instances of type (or subtype of) Point
. It should do this regardless of
whether all the source code performing the access was available at the
time the aspect containing this advice was compiled, whether changes
were made later, etc.
But AspectJ implementations are permitted to deviate from this in a well-defined way — they are permitted to advise only accesses in code the implementation controls. Each implementation is free within certain bounds to provide its own definition of what it means to control code.
In the current AspectJ compiler, ajc, control of the code means having
bytecode for any aspects and all the code they should affect available
during the compile. This means that if some class Client
contains code
with the expression new Point().x
(which results in a field get join point at runtime), the
current AspectJ compiler will fail to advise that access, unless
Client.java
or Client.class
is compiled as well. It also means that join
points associated with code in native methods (including their execution
join points) cannot be advised.
Different join points have different requirements. Method and
constructor call join points can be advised only if ajc controls the
bytecode for the caller. Field reference or assignment join points can
be advised only if ajc controls the bytecode for the "caller", the code
actually making the reference or assignment. Initialization join points
can be advised only if ajc controls the bytecode of the type being
initialized, and execution join points can be advised only if ajc
controls the bytecode for the method or constructor body in question.
The end of an exception handler is underdetermined in bytecode, so ajc
will not implement after or around advice on handler join points.
Similarly, ajc cannot implement around
advice on initialization
or
preinitialization
join points. In cases where ajc cannot implement
advice, it will emit a compile-time error noting this as a compiler
limitation.
Aspects that are defined perthis
or pertarget
also have restrictions
based on control of the code. In particular, at a join point where the
bytecode for the currently executing object is not available, an aspect
defined perthis
of that join point will not be associated. So aspects
defined perthis(Object)
will not create aspect instances for every
object unless Object
is part of the compile. Similar restrictions apply
to pertarget
aspects.
Inter-type declarations such as declare parents
also have restrictions
based on control of the code. If the bytecode for the target of an
inter-type declaration is not available, then the inter-type declaration
is not made on that target. So, declare parents : String implements MyInterface
will not work for java.lang.String
, unless java.lang.String
is part of the compile.
When declaring members on interfaces, the implementation must control
both the interface and the top-level implementors of that interface (the
classes that implement the interface but do not have a superclass that
implements the interface). You may weave these separately, but be aware
that you will get runtime exceptions if you run the affected top-level
classes without the interface as produced by the same ajc
implementation. Any intertype declaration of an abstract
method on an
interface must be specified as public
, you will get a compile time error
message indicating this is a compiler limitation if you do not specify
public
. A non-abstract
method declared on an interface can use any
access modifier except protected. Note that this is different to normal
Java rules where all members declared in an interface are implicitly
public
. Finally, note that one cannot define static
fields or methods on
interfaces.
When declaring methods on target types, only methods declared public
are
recognizable in the bytecode, so methods must be declared public
to be
overridden in any subtype or to be called from code in a later compile
using the target type as a library.
Other AspectJ implementations, indeed, future versions of ajc, may
define code the implementation controls more liberally or
restrictively, so long as they comport with the Java language. For
example, the call
pointcut does not pick out reflective calls to a
method implemented in
java.lang.reflect.Method.invoke(Object, Object[])
. Some suggest that
the call "happens" and the call pointcut should pick it out, but the
AspectJ language shouldn’t anticipate what happens in code outside the
control of the implementation, even when it is a well-defined API in a
Java standard library.
The important thing to remember is that core concepts of AspectJ, such as the join point, are unchanged, regardless of which implementation is used. During your development, you will have to be aware of the limitations of the ajc compiler you’re using, but these limitations should not drive the design of your aspects.
Bytecode Notes
The .class
expression and String
+
The java language form Foo.class
is implemented in bytecode with a
call to Class.forName
guarded by an exception handler catching a
ClassNotFoundException
.
The java language +
operator, when applied to String
arguments, is
implemented in bytecode by calls to StringBuffer.append
.
In both of these cases, the current AspectJ compiler operates on the
bytecode implementation of these language features; in short, it
operates on what is really happening rather than what was written in
source code. This means that there may be call join points to
Class.forName
or StringBuffer.append
from programs that do not, at
first glance, appear to contain such calls:
class Test {
void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println(Test.class); // calls Class.forName
System.out.println(args[0] + args[1]); // calls StringBuffer.append
}
}
In short, the join point model of the current AspectJ compiler considers these as valid join points.
The handler()
join point
The end of exception handlers cannot reliably be found in Java bytecode.
Instead of removing the handler
join point entirely, the current AspectJ
compiler restricts what can be done with the handler
join point:
-
after
andaround
advice cannot apply tohandler
join points. -
The control flow of a
handler
join point cannot be detected.
The first of these is relatively straightforward. If any piece of after
advice (returning, throwing, or "finally") would normally apply to a
handler
join point, it will not in code output by the current AspectJ
compiler. A compiler warning is generated, whenever this is detected to
be the case. before
advice is allowed.
The second is that the control flow of a handler
join point is not
picked out. For example, the following pointcut
cflow(call(void foo()) || handler(java.io.IOException))
will capture all join points in the control flow of a call to
void foo()
, but it will not capture those in the control flow of an
IOException
handler. It is equivalent to cflow(call(void foo()))
. In
general, cflow(handler(Type))
will not pick out any join points, the
one exception to this is join points that occur during the execution of
any before advice on the handler.
This does not restrict programs from placing before advice on handlers inside other control flows. This advice, for example, is perfectly fine:
before(): handler(java.io.IOException) && cflow(void parse()) {
System.out.println("about to handle an exception while parsing");
}
A source-code implementation of AspectJ (such as AspectJ 1.0.6) is able to detect the endpoint of a handler join point, and as such will likely have fewer such restrictions.
Initializers and Inter-type Constructors
The code for Java initializers, such as the assignment to the field d
in
class C {
double d = Math.sqrt(2);
}
are considered part of constructors by the time AspectJ gets ahold of
bytecode. That is, the assignment of d
to the square root of two happens
inside the default constructor of C
.
Thus inter-type constructors will not necessarily run a target type’s
initialization code. In particular, if the inter-type constructor calls
a super-constructor (as opposed to a this
constructor), the target
type’s initialization code will not be run when that inter-type
constructor is called.
aspect A {
C.new(Object o) {} // implicitly calls super()
public static void main(String[] args) {
System.out.println((new C() ).d); // prints 1.414...
System.out.println((new C(null)).d); // prints 0.0
}
}
It is the job of an inter-type constructor to do all the required
initialization, or to delegate to a this
constructor if necessary.
Annotation-style Notes
Writing aspects in annotation-style is subject to the same bytecode
limitations since the binary aspects take the same form and are woven in
the same way. However, the implementation differences (e.g., the
mechanism for implementing around
advice) may be apparent at runtime.
See the documentation on annotation-style for more information.
Summary of implementation requirements
This summarizes the requirements of our implementation of AspectJ. For more details, see the relevant sections of this guide.
-
The invoking code must be under the control of ajc for the following join points:
-
call
join point -
get
join point -
set
join point
-
-
The declaring/target code must be under the control of ajc for the following join points and inter-type declarations:
-
execution
join point -
adviceexecution
join point -
handler
join point -
initialization
join point -
preinitialiaztion
join point -
staticinitialization
join point -
perthis
aspect -
pertarget
aspect -
declare parents
-
declare method | field
(see interface caveats below)
-
-
Implementation Caveats
-
The
initialization
andpreinitialization
join points do not supportaround
advice -
The
handler
join point does not support…-
after advice
-
around
advice -
cflow(handler(..))
-
-
Declaring members on an interface in an aspect affects only the topmost implementing classes the implementation controls.
-
cflow
andcflowbelow
pointcuts work within a single thread. -
Runtime
ClassCastException
may result from supplying a supertype of the actual type as an argument toproceed(..)
inaround
advice.
-