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java-spring-aop

  • Programming technique based on concept of an Aspect.
  • An aspect encapsulate cross-cutting logic - "Cross-Cutting Concerns".
  • "Concern" means logic/functionality - like logging, security.
  • Apply the Proxy design pattern.

Aspects

  • Aspect can be reused at multiple locations.
  • Same aspect/class can be applied on any class based on configuration.

Benefits

  • Code for Aspect is defined in a single class
    • Much better than being scattered everywhere.
    • Promoted code reuse and easier to change.
  • Business code in the application is cleaner
    • Only applied to business functionality.
    • Reduces code complexity.
  • Configurable
    • Based on configuration, apply Aspects selectively to different parts of the application.
    • No need to make changes to main application code.

Use Cases

  • Most common
    • logging, security, transactions
  • Audit logging
    • who, what, when, where
  • Exception handling
    • log exception and notify DevOps team via SMS/Email
  • API Management
    • how many times has a method been called by user.
    • analytics: what are peak times? what is average load? who is top user?

Advantages

  • Reusable modules
  • Resolve code tangling
  • Resolve code scatter
  • Applied selectively based on configuration

Disadvantages

  • Too many aspects and app flow is hard to follow
  • Minor performance cost for aspect execution (run-time weaving)

AOP Terminology

  • Aspect: module of code for a cross-cutting concern (logging, security etc)
  • Advice: What action is taken and when it should be applied
    • Before advice: run before method
    • After finally advice: run after the method (finally)
    • After returning advice: run after the method (success execution)
    • After throwing advice: run after the method (if exception thrown)
    • Around advice: run before and after the method
  • Join Point: When to apply code during program execution
    • We can read the method arguments using JoinPoints.
    • Example - Access and display method signature
    @Before("execution(public void addAccount())")
    public void beforeAddAccountAdvice(JoinPoint joinPoint) {
        MethodSignature methodSig = (MethodSignature) joinPoint.getSignature();
        System.out.println(methodSig);
    }
    • Example - Access and display method signature
    @Before("execution(public void addAccount(com.ysingh.springaop.expression.model.Account, ..))")
    public void beforeAddAccountAdvice(JoinPoint joinPoint) {
        Object[] args = joinPoint.getArgs();
        for(Object arg : args) {
            System.out.println(arg);
        }
    }
  • Pointcut: A predicate expression for where advice should be applied
    • Expression Language: execution(modifiers? return-type declaring-type? method-name(param) throws?)
      • ? - They are optional and we can skip if we don't need them.
      • For Param:
        • () - matches a method with no arguments
        • (*) - matches a method with one argument of any return type
        • (..) - matches a method with 0 or more arguments of any return type
      • Example - Match on method names:
        • Match only addAccount method in AccountDAO class
        @Before("execution(public void com.ysingh.springaop.dao.AccountDAO.addAccount())")
        • Match only addAccount method in any class
        @Before("execution(public void addAccount())")
        • Match methods starting with add in any class
        @Before("execution(public void add*())")
      • Example - Match on return type:
        • Match any return type
        @Before("execution(public * add*())")
      • Example
    • Declaration
      • Benefit
        • Easily reuse the pointcut expressions
        • Update pointcut in one location
        • Can also share and combine the pointcut expressions
      • Example
        • Match DAO Package
        @Pointcut("execution(* com.ysingh.springaop.dao.*.*(..))")
        private void forDaoPackage() {}
      • Example

Comparing Spring AOP and AspectJ

  • Spring AOP only supports
    • Method-level join points
    • Run-time code weaving (slower than AspectJ)
  • AspectJ supports
    • join points: method-level, constructor, field
    • weaving: compile-time, post compile-time and load-time

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