Hello Dennis,

Yes, the sample below is something that literally came out of the ACE code, but 
I ripped it out before I committed it. Go to the ace-webui-vaadin project, and 
then to the src/main/java/org/apache/ace/webui/vaadin/Activator.java class and 
lookup the init(BundleContext context, DependencyManager manager) method and 
insert the snippet below at the end.

That's the quickest way to start with this. Naturally, by sticking it in the 
same bundle as the UI, you cannot easily install and uninstall it separately 
form the rest of the codebase, but I guess that's not hard to do.

Greetings, Marcel


On 23 Jan 2011, at 21:29 , Dennis Crissman wrote:

> 
> Would it be possible to get a working example of how to do this?
> 
> Thanks,
> Dennis Crissman
> 
>> Subject: Re: Dynamically debugging services with aspects...
>> From: [email protected]
>> Date: Sun, 23 Jan 2011 19:34:09 +0100
>> To: [email protected]
>> 
>> Definitely, or, using the same method described below, you can also 
>> intercept all EventHandlers that are listening to events.
>> 
>> On 23 Jan 2011, at 15:55 , Angelo van der Sijpt wrote:
>> 
>>> Ooh, nice method, I've had this problem before.
>>> 
>>> To add to that, you could ease debugging (or at least, tracing of calls to 
>>> EventAdmin) by attaching the method that calls this postEvent or sendEvent 
>>> method, for instance by using
>>>   result.append(Thread.currentThread().getStackTrace()[2])
>>> 
>>> I am aware that this will fail in certain environments, but in most 
>>> situations it gives you an idea of 'where this message came from'.
>>> 
>>> Angelo
>>> 
>>> On Jan 22, 2011, at 3:18 PM, Marcel Offermans wrote:
>>> 
>>>> For ACE-112 [1] I had to debug the events flowing through the system to 
>>>> see if the events being sent were created and received correctly. Most 
>>>> events (in ACE) are being sent asynchronously, which makes debugging by 
>>>> setting breakpoints a bit more difficult, as setting breakpoints in 
>>>> handleEvent() will not reveal the sender.
>>>> 
>>>> One way to get more information is to "intercept" all calls to EventAdmin, 
>>>> and the technique to do this is what I wanted to share with you in this 
>>>> e-mail.
>>>> 
>>>> What we can do is use the Dependency Manager to create an aspect service 
>>>> on top of EventAdmin. An aspect can intercept all calls to services and in 
>>>> your interceptor you can still delegate the calls to the original service. 
>>>> Technically, this is being implemented using service rankings, which means 
>>>> that consumers will automatically react to aspects.
>>>> 
>>>> What I did was add the following to the Activator of the VaadinClient:
>>>> 
>>>>      manager.add(createAspectService(EventAdmin.class, null, 10, null)
>>>>          .setImplementation(new EventAdmin() {
>>>>              volatile EventAdmin m_eventAdmin;
>>>> 
>>>>              private String print(Event event) {
>>>>                  StringBuffer result = new StringBuffer();
>>>>                  result.append("Event[ ");
>>>>                  String[] names = event.getPropertyNames();
>>>>                  for (String name : names) {
>>>>                      result.append(name);
>>>>                      result.append('=');
>>>>                      result.append(event.getProperty(name));
>>>>                      result.append(' ');
>>>>                  }
>>>>                  result.append(']');
>>>>                  return result.toString();
>>>>              }
>>>> 
>>>>              public void postEvent(Event event) {
>>>>                  System.out.println("postEvent: " + print(event));
>>>>                  m_eventAdmin.postEvent(event);
>>>>              }
>>>> 
>>>>              public void sendEvent(Event event) {
>>>>                  System.out.println("sendEvent: " + print(event));
>>>>                  m_eventAdmin.sendEvent(event);
>>>>              }
>>>>          }));
>>>> 
>>>> When we create the aspect service, the first two parameters are the 
>>>> service class and a filter condition (null here) we want to create aspects 
>>>> on top of. For each service that matches the service name and filter, and 
>>>> aspect will be instantiated of the class specified below. The third 
>>>> parameters is the service ranking for this aspect. This is there because 
>>>> you can also chain aspects on top of each other. The final option (null 
>>>> here) is the name of the member that should be injected into the aspect 
>>>> service (null means any member of the right class).
>>>> 
>>>> The implementation is just one that intercepts all calls, prints the 
>>>> event, and then delegates them to the real EventAdmin (which is injected 
>>>> automatically).
>>>> 
>>>> So it's quite easy to debug a service this way, and it's fully dynamic. 
>>>> Even in a running production system, you can install a new bundle that 
>>>> adds an aspect on top of an existing service and you can instantly 
>>>> intercept all calls, and stop or uninstall the bundle again once you're 
>>>> done.
>>>> 
>>>> Greetings, Marcel
>>>> 
>>>> [1] https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ACE-112
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>> 
>                                         

Reply via email to