/* * Copyright 2002-2007 the original author or authors. * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package org.springframework.aop.support; import org.aopalliance.intercept.MethodInvocation; import org.springframework.aop.DynamicIntroductionAdvice; import org.springframework.aop.IntroductionInterceptor; import org.springframework.aop.ProxyMethodInvocation; import org.springframework.util.Assert; /** * Convenient implementation of the * {@link org.springframework.aop.IntroductionInterceptor} interface. * * <p>Subclasses merely need to extend this class and implement the interfaces * to be introduced themselves. In this case the delegate is the subclass * instance itself. Alternatively a separate delegate may implement the * interface, and be set via the delegate bean property. * * <p>Delegates or subclasses may implement any number of interfaces. * All interfaces except IntroductionInterceptor are picked up from * the subclass or delegate by default. * * <p>The <code>suppressInterface</code> method can be used to suppress interfaces * implemented by the delegate but which should not be introduced to the owning * AOP proxy. * * <p>An instance of this class is serializable if the delegate is. * * @author Rod Johnson * @author Juergen Hoeller * @since 16.11.2003 * @see #suppressInterface * @see DelegatePerTargetObjectIntroductionInterceptor */ public class DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor extends IntroductionInfoSupport implements IntroductionInterceptor { /** * Object that actually implements the interfaces. * May be "this" if a subclass implements the introduced interfaces. */ private Object delegate; /** * Construct a new DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor, providing * a delegate that implements the interfaces to be introduced. * @param delegate the delegate that implements the introduced interfaces */ public DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor(Object delegate) { init(delegate); } /** * Construct a new DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor. * The delegate will be the subclass, which must implement * additional interfaces. */ protected DelegatingIntroductionInterceptor() { init(this); } /** * Both constructors use this init method, as it is impossible to pass * a "this" reference from one constructor to another. * @param delegate the delegate object */ private void init(Object delegate) { Assert.notNull(delegate, "Delegate must not be null"); this.delegate = delegate; implementInterfacesOnObject(delegate); // We don't want to expose the control interface suppressInterface(IntroductionInterceptor.class); suppressInterface(DynamicIntroductionAdvice.class); } /** * Subclasses may need to override this if they want to perform custom * behaviour in around advice. However, subclasses should invoke this * method, which handles introduced interfaces and forwarding to the target. */ public Object invoke(MethodInvocation mi) throws Throwable { if (isMethodOnIntroducedInterface(mi)) { // Using the following method rather than direct reflection, we // get correct handling of InvocationTargetException // if the introduced method throws an exception. Object retVal = AopUtils.invokeJoinpointUsingReflection(this.delegate, mi.getMethod(), mi.getArguments()); // Massage return value if possible: if the delegate returned itself, // we really want to return the proxy. if (retVal == this.delegate && mi instanceof ProxyMethodInvocation) { Object proxy = ((ProxyMethodInvocation) mi).getProxy(); if (mi.getMethod().getReturnType().isInstance(proxy)) { retVal = proxy; } } return retVal; } return doProceed(mi); } /** * Proceed with the supplied {@link org.aopalliance.intercept.MethodInterceptor}. * Subclasses can override this method to intercept method invocations on the * target object which is useful when an introduction needs to monitor the object * that it is introduced into. This method is <strong>never</strong> called for * {@link MethodInvocation MethodInvocations} on the introduced interfaces. */ protected Object doProceed(MethodInvocation mi) throws Throwable { // If we get here, just pass the invocation on. return mi.proceed(); } }