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https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-420?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.sy...
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Mark Struberg commented on CDI-420:
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Most of the performance gets lost by parsing the zipstreams from the jar. We also need to
check the scopes + stereotypes or 'annotated' as well. The only difference in
practice is to create the AnnotatedType + fire the PAT events. Of course this is a bit
more than 'annotated', but not much. But the huge benefit is that most CDI
Extensions would work with that mode, whereas they are broken with 'annotated'.
Regarding using @WithAnnotations as input for the scanner. Imo that would be a chicken-egg
problem.
add a bean-discovery-mode 'scoped'
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Key: CDI-420
URL:
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-420
Project: CDI Specification Issues
Issue Type: Bug
Components: Packaging and Deployment
Affects Versions: TBD
Reporter: Mark Struberg
Fix For: 2.0 (discussion)
This is for some future CDI release.
We currently only have 3 bean-discovery-modes
* none
* all
* annotated
The spec also currently says that ProcessAnnotatedType will only get fired (12.4) for
• each Java class, interface or enum deployed in an explicit bean archive, and
• each Java class with a bean defining annotation in an implicit bean archive.
• each session bean
Which means that we do not get the ProcessAnnotatedType (PAT) event for any class in an
'annotated' or 'implicit' BDA which does _not_ have a bean defining
annotation.
It might be useful to fire the ProcessAnnotatedType for all classes, but do not pick them
up as Beans if they (after PAT) do not have a valid scope. Effectively doing the
processing but not make them @Dependent automatically if there is no scope annotation at
the end of the PAT processing.
I'm not yet 100% sure how important this distinction is in practice. Just writing
this up to not forget about the idea...
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