On 15 Aug 2012, at 15:30, Stuart Douglas wrote:
On 15/08/2012, at 11:20 PM, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> All, the CDI EG requires feedback on an item in the spec which is not clear, and has
been implemented differently between implementations, and is not TCK tested. As Deltaspike
contains lots of extensions authors, requesting feedback. Please either send direct to me,
or post to cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org :-)
>
>
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>
> Multiple Annotated Types
> ====================
>
>
https://issues.jboss.org/browse/CDI-58
>
> This concerns whether there can be greater than one annotated type per class instance
in the JVM. Gavin intended there should be, principally to support an XML configuration
dialect, which could introduce multiple versions of a class, each with a different
qualifier. However, this is not TCK tested, and implementations vary in how they support
this.
>
> We discussed that this makes an implementation considerably more complex (as there is
no easy way to uniquely identify an annotated type e.g. for serialization), and also is
pretty confusing for a user (as you now get multiple ProcessAnnotatedType events for each
class, making it hard to know which one you want to change).
>
> We looked at alternative solutions, and concluded that if all use cases can be
satisfied by adding a new bean, rather than a new annotated type, we would like to
explicitly specify that there is only one annotated type per class instance. In CDI 1.1 it
is already much easier to add and manipulate beans from annotated types, so we believe
that the correct thing here is take this route.
>
I think there are some issues here. In order to get consistent behaviour the XML
extension relied upon PAT being fired for every class it defined, so other extension could
then modify the annotated type in a consistent manner.
IOW this would prevent XML defined class from then being modified by another extension.
Later on Weld changed its behaviour so that PAT was not fired when annotated types were
added through the SPI, in order to work around this I made the XML extension fire PAT for
these type itself in order to provide backwards compatibility, which is a horrible hack
that is now causing problems for Delta Spike.
If we make this change to the specification I don't think that it will be possible to
implement a viable XML extension.
The XML would work but couldn't have it's behaviour changed by other extensions.
I am aware that this present challenges for serialisation and clustering, however I
worked around this in Weld when I was writing the XML extension by creating a class that
creates a deterministic bean id based on the annotations on the class
(
https://github.com/weld/core/blob/master/impl/src/main/java/org/jboss/wel...),
I wrote this code before I was working for Red Hat an I am quite happy to license it under
Apache or any other license.
Weld is Apache licensed anyway. I think it's fair to define this approach of creating
a type id as "not easy".
Stuart
>
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>
> Does anyone create multiple AnnotatedTypes per class instance? If so, can you please
describe:
>
> a) why you need to do this
> b) whether you could reimplement by directly creating beans (given that CDI 1.1
allows you to [1])
> c) how much effort it would be to reimplement/how much of your codebase this would
affect
>
> Thanks!
>
> Pete
>
> [1]
>
> BeanAttributes ba = beanManager.cerateBeanAttributes(annotatedType);
> InjectionTarget it = beanmanager.createInjectionTarget(annotatedType);
> Bean b = beanManager.createBean(ba, clazz, it);
>
> or
>
> BeanAttributes ba = beanManager.cerateBeanAttributes(annotatedFieldOrMethod);
> Producer p = beanmanager.createProducer(annotatedFieldOrMethod);
> Bean b = beanManager.createBean(ba, clazz, p);
>
> The Bean can then be registered using
>
> afterBeanDiscovery.addBean(b);
>
>