Hi John,
my two cents:
- this feature is a must-have, if Forge should be more than a tool
to iniitialize projects, really great idea
- being pragmatic I would say this calls for proxy classes, similar
to CDI decorators or the copy-on-write strategy
(AFAIK the downside to CDI decorators is that they need interfaces on
the base classes, thus again requiring changes of the classes if they
hadnt been designed for it firstplace.)
I have a very similar problem I am currently trying to solve with silly
wrapper classes and was starting to think about dynamic proxy generation
- unfortunately I have _no_ experience with such technology other than
being simple user :-/
Have you thought about javassist? Is it an option at all?
Thomas
Am 14.02.2013 16:21, schrieb John Franey:
My motivation for this email is to satisfy FORGE-773. However, this
is also related to FORGE-563 and FORGE-424, and resolution could
enable other features.
I have written a prototype:
1) an implementation of the forge java api interfaces which delegates
to java's reflection, offering a read only perspective of java components.
2) a forge module, currently a facet, to search for a given binary
class in the project's dependencies and returns the result wrapped in
the above delegate.
These are demonstrable in a unit test.
My dilemma now is how to integrate these into the forge project.
There are a few different areas, but I'll start with this:
For some callers, a java class is a java class, whether it originates
as source code (from the current forge project) or is a class from the
dependency set. For example, scaffolding primarily is a read only
operation. In this use case, it would be simpler for these clients to
have a single interface to resolve classes because whether a class is
source or binary is not relevant to the use case.
On the other hand, there is a set of classes in a user's project that
are modifiable. In these cases, a java class is not a java class.
Forge components might want the distinction somehow. There ought the
be some distinction of which class is modifiable and which is not.
Naively, I took the first thinking that the existing forge java model
would be adequate. To have separate java api for read-only and
read-write java model objects seems a fundamental addition to the java
model which requires much more effort. In absence of such a model, I
though to implement 'no-op' for those code changing methods (e.g.,
Named.setName() would be inert). I assumed that forge component that
change source code would have necessary context to know when it is
operating on a source code module, avoiding attempts to modify a
binary class.
So, I'm looking for discussion and consensus on the above. Any thoughts?
Regards,
John
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