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Spring Boot Load-Time Weaving Example with AspectJ

This is an example of Spring Boot load time weaving with AspectJ. It's the continuation of the previous Spring Boot source weaving example.

Load Time Weaving

The load-time weaving is a type of binary weaving where compiled Java classes are taken as an input at runtime instead of compile time. The classes are weaved as they are loaded by the Java Virtual Machine (JVM).

The load-time weaving process weaves classes with the help of Java Agent. A Java Agent intercepts the classes while they are being loaded by the JVM. The intercepted classes are instrumented (bytecode is modified) by the agent based on the AspectJ definitions contained in a meta file named aop.xml. The aop.xml file should be in the classpath in order to be picked up by the agent.

When do you need load-time weaving?

THe load-time weaving is useful when aspects are required at certain times but not all the times. For example, monitoring application performance or investigating thread deadlocks, etc. This way you can keep your application source code free of aspect related code.

@Target({ElementType.METHOD})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface CustomAnnotation {

    String description() default "";
}
  1. A CustomAnnotationAspect aspect to intercept any method marked with @CustomAnnotation. It prints out the name of the intercepted class and method. Note: Unlike the previous source weaving example, this CustomAnnotationAspect aspect do not have the Spring @Component annotation since it's not going to be deployed as a bean.
@Aspect
public class CustomAnnotationAspect {

    private static final Logger
            log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(CustomAnnotationAspect.class);

    @Before("@annotation(anno) && execution(* *(..))")
    public void inspectMethod(JoinPoint jp, CustomAnnotation anno) {
        log.info(
                "Entering CustomAnnotationAspect.inspectMethod() in class "
                        + jp.getSignature().getDeclaringTypeName()
                        + " - method: " + jp.getSignature().getName()
                        + " description: " + anno.description());
    }
}
  1. The BookService class is the example where the @CustomAnnotation is used. The private method validateRequest is called from create method. The create method is annotated with Spring's @Transactional annotation.
@Service
public class BookService {

    private static final Logger
            log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(BookService.class);
    
    private BookRepository repository;

    @Autowired
    public BookService(BookRepository repository) {
        this.repository = repository;
    }

    @Transactional
    public Book create(BookRequest request) {
        Book entity = validateRequest(request);
        return repository.save(entity);
    }

    public Book read(UUID id) {
        return repository.getOne(id);
    }

    @CustomAnnotation(description = "Validates book request.")
    private Book validateRequest(BookRequest request) {
        log.info("Validating book request!");

        Assert.notNull(request, "Book request cannot be empty!");
        Assert.notNull(request.getTitle(), "Book title cannot be missing!");
        Assert.notNull(request.getAuthor(), "Book author cannot be missing!");

        Book entity = new Book();
        entity.setTitle(request.getTitle());
        entity.setAuthor(request.getAuthor());

        return entity;
    }
}

Aspect Filter Examples

This example also includes couple of examples on how to apply aspect conditionally based on either the called method's annotation or by name.

  1. Filter by caller's method tagged with a certain type of annotation,
@Aspect
public class FilterCallerAnnotationAspect {

    private static final Logger
            log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(FilterCallerAnnotationAspect.class);

    @Before("call(* com.basaki.service.UselessService.sayHello(..))" +
            "  && cflow(@annotation(trx))")
    public void inspectMethod(JoinPoint jp,
            JoinPoint.EnclosingStaticPart esjp, Transactional trx) {
        log.info(
                "Entering FilterCallerAnnotationAspect.inspectMethod() in class "
                        + jp.getSignature().getDeclaringTypeName()
                        + " - method: " + jp.getSignature().getName());
    }
}

This aspect will only be applied when the service method of UselessService class is called from methods annotated with Spring's Transactional annotation.

  1. Filter by caller's method's name,
@Aspect
public class FilterCallerMethodAspect {

    private static final Logger
            log = LoggerFactory.getLogger(FilterCallerMethodAspect.class);

    @Before("call(* com.basaki.service.UselessService.sayHello(..))" +
            "  && cflow(execution(* com.basaki.service.BookService.read(..)))")
    public void inspectMethod(JoinPoint jp,
            JoinPoint.EnclosingStaticPart esjp) {
        log.info(
                "Entering FilterCallerMethodAspect.inspectMethod() in class "
                        + jp.getSignature().getDeclaringTypeName()
                        + " - method: " + jp.getSignature().getName());
    }
}

This aspect will only be applied when the service method of UselessService class is called from read method of BookService.

Dependency Requirements

AspectJ Runtime Library

Annotation such as @Aspect, @Pointcut, and @Before are in aspectjrt.jar. The aspectjrt.jar and must be in the classpath regardless of whether the aspects in the code are compiled with ajc or javac.

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.aspectj</groupId>
    <artifactId>aspectjrt</artifactId>
    <version>1.8.13</version>
</dependency>

AspectJ Weaving Library

The aspectjweaver.jar contains the AspectJ wevaing classes. The weaver is responsible for mapping crosscutting elements to Java constructs.

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.aspectj</groupId>
    <artifactId>aspectjweaver</artifactId>
    <version>1.8.13</version>
</dependency>

AspectJ Weaver Configuration

The load-time waving is configured using a file named aop.xml. The aop.xml is made available to the classpath by placing it in the META-INF directory under the resources folder.

The aop.xml contains the following sections:

  1. Aspect section defines all the aspects that are to be used in the weaving process. In our example, there is only one aspect, i.e., CustomAnnotationAspect.

  2. Weaver section defines all the classes (e.g., com.basaki.service.*) that are to be woven.

It should also include the packages where the aspects are defined (e.g., com.basaki.aspect.*).

It also specifies other weaving options, e.g., verbose, showWeaveInfo, etc.

<aspectj>
    <aspects>
        <aspect name="com.basaki.aspect.CustomAnnotationAspect"/>
        <weaver options="-verbose -showWeaveInfo">
            <include within="com.basaki.service.*"/>
            <include within="com.basaki.aspect.*"/>
        </weaver>
    </aspects>
</aspectj>

AspectJ Maven Plugin

The maven-surefire-plugin plugin is only needed if you run the Spring Boot application from an IDE (e.g., IntelliJ). It's required to add the -javaagent JVM arguments.

<plugin>
   <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
   <artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
   <version>2.20.1</version>
   <configuration>
      <argLine>-javaagent:"${settings.localRepository}"/org/aspectj/
                        aspectjweaver/1.8.13/
                        aspectjweaver-1.8.13.jar</argLine>
      <useSystemClassLoader>true</useSystemClassLoader>
      <forkMode>always</forkMode>
   </configuration>
</plugin>

Build

To build the JAR, execute the following command from the parent directory:

mvn clean install

Run

You need to use the -javaagent: JVM argument whenever you run the executable Spring Boot jar.

Here is the command to run the application:

java -javaagent:lib/aspectjweaver-1.8.13.jar -jar spring-loadtime-weaving-example-1.0.0.jar

In the example shown below, it's expected that the aspectjweaver.jar is located in the lib directory.

Usage

Once the application starts up at port 8080, you can access the swagger UI at http://localhost:8080/swagger-ui.html. From the UI, you can create and retrieve book entities.

Once you create a book entity, you should notice the following message on the terminal:

2018-02-09 17:11:38.022  INFO 51061 --- [nio-8080-exec-1] o.s.web.servlet.DispatcherServlet        : FrameworkServlet 'dispatcherServlet': initialization completed in 25 ms
2018-02-09 17:11:38.193  INFO 51061 --- [nio-8080-exec-1] c.basaki.aspect.CustomAnnotationAspect   : Entering CustomAnnotationAspect.inspectMethod() in class com.basaki.service.BookService - method: validateRequest description: Validates book request.
2018-02-09 17:11:38.194  INFO 51061 --- [nio-8080-exec-1] com.basaki.service.BookService           : Validating book request!

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Spring Boot Load-Time Weaving Example with AspectJ

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