RapidPM - Reflections

Reflections - a Java runtime metadata analysis for Java 8

License

License

Categories

Categories

Reflections Application Layer Libs Introspection
GroupId

GroupId

org.rapidpm
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

rapidpm-reflections
Last Version

Last Version

1.0.1
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

${packaging.type}
Description

Description

RapidPM - Reflections
Reflections - a Java runtime metadata analysis for Java 8
Project URL

Project URL

https://github.com/Fork-World/reflections
Project Organization

Project Organization

RapidPM
Source Code Management

Source Code Management

https://github.com/Fork-World/reflections.git

Download rapidpm-reflections

Dependencies

compile (6)

Group / Artifact Type Version
org.javassist : javassist Optional jar 3.22.0-CR1
org.slf4j : slf4j-api Optional jar 1.7.25
dom4j : dom4j Optional jar 1.6.1
com.google.code.gson : gson Optional jar 2.8.0
org.slf4j : slf4j-simple Optional jar 1.7.25
net.jcip : jcip-annotations jar 1.0

provided (2)

Group / Artifact Type Version
javax.servlet : javax.servlet-api Optional jar 4.0.0-b02
com.google.code.findbugs : jsr305 jar 3.0.2

test (6)

Group / Artifact Type Version
junit : junit jar 4.12
org.assertj : assertj-core jar 3.6.2
org.openjdk.jmh : jmh-core jar 1.18
org.openjdk.jmh : jmh-core-benchmarks jar 1.18
org.openjdk.jmh : jmh-generator-annprocess jar 1.18
org.openjdk.jmh : jmh-generator-reflection jar 1.18

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

This Fork

This fork is without the dependency to the guava libs from google. In my projects I try to minimize the amount of dependencies. In this case, I had to make sure, that this lib is Guava free!

##Java runtime metadata analysis, in the spirit of Scannotations

Reflections scans your classpath, indexes the metadata, allows you to query it on runtime and may save and collect that information for many modules within your project.

Using Reflections you can query your metadata such as:

  • get all subtypes of some type
  • get all types/members annotated with some annotation, optionally with annotation parameters matching
  • get all resources matching a regular expression
  • get all methods with specific signature including parameters, parameter annotations and return type

###Intro Add Reflections to your project. for maven projects just add this dependency:

<dependency>
    <groupId>org.reflections</groupId>
    <artifactId>reflections</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>

A typical use of Reflections would be:

Reflections reflections = new Reflections("my.project");

Set<Class<? extends SomeType>> subTypes = reflections.getSubTypesOf(SomeType.class);

Set<Class<?>> annotated = reflections.getTypesAnnotatedWith(SomeAnnotation.class);

###Usage Basically, to use Reflections first instantiate it with urls and scanners

//scan urls that contain 'my.package', include inputs starting with 'my.package', use the default scanners
Reflections reflections = new Reflections("my.package");

//or using ConfigurationBuilder
new Reflections(new ConfigurationBuilder()
     .setUrls(ClasspathHelper.forPackage("my.project.prefix"))
     .setScanners(new SubTypesScanner(), 
                  new TypeAnnotationsScanner().filterResultsBy(optionalFilter), ...),
     .filterInputsBy(new FilterBuilder().includePackage("my.project.prefix"))
     ...);

Then use the convenient query methods: (depending on the scanners configured)

//SubTypesScanner
Set<Class<? extends Module>> modules = 
    reflections.getSubTypesOf(com.google.inject.Module.class);
//TypeAnnotationsScanner 
Set<Class<?>> singletons = 
    reflections.getTypesAnnotatedWith(javax.inject.Singleton.class);
//ResourcesScanner
Set<String> properties = 
    reflections.getResources(Pattern.compile(".*\\.properties"));
//MethodAnnotationsScanner
Set<Method> resources =
    reflections.getMethodsAnnotatedWith(javax.ws.rs.Path.class);
Set<Constructor> injectables = 
    reflections.getConstructorsAnnotatedWith(javax.inject.Inject.class);
//FieldAnnotationsScanner
Set<Field> ids = 
    reflections.getFieldsAnnotatedWith(javax.persistence.Id.class);
//MethodParameterScanner
Set<Method> someMethods =
    reflections.getMethodsMatchParams(long.class, int.class);
Set<Method> voidMethods =
    reflections.getMethodsReturn(void.class);
Set<Method> pathParamMethods =
    reflections.getMethodsWithAnyParamAnnotated(PathParam.class);
//MethodParameterNamesScanner
List<String> parameterNames = 
    reflections.getMethodParamNames(Method.class)
//MemberUsageScanner
Set<Member> usages = 
    reflections.getMethodUsages(Method.class)
  • If no scanners are configured, the default will be used - SubTypesScanner and TypeAnnotationsScanner.
  • Classloader can also be configured, which will be used for resolving runtime classes from names.
  • Make sure to scan all the transitive relevant urls (your packages and relevant 3rd party).

###ReflectionUtils ReflectionsUtils contains some convenient Java reflection helper methods for getting types/constructors/methods/fields/annotations matching some predicates, generally in the form of *getAllXXX(type, withYYY)

for example:

import static org.reflections.ReflectionUtils.*;

Set<Method> getters = getAllMethods(someClass,
  withModifier(Modifier.PUBLIC), withPrefix("get"), withParametersCount(0));

//or
Set<Method> listMethodsFromCollectionToBoolean = 
  getAllMethods(List.class,
    withParametersAssignableTo(Collection.class), withReturnType(boolean.class));

Set<Fields> fields = getAllFields(SomeClass.class, withAnnotation(annotation), withTypeAssignableTo(type));

See more in the ReflectionUtils javadoc

###ClasspathHelper ClasspathHelper contains some convenient methods to get urls for package, for class, for classloader and so.

See more in the ClasspathHelper javadoc

###Integrating into your build lifecycle Although scanning can be easily done on bootstrap time of your application - and shouldn't take long, it is sometime a good idea to integrate Reflections into your build lifecyle. With simple Maven/Gradle/SBT/whatever configuration you can save all scanned metadata into xml/json files just after compile time. Later on, when your project is bootstrapping you can let Reflections collect all those resources and re-create that metadata for you, making it available at runtime without re-scanning the classpath - thus reducing the bootstrapping time.

For Maven, see example using gmavenplus in the reflections-maven repository

###Other use cases Reflections can also:

  • scan urls in parallel
  • serialize scanned metadata to xml/json
  • collect saved metadata on bootstrap time for fastest load time without scanning
  • save your model entities metadata as .java file, so you can reference types/fields/methods/annotation in a static manner
  • initial Spring component scan

###Contribute Pull requests are welcomed!!

The license is WTFPL, just do what the fuck you want to.

This library is published as an act of giving and generosity, from developers to developers.

Please feel free to use it, and to contribute to the developers community in the same manner. Cheers

org.rapidpm

Versions

Version
1.0.1
1.0.0