Custom annotation as Interceptor for a method logging

Based in your answers of my comments, you will not be able to do this with just annotations. You can, of course, create your annotations and create some reflective code that will detected then and execute some code, but this will not change your code too much, because you will need to call the parser method before you call your methods and I think that will not help you too much, since you will need to call the parser method before each call.

If you need the behavior that you mentioned (automatic call), you will need to combine your annotations with some AOP framework like Spring (plain Java) or AspectJ (AspectJ code). With then, you can set pointcuts and everytime this point is reached, some code may be executed. You can configure then to execute some code before and/or after method execution.

If the first scenario is sufficient, you can do something like:

Logger: enum

public enum Logger {
    INFO,
    DEBUG;
}

LogMethodCall: annotation

import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;

@Retention( RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME ) // the annotation will be available during runtime
@Target( ElementType.METHOD )         // this can just used in methods
public @interface LogMethodCall {

    Logger logLevel() default Logger.INFO;

}

Person: annotated class

public class Person {

    // will use the default log level (INFO)
    @LogMethodCall
    public void foo( int a ) {
        System.out.println( "foo! " + a );
    }

    @LogMethodCall( logLevel = Logger.DEBUG )
    public void bar( int b ) {
        System.out.println( "bar! " + b );
    }

}

Utils: class with the log static method (this will perform the "parsing")

public class Utils {

    public static void log( Object o, String methodName ) {

        // gets the object class
        Class klass = o.getClass();

        // iterate over its methods
        for ( Method m : klass.getMethods() ) {

            // verify if the method is the wanted one
            if ( m.getName().equals( methodName ) ) {

                // yes, it is
                // so, iterate over its annotations
                for ( Annotation a : m.getAnnotations() ) {

                    // verify if it is a LogMethodCall annotation
                    if ( a instanceof LogMethodCall ) {

                        // yes, it is
                        // so, cast it
                        LogMethodCall lmc = ( LogMethodCall ) a;

                        // verify the log level
                        switch ( lmc.logLevel() ) {
                            case INFO:
                                System.out.println( "performing info log for \"" + m.getName() + "\" method" );
                                break;
                            case DEBUG:
                                System.out.println( "performing debug log for \"" + m.getName() + "\" method" );
                                break;
                        }

                    }
                }

                // method encountered, so the loop can be break
                break;

            }

        }

    }

}

AnnotationProcessing: class with code to test the annotation processing

public class AnnotationProcessing {

    public static void main(String[] args) {

        Person p = new Person();
        Utils.log( p, "foo" );
        p.foo( 2 );
        Utils.log( p, "bar" );
        p.bar( 3 );

    }
}

Of course, you will need to improve my code to fit your needs. It is just a start point.

More about annotations:

  • http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.5.0/docs/guide/language/annotations.html
  • http://docs.oracle.com/javase/tutorial/java/javaOO/annotations.html
  • http://tutorials.jenkov.com/java-reflection/annotations.html

More about AOP:

  • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aspect-oriented_programming
  • http://static.springsource.org/spring/docs/3.0.x/reference/aop.html
  • http://www.eclipse.org/aspectj/

Use Spring AOP along with Java Annotation. Spring AOP negates the requirement for writing a util class for parsing of Java classes using Java Reflection.

Example -

  1. Custom Annotation -

     @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
     @Target(ElementType.METHOD)
     public @interface A {            
          boolean startA() default false;
    
          boolean endA() default false;
     }
    
  2. Aspect-

      @Aspect
      public class AAspect {
          @Pointcut(value = "execution(* *.*(..))")
          public void allMethods() {
                  LOGGER.debug("Inside all methods");
          }
    
         @Before("allMethods() && @annotation(A)")
         public void startAProcess(JoinPoint pjp, A a) throws Throwable {
              if (a.startA()) {
                    //Do something
         }
     }
    
  3. Enable AspectJ -

     @Configuration
     @EnableAspectJAutoProxy
     public class AConfig {
    
     }
    
  4. Use in code -

     @A(startA = true, endA = true)
     public void setUp(){
           //Do something- logic
     }
    

As already suggested, AOP and annotations is the best option. I would recommend to use a ready-made mechanism from jcabi-aspects (I'm a developer):

@Loggable(Loggable.DEBUG)
public String load(URL url) {
  return url.openConnection().getContent();
}

All method calls will be logged to SLF4J.