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i've been running some experiments of my own with Spring Roo and it seems to be pretty cool, but i noticed that this tool makes heavy use of AOP on the model layer.

I'm thinking about creating a real project using Roo and what i would like to know is:

  • Why AOP is everywhere? Is that ok?
  • What are advantages and disadvantages of this approach?

I'm quite new to aspect-oriented programming and some guidance would be greatly appreciated.

3 Answers 3

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The Spring Framework has extensive AOP capabilities, and it makes sense to use these in Roo-based applications. AOP allows you to make a nice and clean separation between business logic and system logic. When done properly, you get a more maintainable and understandable codebase.

The disadvantage is a small performance hit, but not enough of one to make me worry about it.

To learn more about Spring and AOP, have a look at the docs. Spring uses AOP for things like transaction management and asynchronous operations.

edit: As @chedine rightly pointed out, the AOP is compile-time weaved, so the usual AOP performance hit does not apply.

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I think, there will not be a performance hit in case of Spring ROO. Since it uses compile time weaving and all aspects are introduced during compile time.

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The disadvantages are addressed in this related SO question: What are the disadvantages of Aspect-Oriented Programming (AOP)?

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