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I have a number of classes that call say Trace.WriteLine("LogSomethingClassSpecific"), in various methods all over the place. Now I would like some of those classes to make all their Trace calls like this: Trace.WriteLine("LogSomethingClassSpecific", "CategoryA")

But! I would like to achieve this externally from a single categorizer class; without having to find and modify every Trace call in each of the specific classes.

Sample Architecture

  • Class1,Class2,Class3 which may or may not use Trace calls

  • Separate ControllerClass that makes all the existing Trace calls in say Class2 and Class3 be called with the added argument "CategoryA". While retaining the flexibility to easily change the target classes.

How could that be achieved?

Might it be possible using some Attribute combined with an Aspect Oriented Programming (AOP) library? e.g. the controlling class could specify which classes to target:

[assembly: Categorizer("CategoryA", AttributeTargetTypes = "Namespace.ClassB")]

And then intercept all Trace.WriteLine calls with PostSharp

But I dont know of a way to extract the call context to determine whether the calling class has been marked to include "CategoryA"?

Or are there alternative ways to achieve this aim?

Thankful for any thoughts.

3
  • How big is your codebase? would you not be able to achieve this with a find/replace without all the interception jiggery pokery Sep 6, 2011 at 12:17
  • it's not only about specifying the targets, but being able to easily change the targets: at first Class2 may need to be assigned to CategoryA, but under certain conditions Class2 may need to be categorized differently, or Class1 may need to be assigned to CategoryA; separating this task into the Categorizer class seems to me a good way to achieve the flexibility as well as better approximate the single responsibility principle
    – Cel
    Sep 6, 2011 at 12:32
  • @Ben that is a horrible idea. One of the points of AOP is to prevent using find/replace Sep 6, 2011 at 19:33

1 Answer 1

1

There are a few ways to go about this, but i'm assuming you're calling Trace in places like if/else constructs so here is how you would go about doing what you're asking for (at least, what I think you're asking for)

    using System;
    using System.Collections.Generic;
    using System.Linq;
    using System.Text;
    using PostSharp.Aspects;
    using System.Diagnostics;

    [assembly: ConsoleApplication2.TraceIntercept(AttributeTargetAssemblies = "System", AttributeTargetTypes = "System.Diagnostics.Trace")]

    namespace ConsoleApplication2
    {
        class Program
        {
            static void Main(string[] args)
            {
                ExampleA ex = new ExampleA();
                ex.Method1();

                Console.ReadKey();
            }

        }

        public class ExampleA
        {
            public void Method1()
            {
                Trace.Write("Test");
            }

        }

[Serializable]
    [TraceIntercept(AttributeExclude = true)]
    public class TraceIntercept : MethodInterceptionAspect
    {
        private bool addArgument;
        private string typeName = string.Empty;

        public override void OnInvoke(MethodInterceptionArgs args)
        {
            CheckInvocationPoint();

            if (addArgument)
            {
                //Do work. Change arguments, etc.
            }

            args.Proceed(); // Proceed with Trace
        }

        private void CheckInvocationPoint()
        {
            if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(this.typeName))
            {
                StackTrace s = new StackTrace();
                StackFrame f = s.GetFrame(2);
                string className = f.GetMethod().DeclaringType.Name;

                if (classsName.Equals("ExampleA"))
                {
                    addArgument = true;
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

This will intercept calls to the System.Diagnostics.Trace methods and will instead invoke the TraceIntercept.OnInvoke method where you can manipulate the Trace invocation. The way this works is PostSharp will simply replace calls to Trace.Write with calls to the aspect.

Edit: As far as I know, there isn't a way to acquire the actual invocation point of the target method. This means that you have to do some reflection at runtime. I've updated the code to use the stack trace. You only have to do this once (per type) since the aspect lifetime is going to be per type not per instance so you only take a hit once. It's not how I would do it, but I assume this will be for debugging purposes.

4
  • thanks a lot for the code. i was aware of how to override the .net native method, and how to change arguments too (from your very own demo!), but im still not sure how to add the "CategoryA" argument to only select classes (not all classes)? i.e. lets say there is class ExampleB as well, and i would like to only add the new argument to Trace calls from ExampleB (and not to Trace calls from ExampleA)?
    – Cel
    Sep 6, 2011 at 21:09
  • @Cel I've updated my answer. Please see the comments at the bottom. Are you just tracing the method calls or are you using trace all throughout the method body? If you're only tracing the method entry/exit then I suggest using a different approach like an OnMethodBoundaryAspect and move your traceing in to the aspect. This way you avoid all of these complications. Sep 6, 2011 at 22:21
  • Very cool! I am indeed targeting Trace calls within method bodies. Thanks again!
    – Cel
    Sep 7, 2011 at 15:10
  • could CompileTimeInitialize be used somehow to move the reflective burden out of run-time?
    – Cel
    Sep 7, 2011 at 15:30

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