I'm playing around with OSGi DS components and the ConfigurationAdmin.
I created a simple configurable component
@Component(service=ConfigurableService.class)
public class ConfigurableService {
private String message;
@Activate
public void activate(Map<String, Object> params) {
System.out.println("Activate configurable");
message = (String) params.get("msg");
}
@Modified
public void modified(Map<String, Object> params) {
System.out.println("Modify configurable");
message = (String) params.get("msg");
}
@Deactivate
public void deactivate(Map<String, Object> params) {
System.out.println("Deactivate configurable");
message = (String) params.get("msg");
}
public void execute() {
System.out.println("Service says: " + message);
}
}
Then I created a Felix Gogo shell command component to trigger the configuration via ConfigurationAdmin
@Component(property = {
CommandProcessor.COMMAND_SCOPE + "=fipro",
CommandProcessor.COMMAND_FUNCTION + "=configure"
},
service = ConfigurationCommand.class
)
public class ConfigurationCommand {
private ConfigurationAdmin cm;
@Reference(unbind="-")
public void setConfigAdmin(ConfigurationAdmin cm) {
this.cm = cm;
}
public void configure(String input) throws IOException {
Configuration config = cm.getConfiguration("org.fipro.osgi.config.ConfigurableService");
Hashtable<String, Object> props = new Hashtable<>();
props.put("msg", input);
config.update(props);
}
}
And at last I created another Felix Gogo shell command component that makes use of the ConfigurableService
@Component(property = {
CommandProcessor.COMMAND_SCOPE + "=fipro",
CommandProcessor.COMMAND_FUNCTION + "=welcome"
},
service = WelcomeCommand.class
)
public class WelcomeCommand {
private ConfigurableService service;
@Reference(unbind="-")
public void setConfigurable(ConfigurableService service) {
this.service = service;
}
public void updatedConfigurable(ConfigurableService service, Map<String, Object> properties) {
System.out.println("ConfigurableService updated");
}
public void welcome() {
service.execute();
}
}
If I start an OSGi application with the bundles that contain these components, I expect that on executing welcome
initially, I will see that the component is activated and the service output is null because no configuration is applied yet (sure this changes on consecutive calls). If I afterwards execute configure Dirk
I expect that the method annotated with @Modified
is executed to indicate that the service configuration has been updated. I also expect that the updatedConfigurable
method in the WelcomeCommand
is executed. At least that is my understanding from reading the spec.
Now I observe different behavior in Equinox and Felix.
Equinox:
The modified method is called as expected and the ConfigurableService
is configured correctly. But the updatedConfigurable(<Service>, <Map>)
is not called. Only if I change the method signature to take a ServiceReference
the updated method gets called.
The specification says that all reference event methods support the following method signatures
void <method-name>(ServiceReference);
void <method-name>(<parameter-type>);
void <method-name>(<parameter-type>, Map);
Is there an exception for the updated method I haven't seen in the spec or is this an issue in Equinox where I should raise a ticket for?
Felix:
If I run the same example on Felix in Bndtools, neither the modified nor the update methods get called. I checked the ConfigurationCommand
and there is a ConfigurationAdmin available so there is no exception on updating the configuration. But it gets never applied somehow.
Am I missing something on running the example on Felix?
Update:
Adding console outputs to every lifecycle event method creates the following output:
____________________________
Welcome to Apache Felix Gogo
g! ConfigurationCommand: Activate
ConfigurableService: Activate
WelcomeCommand: Activate
welcome
Service says: null
g! configure Dirk
g! welcome
Service says: null
g! exit 0
WelcomeCommand: Deactivate
ConfigurableService: Deactivate
ConfigurationCommand: Deactivate
As you can see, the modify and updated events are never called.