I am using Javassist to add and modify annotations on a package-info "class".
In some cases, I need to deal with the following edge case. Someone has (incorrectly) specified an @XmlJavaTypeAdapters annotation on the package-info package, but has not supplied a value attribute (which is defined as being required). So it looks like this:
@XmlJavaTypeAdapters // XXX incorrect; value() is required, but javac has no problem
package com.foobar;
import javax.xml.bind.annotation.adapters.XmlJavaTypeAdapters;
In Javassist, this comes through slightly oddly.
The javassist.bytecode.annotation.Annotation representing the @XmlJavaTypeAdapters annotation does not have a member value (getMemberValue("value") returns null), as expected.
It is of course possible to add a value() member value, and that is what I've done:
if (adaptersAnnotation.getMemberValue("value") == null) {
final ArrayMemberValue amv = new ArrayMemberValue(new AnnotationMemberValue(constantPool), constantPool);
adaptersAnnotation.addMemberValue("value", amv);
annotationsAttribute.addAnnotation(adaptersAnnotation);
}
In the code snippet above, I've created a new member value to hold an array of annotations, because the value() attribute of @XmlJavaTypeAdapters is an array of @XmlJavaTypeAdapter. I've specified its array type by trying to divine the Zen-like documentation's intent—it seems that if you supply another MemberValue that this MemberValue will somehow serve as the array's type. In my case I want the type of the array to be @XmlJavaTypeAdapter, which is an annotation, so the only kind of MemberValue that seemed appropriate was AnnotationMemberValue. So I've created an empty one of those and set it as the array type.
This works fine as far as it goes, as long as you stay "within" Javassist.
However, something seems to have gone wrong. If I ask Javassist to convert all of its proprietary annotations into genuine Java java.lang.annotation.Annotations, then when I try to access the value() attribute of this @XmlJavaTypeAdapters annotation, Javassist tells me that there is no default value. Huh?
In other words, that's fine—indeed there is not—but I have specified what I had hoped was a zero-length array (that is, the default value shouldn't be used; my explicitly specified zero-length array should be used instead):
final List<Object> annotations = java.util.Arrays.asList(packageInfoClass.getAnnotations());
for (final Object a : annotations) {
System.out.println("*** class annotation: " + a); // OK; one of these is @XmlJavaTypeAdapters
System.out.println(" ...of type: " + a.getClass()); // OK; resolves to XmlJavaTypeAdapters
System.out.println(" ...assignable to java.lang.annotation.Annotation? " + java.lang.annotation.Annotation.class.isInstance(a)); // OK; returns true
if (a instanceof XmlJavaTypeAdapters) {
final XmlJavaTypeAdapters x = (XmlJavaTypeAdapters)a;
System.out.println(" ...value: " + java.util.Arrays.asList(x.value())); // XXX x.value() throws an exception
}
}
So why is Javassist looking for a default value in this case?
My larger issue is of course to handle this (unfortunately somewhat common) case where @XmlJavaTypeAdapters is specified with no further information on it. I need to add a value member value that can hold an array of @XmlJavaTypeAdapter annotations. I can't seem to figure out how to accomplish this with Javassist. As always, all help appreciated.