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Introduction

aspectlib provides two core tools to do AOP: Aspects and a weaver.

The aspect

An aspect can be created by decorating a generator with an Aspect. The generator yields advices - simple behavior changing instructions.

An Aspect instance is a simple function decorator. Decorating a function with an aspect will change the function’s behavior according to the advices yielded by the generator.

Example:

@aspectlib.Aspect
def strip_return_value():
    result = yield aspectlib.Proceed
    yield aspectlib.Return(result.strip())

@strip_return_value
def read(name):
    return open(name).read()

Advices

You can use these advices:

  • Proceed or None - Calls the wrapped function with the default arguments. The yield returns the function’s return value or raises an exception. Can be used multiple times (will call the function multiple times).
  • Proceed (*args, **kwargs) - Same as above but with different arguments.
  • Return - Makes the wrapper return None instead. If aspectlib.Proceed was never used then the wrapped function is not called. After this the generator is closed.
  • Return (value) - Same as above but returns the given value instead of None.
  • raise exception - Makes the wrapper raise an exception.

The weaver

Patches classes and functions with the given aspect. When used with a class it will patch all the methods. In AOP parlance these patched functions and methods are referred to as cut-points.

Returns a Rollback object that can be used a context manager. It will undo all the changes at the end of the context.

Example:

@aspectlib.Aspect
def mock_open():
    yield aspectlib.Return(StringIO("mystuff"))

with aspectlib.weave(open, mock_open):
    assert open("/doesnt/exist.txt").read() == "mystuff"

You can use aspectlib.weave() on: classes, instances, builtin functions, module level functions, methods, classmethods, staticmethods, instance methods etc.

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