eclipse-aspectj / aspectj

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AspectJ

AspectJ is:

AspectJ enables:

Building

AspectJ has a multi-module Maven build. Although various modules produce intermediate results, the key artifacts at the end of the build are:

These are the artifacts published to Maven Central for each release. In addition, there is an installer that can be run with java -jar to install AspectJ onto Windows/Mac/Linux. This installer is produced by the installer sub-module.

In the root of a cloned AspectJ simply run:

./mvnw clean install

Please make sure that your project root directory name is either aspectj (default for git clone) or org.aspectj (case-insensitive), if you wish to run the build with tests. Some integration tests rely on this name when dynamically searching up the current path for the root folder.

You can also use a reasonably recent (3.6.3+), locally installed Maven installation instead of the Maven wrapper script.

This will build all the modules, run all the tests and install the key artifacts in your local repository. Once built, access the Maven dependencies from your local repository or run the installer to install AspectJ locally:

java -jar installer/target/aspectj-<VERSION>.jar

Running the tests in Eclipse

Once you have imported all the projects using m2e, there is a special module called run-all-junit-tests and within that a RunTheseBeforeYouCommitTests class that can be run with the JUnit launcher to execute thousands of tests. Ensure you run this with a JDK - the more recent the better since some tests will not execute on older JDKs - tests that verify language features that only exist in the more up to date JDK version.

Documentation for AspectJ users

Documentation for AspectJ developers

Maven releases

AspectJ is published to Maven Central under group ID org.aspectj.