If I could know when the program had entered a non instrumented method,that
would suffice since I could just throw a global flag of some description,
though thinking about it now, that's a lot of flag checking I'm setting
myself up for...

It seems like a very basic fact about any program utilizing aspectj -now we
have left instrumented code, now we are reentrant. AspectJ does not support
this scenario? Can anyone confirm that statement?

Thank you!
On Mar 26, 2014 12:29 AM, "Andy Clement" <andrew.clem...@gmail.com> wrote:

> cflow() and cflowbelow() are the usual tools for detecting something
> calling some other thing - but that seems like targeting that you don't
> want to do. In the advice you could create a stack trace (using Thread) and
> inspect it to see who called you but the performance wouldn't be great.
>
> Andy
>
>
> On 25 March 2014 11:55, JAVA DEVELOPER <java_developer_...@gmx.com> wrote:
>
>> Suppose I have program in which some method calls are targeted by a
>> pointcut, while others are not. Of course a targeted method could be
>> invoked by a non-targeted method. What I want to know is when this has
>> happened. I (think) I know that I cant get the invoking, non-targeted
>> method's FQN without targeting it,  (but I would take it if I could have
>> it)..  what I am interested in is knowing the  fact that this has occurred
>> at all. Is this possible?
>>
>> Thank you!
>>
>> -T
>> _______________________________________________
>> aspectj-users mailing list
>> aspectj-users@eclipse.org
>> https://dev.eclipse.org/mailman/listinfo/aspectj-users
>>
>>
>
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