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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-4934?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13619588#comment-13619588
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Sergey Beryozkin commented on CXF-4934:
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Hi - I'm actually not sure the invocation handler invokes the right method 
either. CXF does "method.invoke(object)" and in this case it does not work 
because the method belongs to the service bean class, not to its proxy. I 
suspect the handler works because it is smart enough to invoke directly on the 
service bean - bypassing the AOP layer supporting @Secured - I was not able to 
confirm because even with "rod:koala" I was getting 403 :-) 
                
> JAXRSInvoker and Proxy classes (Spring Security)
> ------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-4934
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-4934
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: JAX-RS
>    Affects Versions: 2.7.3, 2.8.0
>         Environment: Spring framework ver 3.1.3.RELEASE
>            Reporter: Fran Pregernik
>            Priority: Minor
>              Labels: invoker, newbie, proxy, rest, springsecurity
>         Attachments: web-template.zip
>
>
> Hi,
> I am aware of other tickets regarding the proxy invocation issues.
> During development I noticed an exception popping up:
> IllegalArgumentException: object not instance of class
> I narrowed it down to AbstractInvoker.java:performInvocation(Exchange 
> exchange, Object serviceObject, Method m, Object[] paramArray)
> This kept happening whenever I added a @Secured annotation to a rest method. 
> This annotation caused a Spring Security AOP Proxy to be passed to the 
> default Invoker (JAXRSInvoker.java) instead of the original target class. 
> Which is fine.
> The problem (I think) is in the method performInvocation. The serviceObject 
> parameter is a reference to the Proxy and not the target class causing the 
> line:
> {noformat}
> return m.invoke(serviceObject, paramArray);
> {noformat}
> to fail with the above mentioned error.
> I resolved this by extending JAXRSInvoker and registering it via:
> {noformat}
> <jaxrs:invoker>
>     <bean class="hr.altima.web.security.SpringSecurityInvokerProxy"/>
> </jaxrs:invoker>
> {noformat}
> and overriding the performInvocation method like so:
> {noformat}
> public class SpringSecurityInvokerProxy extends JAXRSInvoker {
>     @Override
>     protected Object performInvocation(Exchange exchange, Object 
> serviceObject, Method m, Object[] paramArray) throws Exception {
>         paramArray = insertExchange(m, paramArray, exchange);
>         if (serviceObject instanceof Proxy) {
>             try {
>                 return 
> Proxy.getInvocationHandler(serviceObject).invoke(serviceObject, m, 
> paramArray);
>             } catch (Throwable throwable) {
>                 throw new Exception("Proxy invocation threw an exception", 
> throwable);
>             }
>         } else {
>             return m.invoke(serviceObject, paramArray);
>         }
>     }
> }
> {noformat}
> My reasoning is that you want to call the proxied method (security check) and 
> not the target method directly but the call through proxies should be done 
> differently.
> I am not saying this is the correct way to invoke proxies but it works for 
> this situation although I prefer this to be built in the CXF lib.

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