Refactoring: Aren't there cases where resolving a module import into its packages during deployment into the repository will break with some refactorings?
I'm not talking about the more stable module refactorings where modules are broken into other modules (which you seem to be addressing). This is more development time practices where somebody is refactoring module contents. i.e. the importing module could end up with a "stale" view of what it should be importing. A not very good example would be my module B imports a module A where A exports com.acme.a.interfaces and com.acme.a.implementation I don't use com.acme.a.implementation explicitly so it shouldn't really be one of my constraints. Somebody then refactors module B such that the implementation is now in com.acme.a.impl but my module wants to import the now non-existant (or at least stale) com.acme.a.implementation. Overrides in the repository: I know we avoid these discussions on the list since it is really a tooling issue. But it is a lot easier for a sysadmin to change a single version constraint for a module import than it is to have to figure out what package versions they need to change on the package imports and change each one individually. Basically, the convenience of import-by-module extends beyond the development/source code phase. OSGi/291 There's still going to be a kind of module import somewhere to handle OSGi's bundle import constraint. i.e. OSGi bundle B issues a request to import bundle A which is really a 277 module. On Tue, 2008-06-10 at 18:27 -0700, Bryan Atsatt wrote: > (FYI: I've discussed this with Stanley but wanted to ensure it was > visible to everyone.) > > Proposal > > 1. Eliminate runtime use of import-by-module in the JAM system: > > a. Support the (very convenient) import-by-module at the source level. > b. jam tool transforms import-by-module to a list of > import-by-package statements. > > 2. Add APIs to fully support import-by-package in the JAM system: > > a. Support Version annotation in package-info.java (or in > module-info.java). If a > package does not declare a version, it "inherits" that of the > enclosing module. > b. Add ImportPackage annotation with version constraints. > > 3. Add APIs to fully support import-by-package in the abstract framework: > > a. Add methods to Query to produce import-by-package nodes. > b. Replace Query.getIndexableNames() with fully generic variants (I > proposed > a solution here previously which I will re-post). > > Rationale > > Module refactoring is inevitable, particularly during the transition > from the current, effectively flat class space to a fine-grained space > provided by module systems. We have significant experience with this > issue at Oracle (with the transition to our own module system), and OSGi > best-practices for conversion include starting with everything in one > bundle and then separating out pieces as experience is gained. > > A very common pattern, in our experience, is for developers to start > with many extra jars in their initial module (a mini version of > class-path hell). As that module is put into wider use, someone > discovers that package X is also contained in their module, and that > duplication either leads to runtime conflicts (very bad), or just plain > footprint bloat. The obvious answer is to put package X in a separate > module, and have everyone share it via imports. > > But... not so fast. If there are consumers of that module who import it > by module name alone, then pulling X out of it will cause those > importers to break. And if it is possible for your module to have been > imported by *anyone* by name alone, then you are stuck: either you break > them or you live with the incorrect granularity (which just isn't an > option in the conflict scenarios). Not a happy choice. > > Originally, I had proposed to do away with import-by-module altogether, > both to avoid this problem and to eliminate the conceptual disconnect. > Your code does not today contain import statements that name *jars*, it > names packages and/or specific classes in those packages. Why invent a > new system that takes such a large step backwards? > > The answer is simply convenience. Imagine a module that contains 100 > packages and it is obvious that writing a single import statement is far > easier than discovering and explicitly writing all the package imports. > Yes, IDEs will likely mostly eliminate this issue, but it still makes > sense to be able to do this by hand. > > This proposal is an attempt to maintain the convenience while adding the > crucial ability to safely refactor: step 1b is the central idea. > > // Bryan -- xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Adrian Brock Chief Scientist JBoss, a division of Red Hat xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx