Lifecycle Controller Handler¶
The lifecycle controller allows a component implementation to participate to the instance lifecycle. So, you can immediately decide to stop an instance if the configuration is incorrect (correct properties, accessible resources...). The licecyel controller impacts the instance lifecycle, if you want to impact only the registered service, have a look to the service controller (service providing.
iPOJO instance lifecycle & Lifecycle controller¶
Once started, iPOJO instances can be either valid or invalid. The decision comes from handlers. An instance is valid if every plugged handler are valid. Basically it means that all required services are available. As soon as one handler becomes invalid, the instance becomes invalid.
The lifecycle controller just monitors a field inside the POJO class. When this field becomes false
, the handler becomes invalid, and so the instance becomes invalid. When the field get the true
value, the handler becomes valid, and if all handlers are valid, the instance becomes valid.
An example¶
Imagine the following component :
@Component public class LifecycleControllerTest { @Controller private boolean m_state; @Property public void setConf(String newConf) { System.out.println("setConf : " + newConf); if (newConf.equals("a correct value")) { m_state = true; // update controller value. } else { m_state = false; // update control value } } }
If you don't want to use annotations, the following snippet does the same job using XML:
<component classname="org.apache.felix.ipojo.test.scenarios.component.LifecycleControllerTest"> <controller field="m_state"/> <properties> <property name="conf" method="setConf"/> </properties> </component>
The component requires the conf
property. iPOJO checks if this property is inside the pushed configuration, but cannot checks if the configuration is correct according to the component semantic. When the instance is created, the setConf
method is called with the given value. If the given conf
property is "valid" the m_state
field (i.e. the controller) is set to true
. Else, the m_state
is set to false
. It means that the lifecycle controller handler becomes invalid and as a consequence, the instance becomes invalid.