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Please... can anybody explain me what are the differences between using the following spring pointcut designators?

Using "within pointcut designator":

<aop:pointcut expression="within(my.app.dao.impl.*)" id="commonDaoOperation"/> 

Using "execution pointcut designator":

<aop:pointcut expression="execution(public * my.app.dao.impl.*.*(..))" id="commonDaoOperation"/> 

I am using the second one in my web-projects (and I think it's the most used), the problem i have found with this approach is that it's consuming a lot of memory in the heap...

After analyzing the "heap dump" of the application server with the "eclipse memory analyzer" i have found that my application is consuming 450 MB and the instances of the class "org.springframework.aop.aspectj.AspectJExpressionPointcut" are consuming 30% of those 450MB...

Each instance of AspectJExpressionPointcut occupy 6 MB (approximately) and this is because each instance mantains a cache of matches with instances of java.lang.reflect.Method and surprisingly there are a lot of java methods cached (methods that my pointcut expression doesnt mentions).

After Reading Spring Documentation, I decided to use the first one approach (within pointcut designator) and now each instance of AspectJExpressionPointcut occupy much less memory.

The question is about that... what is the difference in performance between them...

Many thanks in advance...

3 Answers 3

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The Spring documentation explains the difference:

  • execution - for matching method execution join points, this is the primary pointcut designator you will use when working with Spring AOP
  • within - limits matching to join points within certain types (simply the execution of a method declared within a matching type when using Spring AOP)

In other words, execution matches a method and within matches a type.

In this case, your pointcuts are pretty much equivalent. Your within matches any type in the package my.app.dao.impl and your execution matches all the public methods of any type in the package my.app.dao.impl.

However, execution is implemented, I think, with an interceptor for each matched method (a lot of objects), which within only needs one interceptor since it matches the entire type (very little objects).

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9 Comments

Thanks Sotirios Delimanolis, Can i use them together without any problems? Recently I have changed my configuration to use them together (within and execution)... something like the following: '<'aop:pointcut expression="within(my.app.dao.impl.*) AND execution(public * my.app.dao.impl.*.*(..))" And the memory consumption of instances of class "AspectJExpressionPointcut" was reduced very much! So Is this recommended to use them together?
@glazaror There's no real point using them together. The within already matches everything in your execution.
Ok Sotirios Delimanolis, you have the reason... I should only use the "within".
In my "use case" the instances of "AspectJExpressionPointcut" were the problem in memory consumption because of "execution pointcut designator"... changing that for "within pointcut designator" reduces that problem.
So to sum up: seems as if using BOTH the execution and within designators in your example isn't that redundant after all.
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execution() matches join points that are method executions. This is the only designator that actually performs matches. All other designators (supported by Spring AOP) only limit those matches. Note that Spring supports only a subset of designators available in AspectJ (Spring AOP is proxy-based). AspectJ pointcut designators that are supported in Spring are: args() and @args(), target() and @target(), within() and @within(), execution(), this(), @annotation

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As mentioned here:

  • execution() - match a joinPoint method’s signature
  • within() - match all the JoinPoint methods in a given class, package, or sub-package

Other existing types of pointcut expressions: args(), target(), this(), @args(), @within(), @target(), @annotation()

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