- Type Parameters:
T
- type of the target beanR
- return type of the target method
public interface Invoker<T,R>
An invoker allows indirect invocation of its target method on an instance of its target
bean.
CDI-based frameworks are expected to use invokers when they need to invoke application methods. Applications are not supposed to use invokers, as they can invoke their own methods directly.
For example, assume the following managed bean exists:
@Dependent public class MyService { public String hello(String name) { return "Hello " + name + "!"; } }Further, assume that
invoker
is an invoker for the hello()
method
of the MyService
bean and myService
is a contextual reference for the bean.
Then, to invoke the hello()
method indirectly, a framework would call
invoker.invoke(myService, new Object[] { "world" })The return value would be
"Hello world!"
.- Since:
- 4.1
- See Also:
-
Method Summary
-
Method Details
-
invoke
Invokes the target method on the giveninstance
of the target bean, passing givenarguments
. If the target method returns normally, this method returns its return value, unless the target method is declaredvoid
, in which case this method returnsnull
. If the target method throws an exception, it is rethrown directly.- Parameters:
instance
- the instance of the target bean on which the target method is to be invoked; may only benull
if the target method isstatic
arguments
- arguments to be passed to the target method; may only benull
if the target method declares no parameter- Returns:
- return value of the target method, or
null
if the target method is declaredvoid
- Throws:
RuntimeException
- wheninstance
orarguments
are incorrectException
- when the target method throws an exception
-