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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-2709?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12844711#action_12844711
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Daniel Kulp commented on CXF-2709:
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I'm not sure about JAX-RS, but for JAX-WS, the way we enable this is to allow 
the user to configure in their own Invoker.   Normally, in your case, you would 
subclass the JAXWSMethodInvoker or similar to do whatever custom stuff you need 
done.   The jaxws:endpoint entry allows specifying your invoker to use.


> Provide Method Invocation Interceptor
> -------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-2709
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-2709
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Configuration, Core, JAX-RS, JAX-WS Runtime
>    Affects Versions: 2.2.5
>         Environment: JAX-RS, JAX-WS
>            Reporter: Stephen Todd
>
> It would be helpful if there was some kind of MethodInvocationInterceptor (or 
> alternatively with In/Out variants) that could be applied against Invokers 
> before they do the actual method call for jax-rs and jax-ws. I'm thinking the 
> place that the interceptor would be called is in 
> AbstractInvoker.performInvocation() around m.invoke().
> What this provides for is the ability to perform some action or filtering 
> based on information from the java.lang.Method, parameter and return  values 
> before or after the invocation is actually made.
> Two cases that I am looking at are to be able to check for annotations on a 
> method and do some processing for security, transaction management, and/or 
> validation. Currently, the only way to be able to perform logic on custom 
> annotations is to create proxies around singleton beans or something like 
> aspectj. By allowing for these kind of interceptors, this would no longer be 
> necessary.
> These interceptors make it simple to do things such as check for 
> spring-security @Pre/PostAuthorize annotations and apply security 
> constraints. Likewise, I'm also wanting to implement JSR-303 validation 
> checking against method parameters like is done for spring @Controller 
> classes. This would keep cxf's jaxrs implementation on par with spring's rest 
> framework. Adding @Transactional logic would also be possible through this.
> In jax-rs, not having this creates difficulty providing this logic since 
> using singletons imposes the requirement that the resources be stateless. The 
> java changes would be simple, though it would also need some work done in 
> spring configuration code as well.

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