[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-7544?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
 ]

Andriy Redko updated CXF-7544:
------------------------------
    Description: 
The issue pop up as part of https://github.com/apache/cxf/pull/330 discussion. 
In case when provider / feature / resource is a proxied CDI bean, the 
contextual class members (annotated with @Context) are not injected.

Test case to reproduce:

{code}
@ApplicationScoped
public class BookStoreRequestFilter implements ContainerRequestFilter {
    @Context private ResourceInfo resourceInfo;
    
    @Override
    public void filter(ContainerRequestContext requestContext) throws 
IOException {
        // Contextual instances should be injected independently
        if (resourceInfo == null || resourceInfo.getResourceMethod() == null) {
            requestContext.abortWith(Response.serverError().build());
        }
    }
}
{code}

CC [~rmannibucau]

h3. A bit more context 

In some circumstances (like using @ApplicationScoped annotation for example) 
the CDI runtime will create a proxy class for a particular bean. As the result, 
the CXF side is going to bind the particular provider metadata to this proxy 
instance. It looks logical and unambiguous.

However, the interesting things are happening when CXF will try to inject 
contextual proxies (@Context annotations) into the provider instance. The 
injections are successful but the target object for them will be the proxy 
instance (not the real instance behind it). Consequently, at runtime, when the 
proxy delegates the call to a backing instance, all contextual proxies are null 
in there (simply put, not set).

h3. How to solve 

Referring to the recent discussions with [~sergeyb], the best solution would be 
to delegate the @Context annotation to CDI framework (as such, relieving the 
CXF from doing the injection work). This proposal may need a support from the 
JAX-RS specification side.

Simpler (interim?) possible solution would be to complement the CDI injection 
with @Context injection (delegating this work to the CXF as it works right now 
for non-proxy beans and non-CDI deployments). This could be done by observing 
ProcessInjectionTarget events and supplying our own InjectionTarget (have 
working PoC for this approach).

Regarding constructor injection, it seems like CXF does not support passing the 
arguments to provider constructor (w/o @Context annotation) so I it would be 
another (separate) issue to look at.



  was:
The issue pop up as part of https://github.com/apache/cxf/pull/330 discussion. 
In case when provider / feature / resource is a proxied CDI bean, the 
contextual class members (annotated with @Context) are not injected.

Test case to reproduce:

{code}
@ApplicationScoped
public class BookStoreRequestFilter implements ContainerRequestFilter {
    @Context private ResourceInfo resourceInfo;
    
    @Override
    public void filter(ContainerRequestContext requestContext) throws 
IOException {
        // Contextual instances should be injected independently
        if (resourceInfo == null || resourceInfo.getResourceMethod() == null) {
            requestContext.abortWith(Response.serverError().build());
        }
    }
}
{code}

CC [~rmannibucau]


> Support @Context-based injection into proxied CDI beans
> -------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-7544
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-7544
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: Bug
>    Affects Versions: 3.1.13, 3.2.0
>            Reporter: Andriy Redko
>            Assignee: Andriy Redko
>
> The issue pop up as part of https://github.com/apache/cxf/pull/330 
> discussion. In case when provider / feature / resource is a proxied CDI bean, 
> the contextual class members (annotated with @Context) are not injected.
> Test case to reproduce:
> {code}
> @ApplicationScoped
> public class BookStoreRequestFilter implements ContainerRequestFilter {
>     @Context private ResourceInfo resourceInfo;
>     
>     @Override
>     public void filter(ContainerRequestContext requestContext) throws 
> IOException {
>         // Contextual instances should be injected independently
>         if (resourceInfo == null || resourceInfo.getResourceMethod() == null) 
> {
>             requestContext.abortWith(Response.serverError().build());
>         }
>     }
> }
> {code}
> CC [~rmannibucau]
> h3. A bit more context 
> In some circumstances (like using @ApplicationScoped annotation for example) 
> the CDI runtime will create a proxy class for a particular bean. As the 
> result, the CXF side is going to bind the particular provider metadata to 
> this proxy instance. It looks logical and unambiguous.
> However, the interesting things are happening when CXF will try to inject 
> contextual proxies (@Context annotations) into the provider instance. The 
> injections are successful but the target object for them will be the proxy 
> instance (not the real instance behind it). Consequently, at runtime, when 
> the proxy delegates the call to a backing instance, all contextual proxies 
> are null in there (simply put, not set).
> h3. How to solve 
> Referring to the recent discussions with [~sergeyb], the best solution would 
> be to delegate the @Context annotation to CDI framework (as such, relieving 
> the CXF from doing the injection work). This proposal may need a support from 
> the JAX-RS specification side.
> Simpler (interim?) possible solution would be to complement the CDI injection 
> with @Context injection (delegating this work to the CXF as it works right 
> now for non-proxy beans and non-CDI deployments). This could be done by 
> observing ProcessInjectionTarget events and supplying our own InjectionTarget 
> (have working PoC for this approach).
> Regarding constructor injection, it seems like CXF does not support passing 
> the arguments to provider constructor (w/o @Context annotation) so I it would 
> be another (separate) issue to look at.



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