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debugging - Printing debug info on errors with java 8 lambda expressions

I want to use a static method as setter helper that catch exceptions and print debug info about the operation that failed. I don't want the exception details only. I want to show what property was being set so that detail help to debug the problem quickly. I am working with Java 8.

How should I provide or detect the property being set?

What I wish is to remove the "name" string in the example and get the same result.

I know I can't use reflection over the supplied setter method supplied that is transformed to lambda expression and then to BiConsumer.

I got this but the property name needs to be provided.

/** setter helper method **/
private static <E, V> void set(E o, BiConsumer<E, V> setter,
        Supplier<V> valueSupplier, String propertyName) {
    try {
        setter.accept(o, valueSupplier.get());
    } catch (RuntimeException e) {
        throw new RuntimeException("Failed to set the value of " + propertyName, e);
    }
}

Example:

    Person p = new Person();
    Supplier<String> nameSupplier1 = () ->  "MyName";
    Supplier<String> nameSupplier2 = () -> { throw new RuntimeException(); };
    set(p, Person::setName, nameSupplier1, "name");
    System.out.println(p.getName()); // prints MyName
    set(p, Person::setName, nameSupplier2, "name"); // throws exception with message  Failed to set the value of name
    System.out.println(p.getName()); // Does not execute

EDIT: I know reflection does not help with the lambdas. I know AOP and I know this can be made with pure reflection too but I want to know if there a better way to get this done with Java 8 that didn't exist with Java 7. It seems it should to me. Now it is possible to do things like to pass a setter method to another one.

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In case you expect method references as the only input, you can debug them to printable names with the following trick:

public static void main(String[] args) {
  Person p = new Person();
  Supplier<String> nameSupplier1 = () -> "MyName";
  Supplier<String> nameSupplier2 = () -> { throw new RuntimeException(); };
  set(p, Person::setName, nameSupplier1);
  System.out.println(p.getName()); // prints MyName
  set(p, Person::setName, nameSupplier2); // throws exception with message
  System.out.println(p.getName()); // Does not execute
}

interface DebuggableBiConsumer<A, B> extends BiConsumer<A, B>, Serializable {}

private static <E, V> void set(
    E o, DebuggableBiConsumer<E, V> setter, Supplier<V> valueSupplier) {
  try {
    setter.accept(o, valueSupplier.get());
  } catch (RuntimeException e) {
    throw new RuntimeException("Failed to set the value of "+name(setter), e);
  }
}

private static String name(DebuggableBiConsumer<?, ?> setter) {
  for (Class<?> cl = setter.getClass(); cl != null; cl = cl.getSuperclass()) {
    try {
      Method m = cl.getDeclaredMethod("writeReplace");
      m.setAccessible(true);
      Object replacement = m.invoke(setter);
      if(!(replacement instanceof SerializedLambda))
        break;// custom interface implementation
      SerializedLambda l = (SerializedLambda) replacement;
      return l.getImplClass() + "::" + l.getImplMethodName();
    }
    catch (NoSuchMethodException e) {}
    catch (IllegalAccessException | InvocationTargetException e) {
      break;
    }
  }
  return "unknown property";
}

The limitations are that it will print not very useful method references for lambda expressions (references to the synthetic method containing the lambda code) and "unknown property" for custom implementations of the interface.


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