Kotlin has classes and their members final
by default, which makes it inconvenient to use frameworks and libraries such as Spring AOP that require classes to be open
. The all-open
compiler plugin adapts Kotlin to the requirements of those frameworks and makes classes annotated with a specific annotation and their members open without the explicit open
keyword. For instance, when you use Spring, you don't need all the classes to be open, but only classes annotated with specific annotations like @Configuration
or @Service
. The all-open
plugin allows to specify these annotations.
We provide all-open plugin support both for Gradle and Maven, as well as the IDE integration. For Spring you can use the kotlin-spring
compiler plugin (see below).
You add the plugin in build.gradle
and specify the annotations that will make the class open:
buildscript { dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-allopen:$kotlin_version" } } apply plugin: "kotlin-allopen" allOpen { annotation("com.my.Annotation") }
If the class (or any of its superclasses) is annotated with com.my.Annotation
, the class itself and all its members will become open.
It also works with meta-annotations:
@com.my.Annotation annotation class MyFrameworkAnnotation @MyFrameworkAnnotation class MyClass // will be all-open
MyFrameworkAnnotation
is also the annotation that makes the class open, because it's annotated with com.my.Annotation
.
Here's how to use all-open with Maven:
<plugin> <artifactId>kotlin-maven-plugin</artifactId> <groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId> <version>${kotlin.version}</version> <configuration> <compilerPlugins> <!-- Or "spring" for the Spring support --> <plugin>all-open</plugin> </compilerPlugins> <pluginOptions> <!-- Each annotation is placed on its own line --> <option>all-open:annotation=com.my.Annotation</option> <option>all-open:annotation=com.their.AnotherAnnotation</option> </pluginOptions> </configuration> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId> <artifactId>kotlin-maven-allopen</artifactId> <version>${kotlin.version}</version> </dependency> </dependencies> </plugin>
You don't need to specify Spring annotations by hand, you can use the kotlin-spring
plugin, which automatically configures the all-open plugin according to the requirements of Spring.
buildscript { dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-allopen:$kotlin_version" } } apply plugin: "kotlin-spring"
The Maven example is similar to the one above.
The plugin specifies the following annotations: @Component
, @Async
, @Transactional
, @Cacheable
. Thanks to meta-annotations support classes annotated with @Configuration
, @Controller
, @RestController
, @Service
or @Repository
are automatically opened since these annotations are meta-annotated with @Component
.
Of course, you can use both kotlin-allopen
and kotlin-spring
in the same project. Note that if you use start.spring.io the kotlin-spring
plugin will be enabled by default.
The no-arg compiler plugin generates an additional zero-argument constructor for classes with a specific annotation. The generated constructor is synthetic so it can’t be directly called from Java or Kotlin, but it can be called using reflection. This allows the Java Persistence API (JPA) to instantiate the data
class although it doesn't have the no-arg constructor from Kotlin or Java point of view (see the description of kotlin-jpa
plugin below).
The usage is pretty similar to all-open. You add the plugin and specify the list of annotations that must lead to generating a no-arg constructor for the annotated classes.
How to use no-arg in Gradle:
buildscript { dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-noarg:$kotlin_version" } } apply plugin: "kotlin-noarg" noArg { annotation("com.my.Annotation") }
How to use no-arg in Maven:
<plugin> <artifactId>kotlin-maven-plugin</artifactId> <groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId> <version>${kotlin.version}</version> <configuration> <compilerPlugins> <!-- Or "jpa" for JPA support --> <plugin>no-arg</plugin> </compilerPlugins> <pluginOptions> <option>no-arg:annotation=com.my.Annotation</option> </pluginOptions> </configuration> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlin</groupId> <artifactId>kotlin-maven-noarg</artifactId> <version>${kotlin.version}</version> </dependency> </dependencies> </plugin>
The plugin specifies @Entity
and @Embeddable
annotations as markers that no-arg constructor should be generated for a class. That's how you add the plugin in Gradle:
buildscript { dependencies { classpath "org.jetbrains.kotlin:kotlin-noarg:$kotlin_version" } } apply plugin: "kotlin-jpa"
The Maven example is similar to the one above.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/compiler-plugins.html