WireBox : Dependency Injection & AOP
6.x
6.x
  • Introduction
  • Intro
    • Release History
      • What's New With 6.8.2
      • What's New With 6.8.0
      • What's New With 6.7.0
      • What's New With 6.6.0
      • What's New With 6.5.0
      • What's New With 6.4.0
      • What's New With 6.3.0
      • What's New With 6.2.0
      • What's New With 6.1.0
      • What's New With 6.0.0
    • About This Book
      • Author
  • Getting Started
    • Overview
    • Installing WireBox
    • Getting Jiggy Wit It!
      • Instance Creations
      • Binder Introduction
      • Scoping
      • Eager Init
      • How WireBox Resolves Dependencies
    • Migrating From ColdSpring
  • Configuration
    • Configuring WireBox
      • Binder Configuration Properties
      • Binder Environment Properties
      • ColdBox Enhanced Binder
      • Types & Scopes
      • Data Configuration Settings
      • Programmatic Configuration
    • Mapping DSL
      • Mapping Initiators
      • Mapping Destinations
      • MapDirectory() Influence & Filters
      • Persistence DSL
      • Dependencies DSL
        • Mapping Extra Attributes
      • Mapping DSL Examples
      • Influence Instances at Runtime
      • Processing Mappings
    • Component Annotations
      • Persistence Annotations
      • CacheBox Annotations
    • Parent Object Definitions
  • Usage
    • WireBox Injector
      • Injector Constructor Arguments
      • Injection Idioms
      • Common Methods
    • Injection DSL
      • ColdBox Namespace
      • CacheBox Namespace
      • EntityService Namespace
      • Executor Namespace
      • Java Namespace
      • LogBox Namespace
      • Models Namespace
      • Provider Namespace
      • WireBox Namespace
    • WireBox Event Model
      • WireBox Events
      • WireBox Listeners
        • ColdBox Mode Listener
        • Standalone Mode Listener
  • Advanced Topics
    • Child Injectors
    • Object Persistence & Thread Safety
    • ORM Entity Injection
    • Providers
      • Custom Providers
      • toProvider() closures
      • Virtual Provider Injection DSL
      • Virtual Provider Mapping
      • Virtual Provider Lookup Methods
      • Provider onMissingMethod Proxy
      • Scope Widening Injection
    • Runtime Mixins()
    • WireBox Object Populator
      • populateFromXML
      • populateFromQuery
      • populateFromStruct
      • populateFromQueryWithPrefix
      • populateFromJSON
    • Virtual Inheritance
  • Extending WireBox
    • Custom DSL
      • The DSL Builder Interface
      • Registering a Custom DSL
    • Custom Scopes
      • The Scope Interface
      • Scoping Process
      • Registering a Custom Scope
    • WireBox Injector Interface
  • Aspect Oriented Programming
    • AOP Intro
      • Overview
        • AOP Vocabulary
      • Activate The AOP Listener
      • Create Your Aspect
        • MethodInvocation Useful Methods
        • MethodLogger Aspect
      • Aspect Registration
      • Aspect Binding
      • Auto Aspect Binding
        • ClassMatcher Annotation DSL
        • MethodMatcher Annotation DSL
      • Included Aspects
        • CFTransaction
        • HibernateTransaction
        • MethodLogger
      • Summary
Powered by GitBook
On this page

Was this helpful?

Export as PDF
  1. Usage

WireBox Event Model

PreviousWireBox NamespaceNextWireBox Events

Was this helpful?

WireBox also sports a very nice event model that can announce several object life cycle events. You can listen to these events and interact with WireBox at runtime very easily, whether you are in standalone mode or within a ColdBox application.

Note If you are within a ColdBox application, you get the benefit of all the potential of and if you are in standalone mode, well, you just get the listener and that's it.

Each event execution also comes with a structure of name-value pairs called interceptData that can contain objects, variables and all kinds of data that can be useful for listeners to use. This data is sent by the event caller and each event caller decides what this data sent is. Also, remember that WireBox also can be ran with a reference to , which also offers lots of internal events that you can tap into. So let's start investigating first the object life cycle events.

ColdBox Interceptors
CacheBox