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Subject: RE: [wsrp-interfaces] Re: [wsrp-wsia]: Updated alternative API
Mike,
An example would be a situation where the Consumer sets some transient
data (properties) specific to the entity/user scope. When the session
times out, the transient data needs to be restored. One way to implement
this is to let the Consumer know, and have the Consumer re-instate the
state by setting the property values again.
Eilon
-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Freedman [mailto:Michael.Freedman@oracle.com]
Sent: Thursday, June 20, 2002 10:51 AM
Cc: interfaces; wsrp-wsia
Subject: [wsrp-interfaces] Re: [wsrp-wsia]: Updated alternative API
Rich,
Thanks for the comments/questions. On (2) I have been meaning to
ask you about the WSIA use case that needs the consumer to be aware that
the producer session has timed-out. I have some ideas on "solving" this
with the model I propose but could do a better job if I had a more
thorough understanding of what is needed and why. Can you explain?
-Mike-
Rich Thompson wrote:
> Mike, your proposal raises a variety of questions it will be good to
> work through as a group. A large one for me relates to proposing that
> the Consumer generate the session key. I see several pros and cons:
>
> Pros:
> - This become implicit session creation with predefined session
> sharing. As such it minimizes roundtrips while enabling sharing.
>
> Cons:
> - Pushes complexity related to (re)creation of shared sessions from
> Consumer to Producer. I'm not objecting, but we need to explicitly
> recognize this.
> - Sessions can be destroyed and recreated without Consumer knowledge.
> This involves a major state change and the more advanced WSIA use
> cases definitely have the Consumer interested in state changes. Having
> the design hide such changes will cause major problems later.
>
> Any thoughts on how the second con can be mitigated?
>
>
> Michael Freedman
> <Michael.Freedman@ To: interfaces
<wsrp-interfaces@lists.oasis-open.org>,
> oracle.com> wsrp-wsia
<wsrp-wsia@lists.oasis-open.org>
> cc:
> 06/17/2002 04:16 Subject: [wsrp-wsia]:
Updated alternative API
> PM
>
>
>
> The following is an updated version (attached) of the counter-proposal
> to draft 0.1.2 I sent last week. The main changes are the session as
> well as the entity references are created/sent by the consumer. There
> is also a new reference for an entity session -- the session
> conversation with a specific entity. Finally, I have simplified the
> method signature defining a single ConsumerCtx parameter to hold all
> the
> (potential) references. There are still alot of details to put in
here
> so we have a consistent understanding but I though you would like an
> early view. While waiting for these details the key to looking at
this
> is to think in terms of the consumer vs. the producer. This API
doesn't
> represent (many) abstractions as concrete objects in the producer.
> Rather, most abstractions are seen as elements/scopes defined by the
> consumer that are passed by reference to the producer. The Producer
is
> thus freed to represent themselves internally anyway they want to --
> merely needing to build a mechanism that maps from these references to
> their implementation.
> -Mike-
> The following is an updated version of the counter-proposal to draft
0.1.2
> I sent last week. The main changes are the session as well as the
entity
> references are created/sent by the consumer. There is also a new
reference
> for an entity session -- the session conversation with a specific
entity.
> Finally, I have simplified the method signature defining a single
> ConsumerCtx parameter to hold all the (potential) references. There
are
> still alot of details to put in here so we have a consistent
understanding
> but I though you would like an early view. While waiting for these
details
> the key to looking at this is to think in terms of the consumer vs.
the
> producer. This API doesn't represent (many) abstractions as concrete
> objects in the producer. Rather, most abstractions are seen as
> elements/scopes defined by the consumer that are passed by reference
to the
> producer. The Producer is thus freed to represent themselves
internally
> anyway they want to -- merely needing to build a mechanism that maps
from
> these references to their implementation.
>
> As background here are the terms and their defintions I am using:
>
> client = an end user
>
> consumer = an intemediary responsible for the aggregation and
control
> of heterogeneous producer services, responsible for the
interaction
> between
> the client and the producer services placed on the clients
> application interface.
>
> producer = a container of producer services. the WSIA/WSRP
> compliant service. As consumers are anticipated to be
aggregators, a
> producer
> represents 1 or more entity types.
>
> producer service = the WSIA/WSRP compliant service ( aka.
> portlet )
>
> entity type = a specific identifyable consumable function of a
> producer. Producers publish its entity types to consumers.
> Consumers reference entity
> types to address its producer requests.
>
> entity = a consumers particular usage of an entity type.
Consumers
> are anticipated to be aggregators, including aggregating
multiple
> distinct
> instances or producer's entity type. The entity represents each
of
> these uses. From a producer perspective, the entity identifies
a
> particular consumer
> usage. Producers will typically use this ID as a key to per
usage
> state.
>
> reference: A reference is an ID passed from the consumer to the
> producer to identify something known to consumer but maintained
by
> the producer.
>
> persistence reference: A reference to persistent state managed
by
> the producer. Typically, a consumer will maintain a persistence
> reference for
> entities.
>
> conversation reference: A conversation reference is an ID that
> represents a particular (type of) conversation between the
consumer
> and the producer.
> There are 4 converstation IDs: consumer to producer
(application),
> thread of a consumer to a producer (session), consumer to an
entity
> (entity), and
> thread of a consumer to an entity (entity session).
>
> application reference: A conversation between a consumer and a
> producer. This conversation spans all consumer runtime use and
all
> producer
> entities of this consumer. For convenience [in making this
unique],
> this ID is derived from the consumerID created by the producer
> during
>
> regristration.
>
> session reference: A subconversation within an application
> conversation between a consumer and a producer. As such it is a
> shared scope between
> all entities within a given producer that a consumer chooses to
group
> together. This can be all the entities of the producer, a
subset of
> entities, and
> even at the extreme one session per entity. Typically, a
> consumer/producer sessions scope will be tied to a session
maintained
> between the client and
> the consumer.
>
> entity reference: A conversation between a consumer and a
particular
> instance of an entity [type].
>
> entity session reference: A conversation within a session with
a
> particular instance of an entity [type]
>
> API:
> ConsumerRef registerConsumer(ConsumerProperties consumer);
>
> void updateConsumer(ConsumerCtx ctx, ConsumerRef consumer,
> ConsumerProperties consumerData);
>
> deregisterConsumer(ConsumerCtx, ctx, ConsumerRef consumer)
>
> PersistenceRef createPersistenceRef(ConsumerCtx ctx,
> PersistenceType type, PersistentProperty[] values);
>
> PersistenceRef destroyPersistenceRef(ConsumerCtx ctx,
> PersistenceRef ref, boolean cascade);
>
> FragmentResponse getFragment(ConsumerCtx ctx,
FragmentRequestData
> parameters);
>
> void endScope(ConsumerCtx ctx, Scope scope); // scope is
> application,
>
> session, entity, or entitySession
>
> .... [aka performAction, describe, setProperties, getProperties]
>
> Data:
> Note: we can break this into two or more (heirarchical) data objects
> if we need/feel it works better in the API/
>
> public class ConsumerCtx
> {
> private ConsumerRef consumerId;
> private UserIdentify user;
> private SessionRef sessionId;
> private EntityRef entityId;
> private String entityType;
> private EntitySessionRef entitySessionId;
> private PersistenceRef persistenceId; // passed if portlet
> maintains data
> private PersistenceProperties persistenceData; // passed if
> consumer does
> private PreambleData updateData; // update the included session
or
> // persistent data before generating the fragment;
> }
>
> public class FragmentRequestData
> {
> private String charSet;
> private String markupType;
> private String locale;
> private Boolean secureClientCommunications;
> private Property[] headers;
> private Property[] parameters;
> private DeviceInfo clientDevice;
> private Mode producerMode;
> }
>
> public class FragmentResponse
> {
> Property[] responseProperties;
> String fragment;
> PersistentProperty[] values;
> }
>
> Quick overview of usage:
> The producer creates two types of IDs. One to represent a registered
> consumer and one to reference a persistent record it maintains (on
> request by the consumer). The later is not needed/used if the
> consumer manages the producers persistent itself (or the producer does
> not support persistence). The consumer ID is expected to be unique for
> all consumers of this producer. The consumer subsequently uses this
> ID (or one derived from it) as the ConsumerRef in all subsequent calls
> to identify the caller and to allow the producer to tie itself to this
> consumer. The persistentRef is passed to all calls where an entity is
> referenced.
>
> A conversation might go like this:
>
> Note: In this example a session represents a per user conversation
> between a consumer and a producer. In this situation a SessionRef is
> sent by the consumer to the producer for every call below where the
> consumer is running within the context of a user. I.e. a consumer can
> choose not to send sessionRefs when it doesn't know/can't identify the
> user (aka the Public user). Question: is not sending the sessionRef
> when there is no known conetxt okay? or do we force the consumer to
> always find/have a context?
>
> Operation: Portal locates and registers a portlet service.
> Action: Consumer calls registerConsumer() to register itself with the
> service. It also calls describe() to get entity information from the
> producer.
> Result: Because this is the first call received by the producer since
> it has started running, the producer initializes its application scope
> -- acquiring resources at the application level [It can choose to
> defer until an operation needs application data]. Additionally, if a
> sessionRef is passed, the producer may choose to [if it needs session
> data at this point] to initialize sessionscope. The consumer receives
> a ConsumerRef from the producer that it maintains persistently.
>
> Operation: As a consequence of registration, the portal creates an
> entity instance for each entity type in its portlet repository
> (toolbox).
> Action: Portal calls createPersistentRef() for each entity letting the
> entity set its default values.
> Result: The consumer (portal) receives a persistent ref that it
associates
> with the instance it created in the toolbox.
>
> Operation: Portal developer customizes the portlets settings in the
> toolbox.
> Action: Portal calls getFragment with an entityRef it manufactuers to
> represent the toolbox instance, the persistenceRef it received from
> createPersistenceRef, mode of Edit -- plus of course the consumerRef,
> sessionRef, and the entitySessionRef.
> Result: Producer/portlet uses this information to present a screen to
> the developer for customizing its settings.
>
> Operation: End-user creates a portlet on a page from a templaet in the
> toolbox.
> Action: Portal calls createPersistentRef() to create a new reference
> for the page instance. (The persistenceRef of the toolbox instance is
> passed so the values can be inherited.) After this completes, the
> Portal calls
> getFragment() on passing the new persistenceRef, a new entityRef (for
this
> new instance), etc.
> Result: Producer/portlet uses this information to present its "show"
> screen to the user.
>
> -Mike-
>
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