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Subject: Re: [wsbpel] Issue 123 - Proposal for vote



Hi all,

I am OK with moving this part of discussion to Issue 221 also, because I also want to pass Issue 123 resolution in a timely fashion and the decision on where to throw missingReplying is taking some discussion time than expected.

Thanks!

Regards,
Alex Yiu


Danny van der Rijn wrote:
I agree with Yuzo and Chris.  I still think, though, that we should save this discussion for 221.  123 only deals with messageExchange, while 221 holds for any of the 3 values.

Chris Keller wrote:

I support Yuzo’s position completely.  A missing reply at the completion of S2 should be thrown to S1.  The fact that we are saying that the missingReply is thrown is when the partnerLink or messageExchange goes out of scope says it all.  How does it go out of scope, it goes out of scope because the scope completed.  After completion we can’t come back into ourselves to catch a fault.  All that said I’d rather not have this delay 123.  I’m ok with leaving the text as it stands in the 123 proposal and solving the question of which scope catches the fault in issue 221.

 

- Chris

 

 


From: Alex Yiu [mailto:alex.yiu@oracle.com]
Sent: Monday, December 12, 2005 11:50 PM
To: Yuzo Fujishima
Cc: Danny van der Rijn; Chris Keller; 'ws bpel tc'; Alex Yiu
Subject: Re: [wsbpel] Issue 123 - Proposal for vote

 


Hi Yuzo,

Thanks for following this discussion thread. Really appreicate it ... :-)

[a]
The main motivations behind "S2-to-S2" for missingReply fault are:
   ==> Finer-grain reply / compensation

  • If the fault is thrown to S1 instead of S2, S1 cannot do anything to fix the missing reply situation. Because, one of resources (partnerLink or messageExchange) used in the open IMA is already out of scope (S2) and S1 has no access those out-of-scope resources anymore.
  • The missingReply situation may be caused by the situation where some other faults happened and the enclosed scope (S2) does not handle those fault properly. (Please see more analysis of "programming-error-vs-runtime-error" below.)  ... In the <onEvent> or parallel <forEach> situation, assuming there are 5 instances created and 4 of them got executed successfully without any missingReply situation. But, one of them ran into this missingReply situation. If we throw the fault to S1 and if we want to every compensate the work of S2, all 5 of them need to be compensated. We cannot compensate just the faulty instance by itself. On the other hand, if we throw to S2, we can do a partial compensation in its fault handler.


[b]
About "Reason 1" : "programming-error-vs-runtime-error" consideration:

I agree with you this is more likely a programming error, not a true runtime error. That is why Dieter introduced this exit-on-standard-fault facility to allow people to stop process in case of this programming error.

With or without using this exit-on-standard-fault facility, as a complete specification, we need to specify snapshot state of the process - i.e., what scopes are faulted and not, when the "exit" takes place.

If you think of the <onEvent> example described above, S1 should not be faulted, when the "exit" happens. Similarly, the previous 4 instance of "S2" should not be faulted either. Only the true missingReply scope should be faulted.

I also agree with you that people should not rely on catching this missingReply fault to do any complicated business logic. At most, people should just log the fault and attempt doing the partial compensation, as described above. (This applies to most of standard fault catchers).

I am just promoting scope-modularity. Definitely, not promoting any weired coding style. If you want, I think we can add a caution statement along the intention of the passed resolution of Issue 192 (Dieter's exitOnStandardFault proposal) to spec to state that: "If people do not set exitOnStandardFault to true, it is a good practice to restrict logic of any standard fault fault handler to some minimalistic repair work (e.g. error logging and partial compensation)."

Actually, the same wisdom applies to most of conventional programming language. E.g. in Java, if one got an IOException, SQLException, or Security permission related Exception, there are only few things that a Java application programmer can do / should do  (similar to above).

[c]
About "Reason 2: When to judge if a reply is missing":

Yuzo wrote:

we should expect a fault handler to send a reply.

Yes, I totally agree with you here.  :-)

Our intended behavior are actually very similar. :-)  ... I guess the related text in my previous email writeup is muddled. Sorry for the not-organized enough text.

Let me add some clarification and refinement  here:

==================================
There are two checkpoints to decide whether a bpws:missingReply fault needs to be thrown in a scope (S2):

  1. After the normal execution of the scope (S2) is finished but before the scope is considered completed and the fault handlers of the scope (S2) are uninstalled, if no fault has been thrown to the scope (S2) during the normal execution.
  2. After the execution of a fault handler of the scope (S2) is finished, if a fault has been thrown to scope (S2) during the normal execution of the scope (S2), and that fault triggers the fault handler of the scope (S2), and no fault has been thrown by execution of the fault handler

The bpws:missingReply fault thrown by missingReply checkpoint logic in the case #1 will be caught by a fault handler at the scope (S2) which matches bpws:missingReply fault, if there is one.

If the triggered fault handler (either by bpws:missingReply fault or other kinds of fault) does not generate proper replies to any open IMAs, a missingReply fault MUST be thrown. This is the case #2 checkpoint logic.

Important Notes:

  • In case #2, there is NO an infinite loop situation, because any faults triggered or thrown by a fault handler (e.g. <rethrow> activity) will NOT be caught by any fault handler of the same scope (S2) and they can only be caught by its ancestor scopes (e.g. S1).
  • If a fault is thrown either during the normal execution of the scope (S2), checkpoint logic of case #1 will not be executed. That implies, if such a fault happens and the scope (S2) does not have a matching fault handler, this fault will be propagated to the parent scope (S1) and it will overshadow overall missingReply logic.
  • If a fault is thrown or rethrown during the execution of a fault handler of the scope (S2), checkpoint logic of case #2 will not be executed. That implies, if such a fault happens, this fault will overshadow missingReply logic of case #2.


Here is a fragment of process definition that illustrates the relationship of scope S1 and S2 described above:
------------------
<scope name="S1">
    ...
    <scope name="S2">
         ...
         <partnerLinks>
             <partnerLink name="pl1" ... />
         </partnerLinks>
         ...
         <sequence>
             <receive partnerLink="pl1" ... />
             <!-- receive without reply -->
         </sequence>
    </scope>
    ...
</scope>
------------------

Note: The bpws:missingReply fault is thrown by scope S2 to scope S2 itself.

==================================
[I highlighted the clarification changes in GREEN.]


To summarsize, we agree more than disagree. :-) ....

Case #2 is where the fault is thrown by S2 to S1.
I am merely adding one more differentiated checkpoint (case #1) to allow the fault thrown by S2 to S2 to achieve the semantics of scope-modularity and finer-grain repair and compensation. (IMHO, that is very important for <onEvent> cases).

I hope I have explain my intended behavior better this time.  :-)
More thoughts on this topic ... ?     :-)


Thanks!


Regards,
Alex Yiu



Yuzo Fujishima wrote:

Alex,

Alex Yiu wrote:


Hi Danny and Chris,

Please see inline.

...

*Q1*: /have the process' faultHandlers been uninstalled?/
Answer: As I mentioned in the my previous email: (please see the example)
http://lists.oasis-open.org/archives/wsbpel/200512/msg00050.html
I prefer the direction of which: the fault is thrown by scope S2 to scope S2.


I am not a big fan of this "S2 to S2" semantics for
the following reasons:

Reason 1: Credibility of the use case.

I am not convinced that there are (many) cases where
scope S2 fails to reply without throwing a fault (except
missingReply). If S2 does, it should be a programming
error rather than a runtime error.

More likely are, in my opinion, the cases where
scope S2 fails to reply due to some fault.

For such cases,
S2 should define a fault handler to catch the fault and
send a reply there.

Not catching the cause fault and instead waiting for the
missingReply to occur doesn't seem to be a good programming
practice. The language should not promote that.

Reason 2: When to judge if a reply is missing.

A missingReply should be thrown only after the whole execution
of the scope S2, including the fault handlers, completed
without sending a reply. (As explained in the example for Reason 1,
we should expect a fault handler to send a reply.)
Then the natural destination of the missingReply fault should be
the parent of S2, i.e., S1.

Yuzo Fujishima
NEC Corporation

 




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