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Subject: RE: [wsrp] Spec defined events
- From: Rich Thompson <richt2@us.ibm.com>
- To: wsrp@lists.oasis-open.org
- Date: Thu, 10 Mar 2005 14:49:28 -0500
I think the spec would need to have
a paragraph describing the difference between these proactive notifications
and related faults. It may also be worth having the notifications carry
a flag indicating whether or not the next use of the relevant resource
is likely to result in a fault if the notification is ignored.
Rich
"Spector, Artem"
<artem.spector@sap.com>
03/10/05 01:48 PM
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| RE: [wsrp] Spec defined events |
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Is it assumed that all these
events express backward-compatible changes on the Producer side? I mean
if the Consumer ignores these “proactive notifications” and keeps invoking
the Portlets in the same way, they keep working?
If an event expresses a non-backward-compatible
change on some Portlet and the Consumer ignores this event, then on the
next invocation of this Portlet an exception will be thrown. This exception
could be for example OperationFailed, and it will not be easy to the Consumer
to understand the reason of the fault and to recover.
Do you think that the backward-compatibility
semantics should be defined for each spec defined event, and the Consumer
should be responsible to treat the “severe” events before the next invocations?
Since the Producer may notify
the Consumer only on pbia or handleEvent invocation, there always can be
a situation when:
1. Portlet P1 is changed and
the producer is waiting for the next invocation to inform the Consumer
2. The Consumer invokes P1
and gets an exception
So if the backward-compatibility
is really relevant here, we have to admit that sometimes exceptions should
be used for passing information to the Consumer.
Regards,
Artem
From: Rich Thompson [mailto:richt2@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 10, 2005 7:53 PM
To: wsrp@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: Re: [wsrp] Spec defined events
Interesting questions. Other than the last one, they all seem predicated
on an implementation style that tracks changes and does a computation upon
interaction to determine whether or not to generate one of these events.
Another implementation choice (that happens to avoid the bulk of these
issues) is to persistently store the need to provide one of these notifications
to each known Consumer and then delete the record saying the need exists
when it is delivered. In addition to removing datetime computation while
processing a request, this also permits notification by means other than
event delivery. An example of this would be to consider a getServiceDescription
invocation as removing any Producer/Portlet metadata change notifications
as the response will already update the Consumer.
The other point about these event definitions is that their purpose would
not be to require any particular functionality, but rather to provide a
standardized means by which a Producer could proactively inform a Consumer
about changes. Whether or not a particular Producer or Consumer implementation
makes use of this means to reduce polling for metadata would still be entirely
implementation dependent.
On the last question, I do not think it is up to the spec to define what
a change is that should trigger any of these notifications. Rather they
are defined as a means for carrying a notification that a particular form
of metadata has changed. As a result of this, I would resist optimizations
such as having the ProducerMetadataChanged event payload carry the new
ServiceDescription. Instead, the event is just a notification and it is
up to the Consumer to decide when and how to respond to the information.
Rich
Subbu Allamaraju <subbu@bea.com>
03/10/05 10:57 AM
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> As to other options to carry such notifications by other means, why
> would we add such dependencies when we already have a channel that
could
> easily carry the information. I agree that the Consumer is not likely
to
> display the fact that it received such an event to normal end-users,
but
> it certainly would be valuable info to display to system admins (or
> queue for display to them).
Thanks Rich. You make some good arguments. So, let me counter with few
more questions.
o Producers don't necessarily know whether the Consumer's version of the
Producer's metadata is current or not, unless it starts to keep track of
all metadata requests.
o The Producer has to keep track of metadata changes persistently and
make sure to cleanup those changes periodically.
o The only time a Producer could return events is via handldEvent(s) and
pbia responses (excluding fault conditions). This may be acceptable.
o Assuming that the Producer recognized a change, how would it know
whether a given Consumer should be notified or not? Should it start
sending notifications to all Consumers (including those that already
have the current metadata)? Such Consumers will have to do some extra
processing before ignoring the event.
o Should the Producer keep sending events for ever or just once? It
can't be the latter since the Producer does not always know about
Consumers. So, it does not know which Consumer was already notified.
I think, a more fundamental question how would the spec define what a
"change" is.
Regards,
Subbu
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