Regarding your question "why AUTO_ACK is designed this way"

I think at the time when it's firstly implemented, the AUTO_ACK is just a 
convenient way to help user ack the message.

We can discuss the gap between expected behavior and actual behavior and try to 
resolve or simplify it.

On 2022/05/10 01:14:07 Baozi wrote:
> Thanks reply,
> 
> > If AUTO_ACK is TRUE, then the JavaInstanceRunnable will be acking messages.
> > If AUTO_ACK is  FALSE, then the acking will be done by Sink implementation.
> 
> A little confused, I want to know why AUTO_ACK is designed this way.
> 
> I'll give another example:
> 
> > If AUTO_ACK is TRUE, then the JavaInstanceRunnable will be acking messages.
> 
> 
> And if Guarantees != ATMOST_ONCE,then the JavaInstanceRunnable not will ack 
> message.
> 
> > JavaInstanceRunnable#run():Line273
> 
> 
> Thanks,
> Baodi Shi
> 
> > 2022年5月10日 01:0009,Neng Lu <nl...@apache.org> 写道:
> > 
> > Thanks for this detailed discussion about processing guarantee and ack.
> > These two settings are together affecting the behavior of a running 
> > function.
> > 
> > One thing I want to clarify is: 
> > AUTO_ACK setting means if the function runtime will ack messages or not. 
> > ("function runtime" here specifically refers to the JavaInstanceRunnable. 
> > If the ack happens inside a sink's implemented write method, it's not 
> > auto-ack). 
> > 
> > If AUTO_ACK is TRUE, then the JavaInstanceRunnable will be acking messages.
> > If AUTO_ACK is  FALSE, then the acking will be done by Sink implementation.
> > 
> > Now with this context, let's review your two scenarios:
> > 
> >> 1.If the user set Guarantees == ATMOST_ONCE and autoAck == false.
> > To be precise, the processing semantics is not ATLEAST_ONCE. It's actually 
> > left to the implemented Sink to decide which semantics it is. It can be 
> > ATMOST_ONCE, ATLEAST_ONCE and probably EFFECTIVELLY_ONCE.
> > 
> >> 2. If the user thinks that the framework doesn’t auto ack when autoAck == 
> >> false
> > This behavior is actually correct based on our previous context.
> > 
> > A real problematic scenario here is when USER sets 
> > ATLEAST_ONCE/EFFECTIVELY_ONCE and AUTO_ACK=true. I don't think the 
> > JavaInstanceRunnable can ack for use under these cases. So there should be 
> > some check to ban user submit function with such configs.
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > On 2022/05/09 09:02:12 Baozi wrote:
> >> Hi, guys:
> >> 
> >> I found out that autoAck configuration in function framework now affects 
> >> Delivery semantics, and make it difficult for users to understand. Refer 
> >> to the following two scenarios.
> >> 
> >> 1. If the user understands that the semantics of Guarantees shall prevail
> >> 
> >> If the user set Guarantees == ATMOST_ONCE and autoAck == false. Then the 
> >> processing semantics of the actual Function will become ATLEAST_ONCE. 
> >> Refer to the following code, this scenario will not immediately ack.
> >> 
> >> JavaInstanceRunnable#run():Line273  
> >> <https://github.com/apache/pulsar/blob/c49a977de4b0b525ec80e5070bc90eddcc7cddad/pulsar-functions/instance/src/main/java/org/apache/pulsar/functions/instance/JavaInstanceRunnable.java#L271-L276>
> >> if (instanceConfig.getFunctionDetails().getProcessingGuarantees() == 
> >> org.apache.pulsar.functions
> >>        .proto.Function.ProcessingGuarantees.ATMOST_ONCE) {
> >>    if (instanceConfig.getFunctionDetails().getAutoAck()) { // just when 
> >> autoAck == true to auto ack
> >>        currentRecord.ack();
> >>    }
> >> }
> >> 
> >> 2. If the user thinks that the framework doesn’t auto ack when autoAck == 
> >> false
> >> 
> >> According to the following code, the framework is still automatically 
> >> acked.
> >> 
> >> PulsarSinkAtLeastOnceProcessor#sendOutputMessage():Line275 
> >> <https://github.com/apache/pulsar/blob/c49a977de4b0b525ec80e5070bc90eddcc7cddad/pulsar-functions/instance/src/main/java/org/apache/pulsar/functions/sink/PulsarSink.java#L274-L276>
> >> PulsarSinkEffectivelyOnceProcessor#sendOutputMessage():Line325 
> >> <https://github.com/apache/pulsar/blob/c49a977de4b0b525ec80e5070bc90eddcc7cddad/pulsar-functions/instance/src/main/java/org/apache/pulsar/functions/sink/PulsarSink.java#L325>
> >> 
> >> public void sendOutputMessage(TypedMessageBuilder<T> msg, SinkRecord<T> 
> >> record) {
> >>    msg.sendAsync()
> >>            .thenAccept(messageId -> record.ack()) 
> >>            .exceptionally(getPublishErrorHandler(record, true));
> >> }
> >> 
> >> To sum up, users may be confused when configuring Guarantees and autoAck, 
> >> and cannot judge their correct expected behavior.
> >> 
> >> I would like to discuss whether it is possible to cancel the autoAck 
> >> configuration and add a CUSTOM type for Guarantees.
> >> 
> >> switch (processingGuarantees) {
> >>    case Guarantees.ATMOST_ONCE: After the framework consumes the message, 
> >> it immediately acks
> >>    case Guarantees.ATLEAST_ONCE: After processing on the source side, 
> >> perform ack again
> >>    case Guarantees.EFFECTIVELY_ONCE: After processing on the source side, 
> >> perform ack again
> >>    case  Guarantees.CUSTOM: The function framework does not help users 
> >> with any ack operations and semantic guarantees
> >> }
> >> 
> >> If you have any ideas, welcome to discuss. If everyone agrees with this 
> >> idea, I will mention a PIP to promote implementation.
> >> 
> >> Thanks,
> >> Baodi Shi
> >> 
> >> 
> 
> 

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