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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-29?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12995811#comment-12995811
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Andy Seaborne commented on JENA-29:
-----------------------------------

This is an outline of the contract of "cancel".  It is not a description of 
implemenation.

Currently, QueryExecutionBase.cancel() exists (and is deprecated with the 
comment "do not use") for testing all this.  It will be moved to .abort() when 
we're ready.  A phase of renaming internal methods may happen when the details 
of implementation make the exact nature of methods and fields quite clear.

1/ To terminate an execution, something calls .cancel, on the QueryExecution 
which in turn calls ".cancelRequest()".

Multiple calls of .cancel result in one call of cancelRequest().

cancelRequest is async to iterator execution.

2/ Internal "cancellation" is also possible i.e. the system chooses to call 
.cancel itself (e.g. timeout, if done that way, or limit on total number of 
resutls [not planned], other mysteries).

2/ Cancellation is not required to happen immediately, or indeed to happen at 
all, but would probably be considered a bad implementation not to do something. 
 That is, we don't enforce-by-contract that cancel has a specific effect at any 
specific point.

3/ When cancelled, .hasNext/.next on the results iterator are undefined.

CONSTRUCT and DESCRIBE will return null.

4/ There are some internal flags to control the behaviour after cancellation is 
active.

Default behaviour:

A/ Any calls to .hasNext()/.next() throw QueryTerminatedException.  They start 
doing so at some point (cancellation is async to execution) but the intention 
is as soon as reasonably possible.

I read the javadoc for the .hasNext contract as meaning is hasNext is true, 
then noSuchElementException will not be thrown.  You can get 
ConcurrentModificationException from java collections from .next() anyway 
regardless of .hasNext().

Continuation behaviour:

B/ The QueryIterator is closed during the next call to .next(). An element is 
returned.  The iterator is not explicitly closed by 
QueryIteratorBase if NoSuchElementException is thrown.  Further calls to 
.hasNext/.next may return results.

(a little tighter would be to stop if .hasNext has not been called yet for the 
next solution - needs another flag for "is hasNext() already decided").


> cancellation during query execution
> -----------------------------------
>
>                 Key: JENA-29
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/JENA-29
>             Project: Jena
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>          Components: ARQ, TDB
>            Reporter: Simon Helsen
>            Assignee: Andy Seaborne
>         Attachments: JENA-29_ARQ_r8489.patch, JENA-29_TDB_r8489.patch, 
> JENA-29_tests_ARQ_r8489.patch, jena.patch, jenaAddition.patch, 
> queryIterRepeatApply.patch
>
>
> The requested improvement and proposed patch is made by Simon Helsen on 
> behalf of IBM
> ARQ query execution currently does not have a satisfactory way to cancel a 
> running query in a safe way. Moreover, cancel (unlike a hard abort) is 
> especially useful if it is able to provide partial result sets (i.e. all the 
> results it managed to compute up to when the cancellation was requested). 
> Although the exact cancellation behavior depends on the capabilities of the 
> underlying triple store, the proposed patch merely relies on the iterators 
> used by ARQ.
> Here is a more detailed explanation of the proposed changes:
> 1) the cancel() method in the QueryIterator initiates a cancellation request 
> (first boolean flag). In analogy with closeIterator(), it propagates through 
> all chained iterators, so the entire calculation is aware that a cancellation 
> is requested
> 2) to ensure a thread-safe semantics, the cancelRequest becomes a real cancel 
> once nextBinding() has been called. It sets the second boolean which is used 
> in hasNext(). This 2-phase approach is critical since the cancel() method can 
> be called at any time during a query execution by the external thread. And 
> because the behavior of hasNext() is such that it has to return the *same* 
> value until next() is called, this is the only way to guarantee semantic 
> safety when cancel() is invoked (let me re-phrase this: it is the only way I 
> was able to make it actually work)
> 3) cancel() does not close anything since it allows execution to finish 
> normally and the client is responsible to call close() just like with a 
> regular execution. Note that the client has to call cancel() explicitly 
> (typically in another thread) and has to assume that the returning result set 
> may be incomplete if this method is called (it is undetermined whether the 
> result is _actually_ incomplete)
> 4) in order to deal with order-by and groups, I had to make two more changes. 
> First, I had to make QueryIterSort and QueryIterGroup a slightly bit more 
> lazy. Currently, the full result set is calculated during plan calculation. 
> With my proposed adjustments, this full result set is called on the first 
> call to any of its Iterator methods (e.g. hasNext). This change does not 
> AFAIK affect the semantics. Second, because the desired behavior of 
> cancelling a sort or group query is to make sure everything is sorted/grouped 
> even if the total result set is not completed, I added an exception which 
> reverses the cancellation request of the encompassing iterator (as an example 
> see cancel() in QueryIterSort). This makes sure that the entire subset of 
> found and sorted elements is returned, not just the first element. However, 
> it also implies in the case of sort that when a query is cancelled, it will 
> first sort the partially complete result set before returning to the client.
> the attached patch is based on ARQ 2.8.5 (and a few classes in TDB 0.8.7 -> 
> possibly the other triple store implementations need adjustement as well)

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