Hello again Clement!

Skiing trip is now over - time to get back to the interceptors...

Regarding your questions in the last post: Yes, I only add a property on
the chosen service reference (intercepted is set to true), I do not change
the filter.

I have tested the theory regarding config admin / file install and it is
not the problem.

It seems to me that there is no guarantee that both accept() and the
getServiceReferences() are both called before an instance becomes valid. I
haven't looked at the source code in detail yet but is the design such that
this is not supposed to be possible or am I requesting a new feature? In
other words, have I found a bug or not?

Ideally I think it should work as follows:

- When in "interceptor mode" the state of the instance should not change
until all the interceptors (and all callbacks of the interceptors) have
taken effect.

- Initially then instance should not become valid until all the
interceptors (and all callbacks of the interceptors) have taken effect.

With "interceptor mode" I mean that something has triggered iPojo to begin
calling the registered interceptors.

Not sure if this is in accordance with your design. How is it supposed to
work?

/Bengt




2014-02-24 8:17 GMT+01:00 Clement Escoffier <[email protected]>:

>
> On 21 févr. 2014, at 14:15, Bengt Rodehav <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hello Clement,
> >
> > Some comments inline below.
> >
> > /Bengt
> >
> >
> >
> > 2014-02-21 12:53 GMT+01:00 Clement Escoffier <
> [email protected]>:
> >
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> On 20 févr. 2014, at 13:22, Bengt Rodehav <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>
> >>> This is a follow up on another discussion I had with Clement on this
> >>> mailing list:
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> http://apache-felix.18485.x6.nabble.com/Using-iPojo-interceptors-tt5006168.html#a5006276
> >>>
> >>> I'm now trying to get the interceptor solution into production.
> >>>
> >>> Remember that I have to invalidate my instances when their
> configuration
> >> is
> >>> changed. This is because I need to re-evalutate the dependencies for
> the
> >>> instance.
> >>>
> >>> Originally, I only called the invalidateSelectedServices() method on
> the
> >>> DependencyModel. This worked mostly but not when starting a fresh
> >> container
> >>> (I use Karaf and start it with "bin\karaf.bat clean"). My instance then
> >>> first becomes valid but then becomes invalid. I think this is because
> of
> >>> the ordering. The accept() method had not been called prior to
> >>> the getServiceReferences() method. The dependency is therefore not set
> to
> >>> "intercepted=true" which makes it invalid.
> >>
> >> the filter is updated by the interceptor. (just want to be sure I
> >> understand). In that case, if the interceptor arrives after the instance
> >> creation, the filter will be set when the interceptor arrives.
> >>
> >
> > Yes, my interceptor sets intercepted to true on the dependency which
> makes
> > sure that the filter match.
>
> So the filter is not modified by the interceptor, it just add a new
> property on the chosen service reference to match the filter.
>
> >
> >
> >
> >>
> >>>
> >>> Replacing the call to  invalidateSelectedServices() with a call to
> >>> invalidateMatchingServices() seems to do the trick. However, there is
> one
> >>> small glitch that I would like to fix.
> >>>
> >>> If I have a configuration that should not be valid (e g I specified an
> >>> extender id that is not present) the instance should never be valid.
> But,
> >>> when starting Karaf (both with "bin\karaf.bat" and "bin\karaf.bat
> >> clean"),
> >>> the instance becomes valid before it becomes invalid. It does end up in
> >> the
> >>> right state (invalid in this case) but for a short period of time it is
> >>> valid which will cause a lot of things to happen in my code that then
> >> must
> >>> be reversed when it becomes invalid.
> >>>
> >>> I logged the sequence of events and it seems that the accept() method
> is
> >>> called first. I will then set "intercepted=true". This immediately
> makes
> >>> the instance valid. Shortly thereafter getServiceReferences() is
> called.
> >> I
> >>> will then re-calculate the dependency requirements and when I later
> >>> invalidate the dependencies the instance will become valid.
> >>>
> >>> So, there is a short time frame where the instance is valid although it
> >>> shouldn't be. How can I fix that?
> >>
> >> This looks like a bug, as the dependency can be valid only if the set of
> >> selected services is not empty. From what you say, it looks like the
> >> dependency is valid because the set of matching services is not empty.
> >>
> >
> > Is there anything I can do to investigate this? Is it possible for you to
> > take a look if there is indeed a "gap" where this can happen?
>
> My first guess would be in the ServiceReferenceManager coordinating the
> interceptors.
>
> >
> > I think that things are a little complicated since I also listen on
> > configuration changes. I need to recalculate the matching services when
> the
> > configuration of the intercepted instance changes. When starting the
> > container (Karaf), I get more than one configuration change and thus the
> > dependencies are invalidated more than once. What if the sequence were:
> >
> > 1. Configuration change causing the dependencies to become invalidated
> > 2. Accept. Will set intercepted to true
> > 3. getServiceReferences which will calculate the required dependencies
> > 4. Configuration change again causing the dependencies to become
> invalidated
> > 5. Accept. Will set intercepted to true
> > 6. getServiceReferences which will calculate the required dependencies
> >
> > Not sure if there is any point in which an instance could become valid
> when
> > it shouldn't.
> >
> > I will also try to see if the problem could be the configuration admin. I
> > use file install for my configuration. I have a feeling that the first
> > configuration being pushed is a default configuration and not the one
> from
> > the configuration file. Then that might explain it.
> >
>
> Oh, that's an interesting hint. That's definitely possible.
>
> Enjoy your vacations, mine are over....
>
>
> Regards,
>
> Clement
>
> >
> >>>
> >>> From my point of view this is similar to a transaction. I do not want
> the
> >>> instance to become valid before I have done all my "intercepting" which
> >> is
> >>> after BOTH the accept() method AND the getServiceReferences() method
> have
> >>> been called.
> >>
> >> In theory, it is how it should work...
> >>
> >>>
> >>> BTW I also noted that the "dependencies" member in
> >>> the DefaultDependencyInterceptor class (I extend the
> >>> DefaultServiceRankingInterceptor class) seems to contain duplicates of
> my
> >>> dependency. The same DependencyModel instance occurs twice in the List.
> >>> Seems like a bug to me. Perhaps the List should be a Set?
> >>
> >> Definitely, could you open an issue ?
> >>
> >> Clement
> >>
> >>>
> >>> /Bengt
> >>
> >>
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