[rules-dev] Automatic handling of relationships

David Sinclair dsinclair at chariotsolutions.com
Mon Dec 8 10:31:22 EST 2008


I actually have something similar. All of our classes are JPA entities. So I
get a hold of the JAR that contains all the class definitions and generate
traversal rules to spider out the object model. I look for @Entity,
@MapperSuperclass, @Emeddeable, etc. This handles 1-1, 1-many, many-1, and
many-many.

To asset 1 object and see it follow all the relationships is pretty wild!
The only problem is, you sometimes don't want to have all the relationships
followed, or else you could end up with half the DB in memory. To solve
this, I have TraversalPolicy facts that define when a relationship should be
followed. There are default policies that go to a depth of 3 in every
direction. Then you can define rules in Guvnor to allow for more fine
grained traversal under certain circumstances.

dave

On Fri, Dec 5, 2008 at 11:09 PM, Mark Proctor <mproctor at codehaus.org> wrote:

> I thought of a simple, yet powerful idea, anyone want to give this ago? It
> will be the start of making ontologies more sanily usable for java
> developers.
>
> Person
>  @relation(name="OwnerPetRelation", verb="IsOwnerOf")
>   Set<Pet> pets;
>
> Pet
>  @relation(name="OwnerPetRelation", verb="IsOwnedByf")
>   Person owner;
>
>
> IsOwnerOf and IsOwnedBy do not live on the classpath. The engine detects
> those annotations and generates them as internal classes. Or actually it can
> be one class, where it's able to use the two keywords to reference that
> class in either direction. When you insert your Persons and Pets, the
> relations are automatically inserted too (assuming there are rules that use
> them). This allows people to more naturally explore the relational aspect of
> their data, without having to create and insert the relations themselves.
> Once a Relation is being maintained by the engine, any updates to the
> underlying collection will result in relations being added and removed.
>
> If we build in relation inferrence, to avoid the extra binding, it would
> mean that by simply annotating their classes people can do the following
> (Assuming Cat is a type of Pet):
>
> When
>   Person( location == London ) IsOwnerOf() Cat( color == "Tabby")
>   ....
>
> The above will get all my london people and their tabby cats. The simply
> placement of the IsOwnerOf() pattern, would be nice if () was optioal, would
> constrain the Cat to those related to the Owner. i.e. the short hand
> equivalent of:
> $p : Person( location == London ) IsOwnerOf( owner == $p, $c : Cat ) Cat(
> this == $c, color == "Tabby")
>
> I think that's powerful and provides for a hyrbid OO and Relational
> modelling approaches,  asthey can still use graph notation:
> person.pets[0].color == "tabby"
>
> This also solves the question that people always ask, how do I insert my
> collection. With that in place there would still be plenty more to do, like
> constraints, but it would be a start to improving Drools' relationahip
> programming "out of the box" capabilities. So who's game?
>
> Mark
>
>
>
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