On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 7:24 PM, Douglas Campos <qmx@qmx.me> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 10:30:47AM -0500, Summers Pittman wrote:
> On 01/28/2014 09:36 AM, Lucas Holmquist wrote:
> > yup, this is another Data Sync thread,
> >
> > >From a client side perspective, i have concerns that there is still not a clear direction yet.
> >
> > I know there are multiple ideas floating around on what our model should be,  i'm all for choice, but what about deciding on 1 model to get started with.  Then later once we have this nailed down,  we can have other "adapters" with different models perhaps
> All the data model is is an envelope of sync metadata around an object
> right?
>
> We also need to think about the API and server/client protocol as well.
>
> I think that for sync 1.0 we could focus on the following behavior (it
> worked for my demos at least)
>
> 1.  We have a Sync factory similar to Pipeline, Authenticator,
> Registrar, and KeyService.
> 2.  The Sync factory consumes/manages Synchronizer instances.
> 3.  AG Synchronizer listens for sync messages using UnifiedPush endpoints.
> 4.  AG Synchronizer sends sync messages using Pipes
> 5.  AG Synchronizer holds local data in a store
>
> 6.  When AGSynchronizer gets a message it is responsible for updating
> the Store and then notifying code listing for updates OR for notifying
> the code that an error has occurred and needs to be addressed.
>
> 7.  When the developer updates data in the store, the synchronizer
> should package that data and send it to the server.  The synchronizer is
> responsible for error handling, retrying, back-off, etc.
>
> 8.  We should include multiple synchronizer implementations to deal with
> multiple very simple use cases which involve legacy systems. (For
> instance polling to load static data on a schedule.)

The thing I have against all this is its curse and its blessing at the
same time. I prefer to ship small-ish tools that the developer can use
the way she wants instead of a full-blown-zomg-unicorns full-stack
solution.

Even the pipeline API requires some level of buy-in, and I really wish
our DataSync API to be as decoupled as possible from the other parts.

I agree on the decoupling. That's pretty much what the iOS lib does today: Only dependency is AFNetworking;
The JS bits are similar, nothing is weaved into the existing APIs there as well

 
This was my main concern when I was saying: "focus on the datamodel
first, then the update protocol, then...."

I think we somewhat agreed already on a document based model, now it looks like several POCs are build to integrate w/ our sync-server bits

 

If we start with a fully integrated solution, it will be awesome, if we
have buy-in from the developer. And we all know that things not
necessarily go this way with OSS projects, hence my kerfuffle against
increasing sync's scope for 1.0.


So, what will the scope be? And will there be a 1.0 ? 
I am not really sure that we will have a 1.0.0 in the next few month.

-Matthias


What's the MVP for the sync to be a good foundation for all the shiny
bits? That's the question I want to have a good answer for.

>
> Thoughts? Tomatoes?
> >
> >
> >
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