Let's see. I suspect the specification text for EE concurrency is generic enough for
implementations to also be able to cover CDI scopes or any other Java EE API context
propagation needs. This means the issue needs to be solved at the individual
implementation level. Changing anything in the spec is probably just unnecessary ceremony
in this case.
On Mar 6, 2016, at 2:15 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wrote:
2016-03-06 19:42 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
> This frankly surprises me. I'll check the specification text. This might indeed
just be an implementation bug. The EE concurrency utilities are supposed to be copying all
relevant context. If this is an issue than it has to be that it is not copying enough of
the HTTP request context for CDI to work.
>
The issue is not technical since I got it working but needed to reverse. From my
understanding ee concurrency utilities was done in a time CDI was not there so it just
ignored it somehow and it hasnt been updated when integrated to the spec. Now with the
wording of the CDI - and TCK - it is impossible to make it working since request scope is
bound the thre request thread - and not the request. Side note: same applies to session
scope and conversation.
> Surely the Red Hat folks can quickly shed some light here since they implement
essentially this whole stack?
>
>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 1:30 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau <rmannibucau(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
>>
>> 2016-03-06 19:20 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
>>> Can you kindly try to make the example a bit simpler? It's important to
make the case for how likely this is supposed to occur in most business applications.
>>>
>>> Also, other than making sure that the executor service is propagating thread
local request contexts correctly what other solution are you proposing? Did you check the
specification? How sure are you that this isn't simply an implementation bug?
>>>
>>> As far as I know the executor service is supposed to be preserving all
relevant parts of the EE context?
>>>
>>
>> Not in concurrency-utilities for EE at least. That was the first impl I did then
Mark pointed out it was violating CDI spec and request scope definition. There is a kind
of contracdiction there cause concurrency-utilities doesn't integrate with CDI at all
but we can also see it the opposite way: CDI doesn't provide any way to propagate a
context in another thread. Both point of view are valid so we need to see where we tackle
it.
>>
>>>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 12:35 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> does
https://gist.github.com/rmannibucau/d55fce47b001185dca3e help?
>>>>
>>>> Idea is to give an API to make:
>>>>
>>>> public void complete() {
>>>> try {
>>>> asyncContext.complete();
>>>> } finally {
>>>> auditContext.end();
>>>> }
>>>> }
>>>>
>>>> working without hacky and almost impossible context pushing (cause of
injections nature you are not supposed to know what to push in the context when going
async).
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Romain Manni-Bucau
>>>> @rmannibucau | Blog | Github | LinkedIn | Tomitriber
>>>>
>>>> 2016-03-06 16:40 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
>>>>> Can you kindly share an annotated code example of the proposed
solution so we can all follow and discuss this?
>>>>>
>>>>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 9:31 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wroteshar:
>>>>>
>>>>>> Hi guys,
>>>>>>
>>>>>> spoke on concurrency utilities about the ability to inherit a cdi
scope. Idea is to follow request scope more than cdi spec allows. First thought it was a
concurrency utilities thing but Reza mentionned can be a CDI one so here it is.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Sample:
>>>>>> In a servlet i get MyBean which is @RequestScoped, I do some set
on it. The i go async (AsyncContext) and trigger a task in another thread. It would be
neat - and mandatory in some case by the loose coupling nature of CDI - to get the *same*
MyBean *instance* in this thread. With a direct dependency you can easily use message
passing pattern - but you loose the loose coupling cause you need to know until which
level you unwrap, think t principal case which has 2-3 proxies!. However in practice you
have a lot of undirect dependencies, in particular with enterprise concerns (auditing,
security...) so you can't really do it easily/naturally.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Bonus:
>>>>>> One very verbose way is to be able to kind of push/pop an
existing context in a thread - wrappers doing it on a Runnable/Consumer/Function/... would
be neat.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Question:
>>>>>> Would CDI handle it in 2.0?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Side note: this is really about the fact to reuse a "context
context" (its current instances map) in another thread the more transparently
possible and match the user vision more than a technical question for now.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Romain Manni-Bucau
>>>>>> @rmannibucau | Blog | Github | LinkedIn | Tomitriber
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> cdi-dev mailing list
>>>>>> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider
licenses the code under the Apache License, Version 2
(
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all other ideas provided on this
list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual property rights inherent in
such information.
>>>>>
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> cdi-dev mailing list
>>>>> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>>>
>>>>> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider licenses
the code under the Apache License, Version 2
(
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all other ideas provided on this
list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual property rights inherent in
such information.
>>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> cdi-dev mailing list
>>> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>
>>> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider licenses the code
under the Apache License, Version 2 (
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For
all other ideas provided on this list, the provider waives all patent and other
intellectual property rights inherent in such information.
>>
>
> _______________________________________________
> cdi-dev mailing list
> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>
> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider licenses the code under
the Apache License, Version 2 (
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all
other ideas provided on this list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual
property rights inherent in such information.