The specification currently references pretty much all the major CDI scopes specifically
with the issue of propagation and lifecycle in mind. Please see section 2.3.
On Mar 6, 2016, at 11:53 PM, Mark Struberg <struberg(a)yahoo.de>
wrote:
Specifically
The containers mimic ejb for propagation for a good reason!
No session e.g. , new TX, etc
Sadly the concurrency utilis only mention @ApplicationScoped, so the Request Context not
only doesn't get propagated (which is good), but also doesn't get set up (which is
crap).
LieGrue,
Strub
> Am 06.03.2016 um 23:03 schrieb John D. Ament <john.d.ament(a)gmail.com>:
>
> I agree, in a sense, with what you're saying. There's nothing in this spec
that says it wouldn't be propagated. However, there's nothing in this spec that
states clearly that CDI contexts are propagated.
>
> If you look at the RI, the RI only seems to propagate transaction state. Considering
the age of the spec, I'm not surprised to see that. The worst part is that right now,
outside of the ASF, all other EE7 impls seem to be using the RI for concurrency.
>
> I'm fairly certain that from this spec's standpoint, the only thing
that's actually propagated is the transaction.
>
> John
>
>> On Sun, Mar 6, 2016 at 4:50 PM Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com> wrote:
>> I am re-reading the spec end to end again right now. So far it seems I have
remembered everything correctly.
>>
>> You should read over section 2.3. What it is saying is that a container
implementing the Java EE concurrency utilities should ensure whatever contextual
information is needed for managed components to work correctly should be propagated
automatically. For the correct implementation of CDI scopes, this should also mean any
currently active scopes. The section you are referring to is basically implying that
thinking that it is possible to use these scoped beans in tasks (albeit not reliably since
beans could go out of scope before the thread finishes - for example if the request
ends).
>>
>> This does not have anything to do with the context service per se. The context
service is an SPI of sorts to allow end user developers to do for their own applications
what the container does behind the scenes for managed component context propagation.
>>
>> I'll read over the entire spec to see if there is anything to contradict
this. If that's not the case what Romain is describing is most likely an
implementation specific bug that did not take into account CDI scope propagation.
>>
>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 4:23 PM, John D. Ament <john.d.ament(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Reza,
>>>
>>> I read through the concurrency utils spec. Was there a specific section you
had in mind? The only references to CDI were near the beginning warning users to not use
Request/Session scoped beans as tasks since the outer most context may be destroyed before
the work is done.
>>>
>>> I have a feeling what you're referring to is the context service:
http://docs.oracle.com/javaee/7/api/javax/enterprise/concurrent/ContextSe...
>>>
>>> If that's the case, then basically this should work OOTB right?
>>>
>>> Task task = new MyTask();
>>> task = contextService.createContextualProxy(task, Task.class);
>>> executor.submit(task);
>>>
>>> // now magically the context should be prop'd?
>>>
>>> Is that about right?
>>>
>>> John
>>>
>>>> On Sun, Mar 6, 2016 at 3:30 PM Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>
wrote:
>>>> Have you actually looked at the EE concurrency spec text in detail? What
does it say about managed component context propagation?
>>>>
>>>> Without actually doing that further discussing this is just taking shots
in the dark. As an implementer it should not surprise you that this might simply be a bug
because the person implementing the concurrency utilities for the EE runtime was not told
about what to copy over into the new thread for CDI to work correctly.
>>>>
>>>>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 3:06 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> 2016-03-06 20:59 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman
<reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
>>>>>> As far as I know this is precisely the sort of thing that the EE
concurrency spec is intended for. It is supposed to copy over everything from the
underlying thread local context into the new thread for all EE managed components to
function. Since CDI beans are also EE container managed, it also applies to CDI beans as
well. The EE vendor is supposed to make sure this works properly.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I don't think the concurrency utilities specifically lists
APIs for which thread context propagation should work. If this doesn't work in a
specific implementation it's most likely because they didn't take CDI into account
in their own EE concurrency implementation.
>>>>>
>>>>> That's what I wanted/would like. CDI TCK breaks it quite easily
and @RequestScoped which is *used* today is sadly a @ThreadLocalScoped badly named. So to
solve it we would need another scope as I mentionned several times on this list 100%
matching servlet instances lifecycles (on a pure CDI side we have the same issue for
sessions which are recycled during a request, the session scope is corrupted *by spec* in
term of user behavior).
>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Mar 6, 2016, at 2:45 PM, John D. Ament
<john.d.ament(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The section of the spec you link to makes no references to
threads. 6.3 makes some notes about normal scopes and threads, and specifically says that
a context is bound to one or more threads.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I think what's happened is that over the years, people
have simply bound HTTP Request == single thread, but when async processing was introduced
no one thought to clarify that the spawning of a child thread from the original HTTP
request retains the parent's context.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> This is another requested feature, but looks more like a bug
or gap in the spec.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> John
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> On Sun, Mar 6, 2016 at 2:37 PM Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>>> 2016-03-06 20:25 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman
<reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
>>>>>>>>> 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.
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Then 1. concurrency- utility can't be reliable for
"EE" users, 2. CDI still prevent it to work since it would violate the spec to
propagate it while request scope is bound to another thread
(
http://docs.jboss.org/cdi/spec/1.1/cdi-spec.html#request_context handles async listener
but not the main AsyncContext part).
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>> 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
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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>>>>>>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>>>>>>
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