2015-03-18 17:57 GMT+01:00 Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com>:
On 18 Mar 2015, at 16:46, Antoine Sabot-Durand <antoine(a)sabot-durand.net>
wrote:
Le 18 mars 2015 à 17:31, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> a écrit :
Agreed, that is a mess. Why do we need to enable on both sides?
Glad to share this pic with you. Mark raised the problem of backward
compatibility. If a 3rd party lib use fireAsync(), user have no choice to
deactivate async operation on his @Observes. Imagine this observer is
linked to a transaction phase, it won”t work as expected. So if we don’t
give a mean to opt-in or opt-out async on observer code may break and thus
3rd party lib will never switch to fireAsync().
Ok, I’m missing a subtle point I guess. If a transaction is running, then
the observer method is invoked async anyway (during the correct phase). If
a transaction is not running, then it can fire async as per non
transactional observers.
We also have the problem of bean injection or bean request in the
observer, as we are not sure to adopt context propagation in async
operation as I’d like to, it could also break code to fore observer in
async mode from outside.
I would assume that context propagation is a must.
but opposed to ee concurrency utilities and other EE parts? sounds weird
even if tempting, maybe need a sync with other specs
However I can see that if we can’t support this, then there is a
problem.
On 18 Mar 2015, at 15:36, Antoine Sabot-Durand <antoine(a)sabot-durand.net>
wrote:
Ok guys,
Again, ordering here is optional. My first thought was to not support it
with async events, Jozef relaunch the subject. The heart of the discussion
here is “can we find a way to avoid activating async event at both ends and
keep backward compatibility”. Have to use fireAsync() on one side and
@Async @Observes or @Observes(asyncSupported=true) at the other side seems
to me very unfriendly for users, but when I see mot people focus on other
secondary points I think I’m the only one to find this crappy ;).
Le 18 mars 2015 à 16:17, Pete Muir <pmuir(a)redhat.com> a écrit :
On 18 Mar 2015, at 13:04, Romain Manni-Bucau <rmannibucau(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
2015-03-18 13:55 GMT+01:00 Jozef Hartinger <jharting(a)redhat.com>:
>
> On 03/18/2015 01:46 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau wrote:
>
>
> 2015-03-18 13:35 GMT+01:00 Jozef Hartinger <jharting(a)redhat.com>:
>
>>
>> On 03/18/2015 01:28 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> 2015-03-18 13:15 GMT+01:00 Jozef Hartinger <jharting(a)redhat.com>:
>>
>>>
>>> On 03/18/2015 11:16 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau wrote:
>>>
>>>> sequentializing them arbitrarily just makes it not async anymore
>>>>
>>> the event firing thread won't wait for event delivery so it is still
>>> async
>>
>>
>> well doesn't change the fact you break original async need/wish doing it.
>>
>> break what?
>>
>> don't wait behavior, own thread model by call which is what async means
> most of the time
>
> Well, the thread firing an event won't wait for the observers to complete
> so I cannot see how it breaks your "original async need/wish". Or do you
> associate "async" with splitting the work into as many parallel threads as
> possible? If so then we have a mismatch in terminology.
>
FWIW this is what I would interpret an async observer model to be, yes. An
async fire, perhaps not. However I think it’s unnecessarily limiting to
design the ability to do this out of the spec, especially for an edge case
such as asynchronous ordered observers.
If you are writing an async observer, you clearly need to make it’s
functionality idempotent, or expect things to go weird.
Ordered observers are something I’m still not overly happy about ;-)
well about terminology maybe but I more think about expected behavior as a
user. Think we now both get what we each of us put behind async and
question is what's the most common case. Depending where you put async
(fireAsync vs @Async/@ObserveAsync) it is not the same thing at all.
>
>
>
> (+ think to the case you dont really have priorities you are just
>> breaking the whole concept).
>>
> If you do not have priorities (or they are the same) then it is most
> likely fine to notify the observers in parallel. If you however do have
> priorities then it makes sense IMO to take them into account. Doing
> otherwise just complicates the entire concept by adding an artificial
> constraint.
>
>
> point is you are introducing a model concept which is not aligned on the
> common model + doesn't even match correctly the async needs (what about
> onFailure() and onTimeout() which are mandatory when doing async)
> what common model?
>
>
> callbacks one which is the only one making async usable and prod
> compatible
> Which part is not aligned? In the current proposal you get a callback
> when all observers complete or an exception occurs. In what order the
> observers are called does not change anything about that.
>
you don't control the timeout and exception from the callback. I mean in
the observer chain which is what is needed most of the time (it helps me to
think to it with a javascript example but maybe my personal feeling).
>
> I tend to join Mark saying we should just do the minimum instead of
>> wanting to do to much and providing something highly broken we'll need to
>> fix in next version with more broken patterns. What's the need is the real
>> question, not what would be cool to implement.
>>
>> Don't forget an async spec smells more and more strong with real async
>> semantic and solutions so I guess the less we put in CDI now better it is.
>>
>>
>>
>
>
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