"name" will only appear once in the cluster, (on different location though), right?On 13 Apr 2010, at 07:55, Emmanuel Bernard wrote:No need, Marcus had it :)I'd do something likecacheFactory.usingContext().colocateOn(groupName).getCache() (*)(*) assuming the ability to get a cache isOr is the collocation business something that must be done at the cache level temporarily / for a single operation (thus hosted on the cache interface)?The latter. So something like:cache.inGroup("coloGrp1").put("k1", "v1");cache.inGroup("coloGrp1").put("k2", "v2");cache.inGroup("coloGrp2").put("k3", "v3");cache.inGroup("coloGrp2").put("k4", "v4");would result in k1 and k2 being placed on the same nodes, regardless of what the 2 keys individually hash to. Same with k3 and k4.Another question (slightly off-topic) - would people then be tempted to use this as a scoping mechanism:cache.inGroup("coloGrp1").put("name", "Manik");cache.inGroup("coloGrp1").put("location", "London");cache.inGroup("coloGrp2").put("name", "Emmanuel");cache.inGroup("coloGrp2").put("location", "Paris");since this will *not* work. The cache still primarily is a collection of K -> V mappings and in the above case the last 2 lines will effectively overwrite the 1st 2 lines.
_______________________________________________CheersManik_______________________________________________On 12 avr. 2010, at 15:30, Vladimir Blagojevic wrote:Why don't we ping Emmanuel for an advice. He's done similar API design in Hibernate IIRC._______________________________________________On 2010-04-12, at 8:58 AM, Mircea Markus wrote:_______________________________________________On 12 Apr 2010, at 15:36, Manik Surtani wrote:what about using an Flag-like api?Re: subject (see https://jira.jboss.org/jira/browse/ISPN-359), there are a couple of approaches that could be taken:1. Don't use key.hashcode() as the seed in determining to which nodes an entry is mapped, but instead on a well-known method or annotated method (e.g., int getGroupID() or a method annotated with @GroupId). The way I see it, this approach has:+ Will work, no additional overheads of AtomicMaps- Cost (reflection)- Intrusive (what if users have no control over the key class, e.g., String keys?)2. Additional API methods on the cache - cache.put(K, V, G), cache.putAll(Map, G), etc.+ Non-intrusive- Overhead of AtomicMaps + additional entries for mappings+ or - (depending on how you look at it) all keys in the group will be locked together, etc, a side-effect of using AtomicMapsMy pref is for approach #2. In terms of implementation, here is what I have in mind:* A GroupingInterceptor that intercepts the call early on if the call is a put(K, V, G) or something similar.* Breaks up the call to a put(K, G) and a getAtomicMap(G).put(K, V). Wrapped in a tx to ensure atomicity.* get(K), etc intercepted as well, replaced with getAtomicMap(get(K)).get(K)* remove(K), etc intercepted with getAtomicMap(get(K)).remove(K)One of the issues with the API approach is that it heavily pollutes the Cache API. It will double the number of put() methods on Cache (currently 18 variants of put, including ones that take in lifespans and maxIdles, async versions that return futures, etc.) Perhaps this could be in an additional sub-interface interface? GroupedCache? Or is this degree of method overloading not too confusing?cache.inGroup("groupName").put(...).or an "parametrized" flag:cache.withFlag(Flags.getColocateFlag("grouName").put(...)as long as we can create "parametrized" flags as bellow, I like the second approach_______________________________________________Cheers,--Manik SurtaniLead, InfinispanLead, JBoss Cache
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