Hi Marco,
Thank you very much for your feedback, it really helps to move this forward
in the right direction.
Some comments inline:
On Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 4:00 AM, Marco Rietveld <mrietvel(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Hi Mauricio, Maciej,
+1 on configuration.
+5 for " facade for process interactions that hides some of the steps and
expose very simple API to interact with."
In essence, we don't want the process engine (or anything else) to trust
the HT component at all -- and vice versa.
The APIs exposed should be that. Like the current TaskService interface,
only
operations. I would like to know that we are on the same page about
the interfaces. I'm interested to expose similar interfaces to the one
exposed by the specification, which are extremely similar to the
TaskService interface. On top of that I would like to promote some
decoupling which enable us to provide different implementations for
features which are required to integrate against a Content Repository, or
something similar.
Maurcio, I like the API's that you defined in the second
document
(HumanTaskAPIAndDataStructuresProposal), but I'm missing how they would be
used with the current architecture. Do you have idea's about that?
(Actually, see the 3rd para after this, for more ideas).
Also, I think that the local human task service needs to be pulled away
from the current code base: at the moment, the local human task service is
essentially a facade that is based on an infrastructure that was not
designed for it's use that way. In fact, the local human task service *was
initially designed as a demo* -- but has grown far beyond that. Luckily,
it has an API which means we can change the underlying implementation.
The idea of the interfaces that I've created and described in the document
is
that. Behind those interfaces we can implement a very straight forward
infrastructure like for example: Interface -> Implementation -> Database.
As mentioned in another email, the Task*Service Services should be as
stateless and as simple as possible.
In short, I think the use case for the local task service is
sufficiently
different from the rest of the use cases (standalone/hornetq, etc.) that it
should have it's own infrastructure -- almost down to the task functional
level. The main reason for this is that persistence (especially tx's) are a
big part of the use case for the local task service -- but the tx logic and
request handling in human-task wasn't really written with that in mind. I
would like to consider rewriting the code so that persistence and request
handling could be even more pluggable than they are (depending on local or
standalone task service).
On top of the very simple local implementation we can build the transport
layers or reuse an existing framework like camel/switchyard. If we are in
an EE environment we can instantiate the Local/Simple configuration and
plug the transports provided by the container. One of the advantage of CDI
is that it will make our life easier from the testing perspective and also
from the pluggeablity and configuration perspective.
Separating the pure human task code out from the other concerns (request
handling, persistence) will probably also help to create the API's that you
define.
The APIs that I've propose doesn't care about those topics, that's one
of
the main points. In some way the structures that the API is proposing
affects how the persistence entities will look like, but I want to have
clear interfaces that exposes the semantic of the work that we want to do
with the module: Human Interactions.
Lastly, +10 on the API's -- but I really do want them to be Interfaces.
Where possible, I'd really like to make sure that the underlying classes
are not accessible to the user and that there's a real focus on creating an
interface that satisfies a User's need -- instead of simply creating
functionality for the user and exposing it.
They are all interfaces, we cannot force to the users to use one
implementation.
I'm pushing CDI forward to guarantee standards ways for the
user to plug their own implementation if they want.
I will be adding more details to the wiki page today to clarify some of the
points that were mentioned in this thread.
Unfortunately, I will be side tracked tomorrow with the form builder, but
as soon as I can get back with this topic I will try to upload a very
simple PoC to show how the interfaces will look like and
the responsibility of each service.
Oh yeah, +1 on not forcing users to use the software a particular way: they
always end up surprising you and using it another way. The more ways
you
can expose an API the better..
Regards,
Marco
Cheers
27-06-12 23:28, Maciej Swiderski:
Hi Mauricio,
Do we foresee any use cases where task service will be used without
process engine? If so, I agree we could make it as generic as possible but
priority number 1 should be integration with process engine to make it
simple and intuitive.
In general I like this separation but I am not convinced about task
definition service as to me it looks bit over designed to the use cases I
am aware of. One issue I see with this is that we introduce task definition
management in human task module which I don't think should be concerned
about. It should be only runtime component and not repository for task
definition. If we think about storing task definitions that are reusable
across processes we should store them in guvnor rather than in additional
component (ht module). Since both designer and form builder is integrated
with it so no need for yet another integration. This is more of tools
responsibility and not runtime component. Especially important in case of
local task service, since how we could store/deploy task definition into
local task service?
Same applies for task delegation service, as this kind of information
could come from another place - repository and be utilized by tooling.
Configuration is week point in human task module currently so I believe
that this is very important element to be improved while refactoring (or
even redesiging) task module. I would see this as single configuration
service that allows to configure - in this new way - all services with
defaulting to convention over configuration so well documented convention
of configuration points is a must.
As it comes to integration between process engine and human task it should
be as simple as possible. I agree that in some cases use of switch yard and
camel makes sence but we should not force users to include it every time.
Simple interactions should be available and in my opinion out of the box.
For instance, make use of jms provider that AS delivers instead of putting
additional frameworks in between.
If you want to keep the services not aware of process interaction then we
should deliver facade for process interactions that hides some of the steps
and expose very simple API to interact with, like addTask, completeTask,
getTask, getAssignerTasks, etc (part of this is probably in task instance
service). That will make a smooth interaction from the process side which
as mentioned already is most important, in my opinion.
For CDI, I am not expert here but what about standalone adoptions, like
swing, or other desktop frameworks, will CDI fit into that?
Let's encourage others here to speak up as we need more votes on this
refactor.
Maciej
On 27.06.2012 20:17, Mauricio Salatino wrote:
Thanks Maciej for the questions. I've included comments between the
bullets
"Mauricio, couple of questions at the very beginning to understand
correctly your proposal:
- Q: how does task def service applies to process interactions - when
task definition will be deployed?
A: I was trying to not think about the process engine for exposing a
Human Task Interactions APIs, but I understand your question. Right now
inside our HTWorkItems we are calling the taskClient.add method which in
fact is doing a deploy and an instantiation of a task based on the WorkItem
params map. This parameters map is created based on the userTask defined in
a process and its internal data mappings. That's from one side.
With the form builder, what can be done right now is to "decorate" a
userTask from a business process and define a form based on it. So
basically we do something like: pick a process, get all the userTasks and
for each task we end up with a TaskForm.def this TaskForm.def can be
associated with a TaskDefinition, instead with a TaskInstance, promoting
reusability as much as we can.
If we have this TaskDefService, we can make both: the WorkItemHandlers
and the Form builder to consume the same information and reuse that as much
as we can. We can include the process designer in the loop and make the
Company Tasks Definitions available for the editor, so the user when want
to place a new UserTask inside their process, can choose from a list of
presets instead of filling all the mappings, user assignments, presentation
details, notifications settings, etc.
- Q: delegation service - since that is on task def level - what
about sharing this information on concurrent task instances since based on
the same definition expressions can be evaluated to different values
A: Yes that's the idea. In the static information we can have an
expresion, in that case the expresion will be evaluated with the
TaskInstance context and the result will be placed in the task instance
context, the task def information will not be changed, so it can be safely
shared between instances. All the taskDef related structures should contain
"templating" information which means something for the company. All the
runtime status will be kept in the task instances. Think about TaskDef,
DelegationsDef, NotificationDef, as shortcuts for the users to not define
everything each time that they want to instantiate a task.
- Q:how is this going to be configured - per service or will there be
a configuration service as well
A: good question, we can add this topic for our board session :) I'm
not a CDI expert, but based on what I've being reading, you can provide a
default set of services that will be automatically instantiated and
injected, and then you can provide alternatives. If the user doesn't want
the default settings he can defined the alternatives via a vary basic
configuration file. Using CDI qualifiers we can, with a pair of
annotations, define which set implementations (1 configuration) do we want
for our whole set of services.
Would be really nice to see how this is going to be utilized from
following perspectives:
- Q: process engine - how process engine will interact with human task
services
A: This should not be a problem of this module, and I think that this
can be considered as an integration problem, so it can be
fixed with an specialized framework such as switchyard and/or camel.
I've being reading about the CDI support for them.. and
I think that we can go in that way.
The Callbacks/Listener Service is intended to store information about
the Task Owners and their interest to be notified about a tasks events. We
need to think about this a little bit more, because the Process Engine is
not the Task Owner of a TaskInstance that has being created by a business
process instance. The business process instance is the owner of that task
in that case, so we will need to keep a reference from that process
instance inside this service. When I say, reference I mean a business key,
an ID, an endpoint or something to be able to notify the interested ones.
- Q: task client - how to access tasks and to perform operations on
them"
A: via the TaskInstanceService, its the same as our TaskClient right
now. (but restricted for TaskInstances and TaskInstancesQueries, not add,
not Comments, not attachments, not notifications)
Cheers
On Wed, Jun 27, 2012 at 1:02 PM, Mauricio Salatino <salaboy(a)gmail.com>wrote:
> Hi guys,
> I'm back with more wiki pages. I was thinking about how to improve the
> Human Task Module and I came back with this wiki page
> that shows some proposals.
> The main idea behind the proposal is to modularize as much as we can the
> features provided by the human task module. I've also included
> into the proposal the concept of TaskDefinition which will allow us to
> add a nice integration with the form builder (in modeling and in runtime
> phases).
>
> I'm trying to move towards CDI to leverage all the mechanisms provided
> by the framework and the fact that exposing CDI beans across different
> platforms is extremely easy these days.
>
>
https://community.jboss.org/wiki/HumanTaskAPIAndDataStructuresProposal
>
> I understand that the changes proposed in the wiki looks quite heavy,
> but I do believe that we can fit the current code base into that structure
> without loosing functionality.
>
>
> The document is showing APIs and Data Structures only. i think that we
> can assume that all the services implementation will represent simple
> stateless services which will
> insert and read information from a database, so architecturally speaking
> from that perspective the service implementations should be straight
> forward.
>
> I will be filling the Data Structure Sections briefly, but I would like
> to share the main concepts with you guys to gather feedback, as always.
>
> Cheers
>
> --
> - MyJourney @
http://salaboy.wordpress.com
> - Co-Founder @
http://www.jugargentina.org
> - Co-Founder @
http://www.jbug.com.ar
>
> - Salatino "Salaboy" Mauricio -
>
>
--
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http://salaboy.wordpress.com
- Co-Founder @
http://www.jugargentina.org
- Co-Founder @
http://www.jbug.com.ar
- Salatino "Salaboy" Mauricio -
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- Salatino "Salaboy" Mauricio -