"A ruleset parameter is the equivalent of a global variable"
So a ruleset parameter is nothing more than a global, so just use our
globals as is and you get IN_OUT capabilities. I would strongly advise
you against representing your entire model this way and just using evals.
Mark
Mark Proctor wrote:
Yoni Mazar wrote:
> Hi all,
> We are at the begining of a new clinical decision-support project. We
> plan using drools (using Eclipse) in order to manage and execute our
> business logic. As part of our research, we also evaluated JRules
> which has a feature that
> is very important to us and we could not find in Drools.
I've reference the ilog manual on in/out parameters if anyone doesn't
know what they are:
http://www.ilog.com/products/jrules/documentation/jrules67/rsruleset/rs_r...
http://www.ilog.com/products/jrules/documentation/jrules67/rsruleset/rs_r...
I don't see the difference between a global and an IN_OUT parameter,
and I don't see the value of specifically saying which parameters are
IN and which are OUT. It doesn't seem that parameters are facts, they
are not asserted into the engine and propagated through the working
memory - atleaast I don't think they are, the manual doesn't say
clearly enough, it just says they can be referenced from any ruleset
component, which seems to be akin to how we do globals.
> Unless we missed it out, we will probably try and add this functionality
> ourselves.
>
> In JRules, one can define a ruleset (corresponds to a package) with
> parameters. Each parameter has a datatype (a class), a direction
> (in/out/inout), and an alias. Then, within the rules, the user can
> refer to the parameter alias. For
> example, a user can define a ruleset with the following parameters:
> *class=LabResult, direction=in, alias=hemoglobin *class=LabResult,
> direction=in, alias=creatinin
> Then, within a rule, one can write: when hemoglobin.value<10 and
> creatinin.value>34 then...
We can do the same with globals, but what that actually means is you
have a rule that doesn't use any working memory objects, and you put
the constraints into one big eval - no pattern matching, so you are
turning the rule engine into a scripting engine rather than a
production rule system.
If they are indeed facts that allow for pattern matching, then it
seems that they constraint by the variable name rather than by object
type. I've never liked this, again why not just use mvel directly as a
scripting engine. But I have thought of how this would be possible,
somethign I call Named Facts - where asserted facts can be given a
unique string identifier and a pattern can be told to not only
constraint against that object type, but also against that variable
name. However this is something that users can emulate themselves now,
by just putting an "identifier" field on their facts and constraining
on it in the pattern. If someone comes up with a clean way for
supporting named facts and provides a patch we will consider including
it, but it's not one of our priorities at the moment.
> Now, the application retrieves the patient data accordingly
> (hemoglobin and creatinine data separetly - even though they are of
> the same type) and sets
> the ruleset parameters:
> ruleset.parameters.add("hemoglobin",hemoglobinFact)
> ruleset.parameters.add("creatinin",creatininFact)
> It is important that the definition of the aliases will be done
> outside of
> the rule (and not by defining in-rule variables)
>
> This approach simplifies the rules since some of the filtering is being
> applied externally (not in the rule itself)
>
sounds like it simplifies it, by turning it into a scripting engine
where all facts are variables with identifiers.
> Does someone has an idea how to bridge this gap using Drools? Are
> there any workarounds that can be used in order to avoid changes in
> code?
>
Hopefully my main paragraph above shows you how to emulate this.
> And here we can use your help:
> We are new to Drools (and still have to dive into the big ocean of
> code that
> exists). The following features
>
> 1) defining parameters (in the package level...something like import)
> 2) adding in/out modifiers (can be used in LHS, RHS, or both)
> 3) allowing assignment of aliases to parameters 4) adding such
> functionality to the rule editor (auto-complete ,type safety)
>
> Where should we start?
> Do you have any ideas that can help start this process (e.g. relevant
> classes, modules)?
> We would appreciate any help regarding any of the items in the list
> above.
> Any hints, suggestions, directions, referals and so on.
>
IF IN_OUT params are nothign more than globals and big fat evails,
then you have nothing to do.
If they are named facts, it won't be easy, but you could try the
following approach:
1) update drools to support named facts, as described previously, this
will involve a special type of ObjectType I imagine, and you'll have
to change how it matches ObjectTypes so that it also has access to the
possible variable name.
2) figure out a sane syntax, that is not ambigious, to allow pattern
matching on named facts, and update our Antlr files to support this.
4) I don't konw if in/out parameters are useful for a stateful
session, or only stateless. Either way you will probably want to
create some Context object that contains these parameters and then you
"insert" them using smething like insertWithParameters( myParams ).
With stateless it'll execute and return results directly, with
stateful you'll have to figure out how that'll work with possible
incremental inserts and fireallrules being called separately.
4) Write lots of tests ot make sure it doesn't break anything
> Thanks a lot.
>
> Yoni
>
>