Transformer SDK For C
6.2.11.309924
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Data Services are a new feature in the 4.0 Caplin platform and offer improved source mapping when compared to previous versions with the following key features:
A Source Mapping definition is called a Service. A service comprises a name, one or more subject patterns to match and one or more source groups.
This is an indentifier which can be used in status messages. RTTP objects have a field called SID which is the service name.
Note:When picking a service for an object, the first defined match takes priority. As such you should ensure that each object is associated with one and only one service.
These are regular expression strings to accept or deny for this service. A service will allow multiple patterns including patterns to deny. Exclude patterns can help to define the namespace used.
Note: When checking pattern matches within a service definition, the first match takes priority whether it is an include or an exclude.
The main part of the service definition is the source groups. This is one or more sets of sources, plus certain attributes which define the behaviour of the group. In most cases only a single group is defined. When multiple groups are defined for a service it means that a request will attempt to get the object from a source from each group. Multiple groups allow an object to have different sets of fields coming from different sources, for example.
Priorities are defined within each source group and are taken in the order in which they are defined. Multiple labels can be defined within each priority. Within a priority, the peer with the lowest number of subscriptions will be used.
There are various timeouts associated with Data Services. By default when an object is requested if after 10 seconds there has been no response, the request will be cancelled and the user informed. This is the service-request-timeout
and applies to the whole object request. It is also possible to timeout requests to individual sources, to allow the request to move on to another source. This is the source-request-timeout
, which by default is not turned on. The Source timeout is only useful when using a priority group with multiple sources within it as it allows the system to try more than one source before giving up. All these timeouts are only relevant when a source does not respond to a request, when the timeout occurs a discard message is sent to the source so it is aware that the request is cancelled.
If no data-service is defined, then the application will act as if the following was defined:
add-data-service service-name default include-pattern ^/ add-source-group required false add-priority label source1 end-priority end-source-group add-source-group required false add-priority label source2 end-priority end-source-group . . add-source-group required false add-priority label sourceN end-priority end-source-group end-data-service
This means a request will be sent to all active Data Sources at once.
When using the DataSource SDK to request objects programmatically, the Data Services system will prevent requests going to any peer that has already been sent a request. It also handles which peers requests go to rather than the programmer explicitly specifying the peers.
Pre-version 4.0 source mapping should be converted to data services in the following manner:
All peers should have a label
defined in the add-peer
configuration section, for these example conversion, the label
is 'src' appended with the the remote-id
add-source-mapping /A/* 1 should be converted to:
include-pattern ^/A/ add-source-group required true add-priority label src1 end-priority end-source-group
add-source-mapping /A/* 1,2 should be converted to:
include-pattern ^/A/ add-source-group required true add-priority label src1 label src2 end-priority end-source-group
add-source-mapping /A/* 1 2 should be converted to:
include-pattern ^/A/ add-source-group required true add-priority label src1 end-priority end-source-group add-source-group required true add-priority label src2 end-priority end-source-group
add-source-mapping /A/* 1,2 3,4 should be converted to:
include-pattern ^/A/ add-source-group required true add-priority label src1 label src2 end-priority end-source-group add-source-group required true add-priority label src3 label src4 end-priority end-source-group
service-request-timeout
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: 10.000000
Global request timeout for all services
source-request-timeout
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: -1.000000
Global request timeout for all sources
add-data-service
Starts the definition of data service.
Format:
add-data-service service-name [value] request-timeout [value] exclude-pattern [value] include-pattern [value] add-source-group required [boolean] retry-time [value] add-priority label [value] end-priority end-source-group end-data-service
Example:
add-data-service service-name FX exclude-pattern ^/I/X include-pattern ^/I/ include-pattern ^/B/ request-timeout 20 add-source-group required true retry-time 45 add-priority label sourceA end-priority add-priority label sourceB label sourceC end-priority end-source-group add-source-group required false add-priority label source1 label source2 end-priority end-source-group end-data-service
In this example, the service FX is defined which matches the patterns ^/I/ and ^/B/ but not the symbols ^/B/. There are two service groups, one providing required data and another providing optional data.
For the required group, there are two priorities defined, requests will be preferentially sent to sourceA, however should it not be available then sourceB and sourceC will be asked in a round-robin fashion.
For the non-required group, two sources are defined, requests will be sent to source1 and source2 in a round-robin fashion.
service-name
Type: String
Default: None
affinity
Type: Function
Default: None
service-type
Type: Integer
Default: 3
Acceptable Values:
Name | Value | Desc |
---|---|---|
active | 1 | |
broadcast | 2 |
request-timeout
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: -1.000000
This option configures the timeout for all requests for this service. Should no response be received from peers within this time, the object will be assumed to be not available.
The default value of -1 means that requests will never timeout.
discard-timeout
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: -1.000000
Timeout for all discards for this service
exclude-pattern
Type: Function
Default: None
include-pattern
Type: Function
Default: None
required-state
Type: Integer
Default: 0
Acceptable Values:
Name | Value | Desc |
---|---|---|
down | 0 | |
optional | 0 | |
limited | 1 | |
ok | 2 | |
up | 2 |
Required state for this service
cache-contrib
Type: Boolean
Default: FALSE
Whether contrib symbols from this group are cached
nodata-ignore-request-timeout
Type: Boolean
Default: FALSE
This option configures the service so that all nodatas received are propagated to the user code and any outstanding requests for the nodata subject are discarded.
The default value is for the legacy behaviour.
disable-auto-status
Type: Boolean
Default: FALSE
Disable the automatic generation of object status
add-source-group
affinity
Type: Function
Default: None
required
Type: Boolean
Default: FALSE
Whether this source group is required
retry-time
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: 30.000000
Minimum: 1.000000
Time to retry when we've looped through all priorities
add-priority
remote-label
Type: String Array
Default: None
label
Type: String Array
Default: None
datasrc-default-obj-hash-size
Type: Integer
Default: 16384
Default number of entries in the active object hashtable. This size can be overridden by putting a value in the obj-hash-size
option of the add-peer entry.
cleanup-stale-timeout
Type: Floating Point Value
Default: -1.000000
Default delay in seconds before cleaning STALE objects from the cache
broadcast-cleanup-time
Type: Integer
Default: -1
Time in minutes past midnight to clean up broadcast objects
broadcast-cleanup-period
Type: Integer
Default: 1440
How often to cleanup broadcast objects
broadcast-cleanup-age
Type: Integer
Default: -1
How old broadcast objects need to be for cleanup