Batching
Batches are configured in the connector configuration and the Publisher Framework respects this. If no batching is defined, the Publisher Framework creates a one-time batch with only one document included.
On the publisher level, a developer can choose among certain batch types: BUFFER/ STREAM/ NONE
- For STREAM batch type, the Publisher Framework gets connection from the pool on batch start and keeps sending this connection to PAP methods in the course of the whole batch.
- The connection is released when closing the batch.
- For BUFFER batch type the connection is claimed from the pool at the beginning of batch close, passed to PAP endBatch method and released afterwards.
- This means that the developer should buffer all documents in the course of batch. For this purpose, so called batch data buffer is available in PublisherBatch object.
- The Publisher Framework also supports "so called" multi server batches.
- Batch factory creates this kind of batch when more URL's are provided in the configuration.
- The purpose of this is to support the ability to publish documents to more servers.
- Broadcasting and round robin are supported.
- There is a BatchAdapter object available in PublisherBatch.
- This object can be used for reporting error and other messages to the Aspire framework.
Transformers are used for transforming AspireObjects coming in jobs into some String format representation of this object required by the target repository. For example, when publishing to Elasticsearch we need to create a JSON structure of the Aspire document.
We support XML, JSON and simple String transformers
- Transformers are configured by specifying transform file – Groovy script for JSON or XSLT template for XML transformer.
- Transform files are typically provided by the developer of the specific publisher. For example Elasticsearch publisher bundle is pre-packed with transform.groovy script. In runtime the user can configure the publisher with his own transform file.
- Transformer functionality can be used by calling PublisherInfo.transform(AspireObject doc) method which produces string result of the transformation.
For more low-level handling of the transformation process, use the PublisherInfo.getTransformerFactory method to create transformers and use streams passed as parameters to transformers.
HttpClient
HttpClient is provided by the HttpConnection object. When developing a publisher for REST-based target repositories, consider using this class.
- HttpClient was primarily developed for writing AspireObject documents.
- If required, HttpClient uses transformers for converting AspireObjects before writing.
- HttpClient supports REST-based API and can execute GET, PUT, POST, DELETE methods.
- HttpClient also supports streaming.
- This can be used in batching. For example, Elasticsearch publisher writes single documents to the HttpClient stream first. Then on batch close, this stream is posted to the Elasticsearch.
- HttpClient can be configured by the HttpProperties object.
- HttpClient configuration is flexible enough to accept changes even after the object is constructed.
- This opens possibilities for reconfiguring already created and possibly already pooled objects.
- For example, we can modify a URL parameter value in created by the HttpClient because we need different URLs for normal bulk POST and other actions such as index clean.
- HttpClient supports retry logic configured by specific parameters.
- HttpClient can be configured by HttpErrorHandler.
- If this handler is provided, the developer can get information about possible connection errors or other Http errors and react accordingly – either by throwing an exception or by continuing with retry logic.
Delete By Query
If a document with action “deleteByQuery” arrives in a publisher, the Publisher Framework takes appropriate action.
- The query document is first automatically transformed by the configured transformer.
- You must support the transformation in a transformation script.
- For example, in JSON, introduce a section with “if (action == "deleteByQuery")” command.
- If this section is left empty, the document is not considered transformed.
- In the PAP class implement, delete by query logic in the method processDeleteByQuery by interpreting the syntax of “deleteByQuery” document.
- When arriving in PAP.processDeleteByQuery(DeleteByQuery) the DeleteByQuery object (the object where the original “deleteByQuery” document is wrapped) can be translated by the supported Visitor objects into some meaningful string representation.
- The prepared visitor classes support delete by query format created by ArchiveExtractor utility (QueryForArchiveDefaultVisitorImpl).
- For example, in the Elasticsearch publisher, you can create part of an Elasticsearch API command to get all documents with the same “parentId” published previously; therefore, handling all the documents of the archive.