public interface MatchSet
Entry
instances to be incrementally
returned from a JavaSpaces service. Some operations on a
space must return more entries than can be conveniently
returned by a single call, generally because returning all the
entries in one result would consume too many resources in the
client or introduce too much latency before the first entry
could be processed. In these cases, match sets are returned to
incrementally return the necessary entries. A
MatchSet
instance is a proxy object that can be
used to access a match set created by a space.
Typically match sets are created by some factory method on the
space (for example, JavaSpace05.contents
) which returns a MatchSet
instance that will serve as a proxy to the match set. The match
set will initially contain some population of entries specified
by the operation that created it. These entries can be
retrieved by calling next
. A successful call to
next
will remove the returned Entry
from the match set. Match sets can end up in one of two
terminal states, exhausted or invalidated.
Under what conditions a match set enters one of these states is
specified by the operation that created it. An exhausted match
set is empty and will have no more entries added. Calling
next
on an exhausted match set must always return
null
. Calling next
on an invalidated
match set may return a non-null
value, or it may
throw one of the allowed exceptions. In particular it may
throw NoSuchObjectException
to indicate that the match
set has been invalidated. Once next
throws a
NoSuchObjectException
, all future
next
calls on that instance must also throw
NoSuchObjectException
. Calling next
on an invalidated match set must never return
null
. Implementations must not add entries to an
invalidated match set.
Between the time a match set is created and the time it reaches a
terminal state, entries may be added by the space. However, an
Entry
that is removed by a next
call
must not be added back to a match set (though if there is a
distinct but equivalent entry in the space it may be
added). The space may also remove entries independent of
next
calls. The conditions under which entries
will be removed independent of next
calls or added
after the initial creation of the match set are specified by
the operation that created the match set.
If there is a possibility that a match set may become
invalidated, it must be leased and an appropriate proxy must be
returned by the getLease
method. If there is
no possibility that the match set will become invalidated,
implementations should not lease the match set. If a match set
is not leased, then getLease
must return
null
.
An active lease on a match set serves as a hint to the space
that the client is still interested in the match set, and as a
hint to the client that the match set is still functioning.
However, implementations are allowed to invalidate match sets
associated with active leases and to unilaterally cancel leases
associated with functioning match sets. If a match set is
leased and the lease is active, implementations should, to the
best of their ability, maintain the match set and not invalidate
it. There are cases, however, where this may not be possible in
particular, it is not expected that implementations will
maintain match sets across crashes. If the lease expires or is
canceled, an implementation should invalidate the match
set. An implementation must unilaterally cancel a match set's
lease if the match set is invalidated. An implementation may
unilaterally cancel the lease at other times without necessarily
invalidating the match set. Clients should not assume
that the resources associated with a leased match set will be
freed if the match set reaches the exhausted state, and should
instead cancel the lease.
This interface is not a remote interface; though in general a
MatchSet
is a proxy for some remote match set,
only the next
method is considered to be a remote
method, and as outlined in its description
it deviates in a number of ways from normal Java(TM) Remote
Method Invocation remote method semantics.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
Lease |
getLease()
Returns a proxy to the
Lease associated with this
match set, or null if this match set is not
leased. |
Entry |
getSnapshot()
|
Entry |
next()
Removes one
Entry from the match set and
returns a copy to the caller. |
Entry next() throws RemoteException, UnusableEntryException
Entry
from the match set and
returns a copy to the caller. Returns null
if
the match set is empty. The returned Entry
must be unmarshalled in accordance with the Jini Entry
Specification.
A given invocation of this method may perform remote
communications, but generally the next
method
is not expected to have remote method constraints that
can vary from invocation to invocation. Instead the set of
constraints associated with the next
method
will be fixed at the time the match set was created, even
if this object implements an interface like RemoteMethodControl
that would otherwise allow the set of
constraints associated with the next
method to
be altered.
Entry
from the match set, or
null
if the match set is emptyUnusableEntryException
- if the entry removed from
the match set could not be unmarshalledRemoteException
- if a communication error occurs. If a
RemoteException
is thrown, no
Entry
was removed from the match set
because of this callLease getLease()
Lease
associated with this
match set, or null
if this match set is not
leased.null
if there is no lease associated with this
match setEntry getSnapshot()
Entry
removed by
the last call to next
. Snapshots are defined
in section JS.2.6 of the
JavaSpaces Service Specification and are an
alternative representation of a given Entry
produced by a particular space for use with that same
space. Passing a snapshot to a space is generally more
efficient than passing the original representation.
Any snapshot returned by this method will meet the same
contract as the object returned by passing the result of
the last next
invocation to JavaSpace.snapshot
.
Generally there is a cost associated with calling the
JavaSpace.snapshot
method. Thus creating a
snapshot using that method is usually only worthwhile if
the resulting snapshot is used more than once. The cost of
invoking this method should be low and should be worthwhile
even if the resulting snapshot is used only once.
Entry
removed
from the match set by the last call to next
IllegalStateException
- if the last call to
next
did not remove an
Entry
from the match set, or no call
to next
has been madeCopyright 2007-2013, multiple authors.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0, see the NOTICE file for attributions.