Difference between revisions of "Databoard Developer Manual"
m |
m |
||
Line 314: | Line 314: | ||
A ''binding scheme'' associates some data types with a unique binding. The mapping of types to bindings is bijective, there is one binding for each type and vice-versa. | A ''binding scheme'' associates some data types with a unique binding. The mapping of types to bindings is bijective, there is one binding for each type and vice-versa. | ||
− | <code> | + | <code>DefaultBindingScheme</code> is a scheme that converts any datatype to a binding. It prefers java.lang.X primitives. |
+ | The Class mapping for each type is listed below. | ||
+ | {| style="background-color: #e9e9e9; border: 1px solid #aaaaaa; " | ||
+ | | '''Type''' | ||
+ | | '''Class''' | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>BooleanType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Boolean.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>ByteType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Byte.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>FloatType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Float.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>DoubleType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>eDouble.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>IntegerType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Integer.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>LongType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Long.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>StringType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>String.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>UnionType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>TaggedObject.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>OptionType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>ValueContainer.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>RecordType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Object[].class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>ArrayType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>ArrayList.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>Array(Byte)</code> | ||
+ | | <code>byte[].class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>MapType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>TreeMap.class</code> | ||
+ | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
+ | | <code>VariantType</code> | ||
+ | | <code>Variant.class</code> | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | <code>MutableBindingScheme</code> is a scheme that provides a fully implementing mutable binding for all data types. | ||
The Class mapping for each type is listed below. | The Class mapping for each type is listed below. | ||
Line 343: | Line 392: | ||
|- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
| <code>UnionType</code> | | <code>UnionType</code> | ||
− | | <code> | + | | <code>TaggedObject.class</code> |
|- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | |- style="background-color: #f9f9f9; " | | ||
| <code>OptionType</code> | | <code>OptionType</code> |
Revision as of 14:44, 7 December 2010
Contents
Datatype
In Databoard all values have a type representation, Datatype.java. It is the base abstract class for all concrete type classes (See table below). There is a facade class utility (Datatypes) that provides functions to most of the Datatype library's features.
Class | Description |
Datatype | Base class for all data types |
RecordType | Record |
ArrayType | Array - an ordered sequence of elements of one type. |
MapType | Map - an ordered map of keys to values. |
UnionType | Union |
BooleanType,IntType,LongType,FloatType,DoubleType | Primitive and numeric types |
StringType | String |
OptionalType | Optional value |
VariantType | Variant value |
Datatype can be acquired or created using one of the following methods:
- Construct new
- Constant
- Reflection-Read from a Class
- Read from string of the text notation.
Datatype type = new DoubleType(); Datatype type = Datatypes.DOUBLE; Datatype type = Datatypes.getDatatype( Double.class ); Datatypes.addDefinition("type Node = { id : String; children : Node[] }"); Datatype type = Datatypes.getDatatype("Node");
Parsing
Datatypes are parsed using Datatypes.DatatypeRepository
.
Datatypes.addDefinition("type Node = { id : String; children : Node[] }"); Datatype type = Datatypes.getDatatype("Node");
Types are printed to types and definitions with
String type = type.toString(); DatatypeRepository repo = new DatatypeRepository(); repo.add("temp1", type); String typeDef = repo.toString();
Structure Example
A node is a recursive type. With databoard typesystem it could be stated as
type Node = { id : String; displayNames : LocalizedTexts; children : Node[]; value : Optional(Variant); }
A couple of instances with Databoard value notation:
root : Node = { id = “PI_01” displayNames = map{ “en” = “Instrument “ } children = [ {id=”Child”, displayNames = map{ “en” = “Child”} }, value = 5 : Integer } ] value = “<root>” : String }
Binding
There is a type system, and when developing with java, platform neutral data values can be read from and written to objects. This is the role of a binding, a map from a Java Class to a Datatype.
For instance, take a java.lang.Double. Its instance is the container (private final double value;
) of the data and its Binding (DoubleBinding) is the access (.valueOf()
, .getDouble()
) to the data.
Java Object + Binding = Databoard Value
Bindings have the exact same composition tree structure as its respective Datatype
- structural types have structural Bindings, and primitive types a single binding. To acquire a binding, the developer can use a utility that creates one using Java reflection functions.
Binding binding = Binding.getBinding( Double.class );
Sometimes classes cannot bound using automatic tool, for instance when using 3rd party classes which cannot be modified. The developer must then write binding self by sub-classing on of the 13 base binding classes (There is a base binding class for each Datatype).
Binding binding = new RecordBinding() { ... };
org.simantics.databoard.binding.
Class | Description |
DataBinding | Base class for all data Bindings |
RecordBinding | Record |
ArrayBinding | Array - an ordered sequence of elements of one value. |
MapBinding | Map - an ordered map of keys to values. |
UnionBinding | Union |
BooleanBinding,IntBinding,LongBinding,FloatBinding,DoubleBinding | Primitive and numeric Bindings |
StringBinding | String |
OptionalBinding | Optional value |
VariantBinding | Variant value |
Binding can be acquired or created using one of the following methods:
- Constructor
- Constant
- Reflection-Read from a Class
- Created using BindingScheme
Binding binding = new DoubleBinding( doubleType ); Binding binding = new RecordBinding() { ... }; Binding binding = Bindings.DOUBLE; Binding binding = Binding.getBinding( Double.class ); Binding binding = Binding.getBinding( Datatypes.DOUBLE );
Reflection
Data Type and Binding can be read automatically from a Class by utility.
Datatype type = Datatypes.getDatatype( Foo.class ); Binding binding = Bindings.getBinding( Foo.class );
Bindings for generics classes can be created by passing arguments.
Binding e = Bindings.getBinding(List.class, String.class); List<String> list = (List<String>) e.createRandom(5);
Binding binding = Bindings.getBinding( Map.class, Integer.class, Integer.class ); Map<Integer, Integer> value = (Map<Integer, Integer>) binding.createDefault();
Even cascading generics...
Binding e = Bindings.getBinding(List.class, List.class, String.class); List<List<String>> listList = (List<List<String>>) e.createRandom(5);
Classes are RecordTypes
class Foo { public int x, y, z; }
Is a binding to the following Datatype
type Foo = { x : Integer, y : Integer, z : Integer }
There are three types of classes supported, and therefore three ways how objects are constructed. If you create binding for your class with Bindings#getBinding( clazz ), the class must adhere one of these format. You may have to add annotations such as @Recursive, @Optional, @Arguments.
Record-like classes:
class Foo { public String name; public Object value; }
Immutable classes:
class Foo { private String name; private Object value; public Foo(String name, Object value) { this.name = name; this.value = value; } public String getName() { return name; } public Object getValue() { return value; } }
Bean-like classes:
class Foo { private String name; private Object value; public void setName(String name) { this.name = name; } public void setValue(Object value) { this.value = value; } public String getName() { return name; } public Object getValue() { return value; } }
Static and transient fields are omited:
static final long serialVersionUID = -3387516993124229943L; transient int hashCode;
Enumerations are Union Types
enum Cars { Ferrari, Porche, Lamborghini, Jaguar }
is interpreted as union type
type Cars = | Ferrari | Porche | Lamborghini | Jaguar
If you cannot modify the class, you have to create binding for it by subclassing base binding classes, eg. RecordBinding.
Other exceptions:
java.lang.Object
is Variant.java.lang.Set<T>
is Map(T, {}).java.lang.TreeSet<T>
is Map(T, {}).java.lang.HashSet<T>
is Map(T, {}). (Note HashSet binding has very low performance.)java.lang.Map<K, V>
is Map(K, V).java.lang.TreeMap<K, V>
is Map(K, V).java.lang.HashMap<K, V>
is Map(K, V). (Note HashMap binding has very low performance.)java.lang.List<T>
is Array(T).java.lang.ArrayList<T>
is Array(T).java.lang.LinkedList<T>
is Array(T).void
is {}.- The stacktrace of
Exception.class
is omited.
Annotations
Java Classes / Fields can be annotated with the following annotations (org.simantics.databoard.annotations).
UnionTypes are abstract classes or interfaces with @Union
annotation.
@Union({A.class, B.class}) interface Union1 { } class A implements Union1 { public int value; } class B implements Union1 { public String name; }
@Referable
denotes that the class has recursion and is a referable record.
public @Referable class Node { public Node[] children; }
Fields that can have null value have @Optional
annotation.
@Optional String name;
String valid values are set with @Pattern
as regular expression. ([1])
String @Pattern("(19|20)\\d\\d[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.](0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])") date; type Date = String( Pattern = "(19|20)\d\d[- /.](0[1-9]|1[012])[- /.](0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])" )
String content type is set with a @MIMEType
. (MIME Type)
@MIMEType("text/xml") String document;
Array size restricted with @Length.
@Length("[0..10]") int[] array; @Length({"[320]", "[240]"}) int[][] image;
Valid numeric range is set with @Range.
@Range("[0..100]") double alpha; @Range("[0..]" double length;
Range and Length notation:
- Exact Value "0"
- Exclude all "()"
- Unlimited "[..]"
- Inclusive range "[0..100]"
- Exclusive range "(0..100)"
- Inclusive lower bound and exclusive upper bound "[0..100)"
Engineering unit type is given with @Unit.
@Unit("km/h") double maxVelocity;
Mapping Scheme
A binding scheme associates some data types with a unique binding. The mapping of types to bindings is bijective, there is one binding for each type and vice-versa.
DefaultBindingScheme
is a scheme that converts any datatype to a binding. It prefers java.lang.X primitives.
The Class mapping for each type is listed below.
Type | Class |
BooleanType
|
Boolean.class
|
ByteType
|
Byte.class
|
FloatType
|
Float.class
|
DoubleType
|
eDouble.class
|
IntegerType
|
Integer.class
|
LongType
|
Long.class
|
StringType
|
String.class
|
UnionType
|
TaggedObject.class
|
OptionType
|
ValueContainer.class
|
RecordType
|
Object[].class
|
ArrayType
|
ArrayList.class
|
Array(Byte)
|
byte[].class
|
MapType
|
TreeMap.class
|
VariantType
|
Variant.class
|
MutableBindingScheme
is a scheme that provides a fully implementing mutable binding for all data types.
The Class mapping for each type is listed below.
Type | Class |
BooleanType
|
MutableBoolean.class
|
ByteType
|
MutableByte.class
|
FloatType
|
MutableFloat.class
|
DoubleType
|
MutableDouble.class
|
IntegerType
|
MutableInt.class
|
LongType
|
MutableLong.class
|
StringType
|
MutableString.class
|
UnionType
|
TaggedObject.class
|
OptionType
|
ValueContainer.class
|
RecordType
|
Object[].class
|
ArrayType
|
ArrayList.class
|
MapType
|
TreeMap.class
|
VariantType
|
Variant.class
|
Serialization
Serializer.java is a class that serializes Values into and from binary serialization format. It follows the Databoard Binary File Format.
Binding binding = Bindings.DOUBLE; Serializer serializer = Bindings.getSerializer( binding ); byte[] data = serializer.serialize( new Double( 100.0 ) ); Double value = (Double) serializer.deserialize( data );
Files can be partially accessed using BinaryAccessor, see Accessors. This is useful when handling larger than memory files.
Validation
Value can be well-formed or valid.
The domain of valid values are defined with restrictions in data types, and @Length
, @Range
, @Pattern
and @MIMEType
Annotations in Classes
Validation mechanism in Binding asserts that the instance is a valid value of the respective Data Type.
try { Binding.assertInstaceIsValid( object ); } catch( BindingException e ) { // In-valid object }
Other Notes
- Binding is a Comparator, all data values are comparable, the order is defined in Specification.
- Binding#createDefault() creates a valid instance of the Datatype.
- Binding#createRandom(int) creates a valid instance with random values. Useful for unit tests.
- Binding#clone(Object) creates a new instance with same content.
- Binding#readFrom(Object, Binding, Binding) copies contents from another object of same type.
Parsing & Printing
Data values are printed and parsed of the Text notation with the following Binding
methods:
String text = binding.printValue( value, true ); Object value = binding.parseValue( text );
And also to value definitions name : type = value
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(); DataValueRepository repo = new DataValueRepository(); repo.add( "temp", value ); binding.printValue( value, sb, repo, true ); String text = sb.toString(); Object value = binding.parseValueDefinition( text );
Adapter
There can be different Java Class Bindings for a single data type. For example, Double
type can be have bindings DoubleJavaBinding
and MutableDoubleBinding
to two respective classes java.lang.Double
and MutableDouble
. Instance of one binding can be adapted to instance of another with an Adapter
.
Adapter can be created automatically or implemented self.
Adapter adapter = new Adapter() { ... }; Adapter adapter = Bindings.getAdapter( domainBinding, rangeBinding );
Example:
Adapter adapter = Bindings.getAdapter(Bindings.MUTABLE_DOUBLE, Bindings.DOUBLE); java.lang.Double double = adapter.adapt( new MutableDouble(5.0) );
There is also convenience.
java.lang.Double double = Bindings.adapt( new MutableDouble(5.0), Bindings.MUTABLE_DOUBLE, Bindings.DOUBLE );
The argument given to Adapter#adapt(Object)
may be re-used in the result unless the adapter is a cloning adapter which guarantees a clone. Note, even wih cloning adapters immutable classes, (eg java.lang.Integer) are never cloned.
Adapter cloner = Bindings.adapterCache.getAdapter(domain, range, false, true); cloner.adapt( ... );
Rectangle2D rect2 = Bindings.clone( rect1, rectBinding, rectBinding );
Type Conversion
In some cases different types may be are type-conversion compatible. An instance of one type is convertible to instance of another.
Engineering Units of same quantity are convertible.
class CarSI { String modelName; @Unit("km/h") double maxVelocity; @Unit("kg") double mass; @Unit("cm") double length; @Unit("kW") double power; } class CarIm { String modelName; @Unit("mph") float maxVelocity; @Unit("lbs") float mass; @Unit("ft") float length; @Unit("hp(M)") float power; } Adapter si2imAdapter = Bindings.getTypeAdapter( Bindings.getBinding(CarSI.class), Bindings.getBinding(CarIm.class) ); CarIm americanCarInfo = si2imAdapter.adapt( europeanCarInfo );
Primitive Types. Note, primitive adapter throws an exception at runtime if values are not adaptable.
Adapter adapter = getTypeAdapter( integerBinding, doubleBinding ); Double double = adapter.adapt( new Integer( 5 ) );
Records are matched by field names.
class Foo { int x, y, z; } class Bar { int z, y, x; } Adapter adapter = getTypeAdapter( fooBinding, barBinding );
Subtype to supertype: Note, this conversion cannot be not symmetric, supertypes cannot be converted to subtypes.
class Node { String id; } class ValueNode extends Node { Object value; } Adapter adapter = getTypeAdapter( valueNodeBinding, nodeBinding );
Non-existing fields to Optional fields
class Node { String id; } class NominalNode { String id; @Optional String name; } Adapter adapter = getTypeAdapter( nodeBinding, nominalNodeBinding );
Enumerations
enum Cars { Audio, BMW, Mercedes, Honda, Mazda, Toyota, Ford, Mitsubishi, Nissan, GM } enum JapaneseCars { Honda, Mazda, Toyota, Nissan, Mitsubishi } Binding carsBinding = Bindings.getBinding( Cars.class ); Binding japaneseCarsBinding = Bindings.getBinding( JapaneseCars.class ); Adapter adapter = Bindings.adapterCache.getAdapter(japaneseCarsBinding, carsBinding, true, false);
Accessors
Say, you have several gigabytes of data in a file. The whole object doesn't need to be serialized at once. You can read and write the value partially using Accessor interface. The actual container can be a file, memory byte[]/ByteBuffer or a Java Object. The content is structured as tree using Databoard's type system. All but referable records are supported (=no recursion in accessors).
org.simantics.databoard.accessor interfaces.
Class | Description |
Accessor | Base class for all data Accessors |
RecordAccessor | Record |
ArrayAccessor | Array - an ordered sequence of elements of one value. |
MapAccessor | Map - an ordered map of keys to values. |
UnionAccessor | Union |
BooleanAccessor,IntAccessor,LongAccessor,FloatAccessor,DoubleAccessor | Primitive and numeric Accessors |
StringAccessor | String |
OptionalAccessor | Optional value |
VariantAccessor | Variant value |
Accessors and Files are facade classes that contains utilities for instantiating and handling Accessors.
Binary Accessor
is an access to a value in binary format (byte[] or ByteBuffer).
Example: Binary accessor
Datatype type = Datatypes.getDatatype( Rectangle2D.Double.class ); Binding binding = Bindings.getBinding( Rectangle2D.Double.class ); Serializer s = Binding.getSerializer( binding );
// Serialize rectangle Rectangle2D rect = new Rectangle2D.Double(0,0, 10, 10); byte[] data = s.serialize(rect);
// Open accessor to byte data and modify first field in the byte data RecordAccessor ra = Accessors.getAccessor(data, type); ra.setFieldValue(0, Bindings.DOUBLE, 5.0);
// Deserialize values from the byte data back to the rectangle object s.deserialize(data, rect); System.out.println(rect.getX());
</syntaxhighlight>Example: File accessor, create
RecordType type = Datatypes.getDatatype( Rectangle2D.Double.class ); // Create a new file and initialize it with rectangle type, and open file accessor FileRecordAccessor fa = Accessors.createFile( file, type );
// Write the first field (x) fa.setFieldValue(0, Bindings.DOUBLE, 5.0); fa.close();
</syntaxhighlight>Example: File accessor, open
// Open an accessor to an existing binary file FileVariantAccessor fa = Accessors.openAccessor(file); RecordAccessor ra = fa.getContentAccessor();
// Read the first field (x) Double x = (Double) ra.getFieldValue(0, Bindings.DOUBLE); fa.close();
</syntaxhighlight>Example: Java Accessor
Binding binding = Bindings.getBinding(Rectangle2D.Double.class); Rectangle2D rect = new Rectangle2D.Double(0,0, 10, 10);
// Open accessor to rectangle RecordAccessor ra = Accessors.getAccessor(binding, rect);
// Set rectangle's first field (x) to 5.0 ra.setFieldValue(0, Bindings.DOUBLE, 5.0); System.out.println( rect.getX() );
</syntaxhighlight>
Accessor Reference
Accessors can be opened to a sub-nodes with AccessorReference or by calling getAccessor. AccessorReference is a string of instances, either accessor type specific of LabelReferences.
ChildReference ref = ChildReference.compile( new NameReference("node"), new ComponentReference() ); Accessor child = accessor.getComponent( ref );
ChildReference ref = ChildReference.compile( new LabelReference("node"), new LabelReference("v") ); Accessor child = accessor.getComponent( ref );
ChildReference ref = ChildReference.create("n-node/v"); Accessor child = accessor.getComponent( ref );
ChildReference ref = ChildReference.create("node/v"); Accessor child = accessor.getComponent( ref );
VariantAccessor va = recordAccessor.getFieldAccessor("node"); Accessor child = va.getValueAccessor();
Listening mechanism
Accessor offers a monitoring mechanism for the data model.
There is an InterestSet
that is a description of a sub-tree that is to be monitored of the data model.
Events
are objects that spawned on changes to the data model. Each event object is annotated with reference path that is in relation to the node where the listener was placed.
Utilities
- Datatypes is a facade class that has functions for handling Datatypes.
- Bindings is a facade class that has functions for handling Bindings.
- Accessors is a facade class that has functions for handling Accessors.
- Files has Read, Write and accessor functions.
- Units is a facade class that has functions for handling Engineering Units.
- Methods has Methods, Interfaces and RPC utility functions.
- RandomAccessBinary is a interface for byte handling operations. In addition to basic primitive reading & writing, there are methods for grow, shrink, insert and remove.
- BinaryFile and BinaryMemory are corresponding file and memory implementations.
- Blob is an implementation that represents a sub-region of a RandomAccessBinary.
Interface Types
There are interfaces, method types and method type definitions. Interface type describes a software interface. It is a collection of methods type definitions. Method type is an unnamed function with the following properties : Response Type, Request Type and ErrorType; where Response Type is any Data Type, Request Type is a Record and Error Type is an Union. Method type definition is nominal method description.
The respective Java classes are:
In java InterfaceType description can be created with one of the following methods:
- Implementing InterfaceType
- Reading an Java Interface Class using reflection
Interface it = new Interface( ... methodDefinitions ); Interface it = getInterface( MyInterface.class );
MethodInterface.java is a binding of an Java Instance and an Interface Type. It decouples the method invocation from the object.
MethodInterface can be created with the following methods:
- Implementation
- Reflection
MethodInterface mi = new MethodInterface() {...} MethodInterface mi = Datatypes.bindInterface( MyInterface.class, myObject );
Utilities Datatypes.createProxy()
and Datatypes.bindInterface()
adapt between MethodInterface and Java Instance.
MethodInterface mi = Datatypes.bindInterface( MyInterface.class, myObject ); MyInterface myObject = Datatypes.createProxy( MyInterface.class, mi );
Remote Procedure Call
Utilities Server.java and Client.java put MethodInterface over TCP Socket.
Server myServer = new Server(8192, mi); MethodInterface mi = new Client("localhost", 8192);
MethodInterface with Server and Client together forms a Remote Procedure Call (RPC) mechanism.
public interface MyInterface { String helloWorld(String msg); } [Server] MethodInterface mi = Methods.bindInterface( MyInterface.class, myObject ); Server myServer = new Server(8192, mi); [Client] MethodInterface mi = new Client("localhost", 8192); MyInterface myObject = Methods.createProxy( MyInterface.class, mi );