From: mike Date: Tue, 11 Apr 2006 16:38:38 +0000 (+0000) Subject: Documentation for asynchronicity. X-Git-Tag: cpan_1_22~190 X-Git-Url: http://lists.indexdata.dk/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=7bf889db4a2c15b79d5ac332c09d304ace400111;p=ZOOM-Perl-moved-to-github.git Documentation for asynchronicity. --- diff --git a/lib/ZOOM.pod b/lib/ZOOM.pod index 0617ad6..908bba5 100644 --- a/lib/ZOOM.pod +++ b/lib/ZOOM.pod @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# $Id: ZOOM.pod,v 1.31 2006-04-03 14:08:29 mike Exp $ +# $Id: ZOOM.pod,v 1.32 2006-04-11 16:38:38 mike Exp $ use strict; use warnings; @@ -99,10 +99,10 @@ enumeration or drawn from the BIB-1 diagnostic set. =head2 ZOOM::event() -B -Lark's vomit. Do not read this section. - - $which = ZOOM::event([ $conn1, $conn2, $conn3 ]); + $connsRef = [ $conn1, $conn2, $conn3 ]; + $which = ZOOM::event($connsRef); + $ev = $connsRef->[$which-1]->last_event() + if ($which != 0); Used only in complex asynchronous applications, this function takes a reference to a list of Connection objects, waits until an event @@ -111,8 +111,7 @@ the connections it occurred on. The return value is a 1-based index into the list; 0 is returned if no event occurs within the longest timeout specified by the C options of all the connections. -B -This function is not yet implemented. +See the section below on asynchronous applications. =head1 CLASSES @@ -418,11 +417,8 @@ the C documentation. Returns a C enumerated value indicating the type of the last event that occurred on the connection. This is used only in -complex asynchronous applications - see the section below on -C for more information. - -B -This method has not been tested. +complex asynchronous applications - see the sections below on the +C enumeration and asynchronous applications. =head4 destroy() @@ -1255,11 +1251,10 @@ applications - The C method is used to return an indication of the last event that occurred on a particular connection. It always returns a value drawn from this enumeration, that is, one of C, C, C, C, -C, C, C, C, C or -C. +C, C, C, C, C, +C or C. -You almost certainly don't need to know about this. Frankly, I'm not -sure how to use it myself. +See the section below on asynchronous applications. =head1 LOGGING @@ -1366,6 +1361,69 @@ called. The log-level argument may be either a numeric value, as returned from C, or a string containing the module name. +=head1 ASYNCHRONOUS APPLICATIONS + +Although asynchronous applications are conceptually complex, the ZOOM +support for them is provided through a very simple interface, +consisting of one option (C), one function (C), +one Connection method (C and an enumeration +(C). + +The approach is as follows: + +=over 4 + +=item Initialisation + +Create several connections to the various servers, each of them having +the option C set, and with whatever additional options are +required - e.g. setting the piggyback retrieval record-count so that +records will be returned in search responses. + +=item Operations + +Send searches to the connections, request record retrieval, etc. + +=item Event harvesting + +Repeatedly call C to discover what responses are being +received from the servers. Each time this function returns, it +indicates which of the connections has fired; this connection can then +be interrogated with the C method to discover what event +has occurred, and the return value - an element of the C +enumeration can be used to determine what to do next. For example, +the C operation indicates that no further operations are +outstanding on the connection, so any fetched records can now be +immediately obtained. + +=back + +Here is a very short program (omitting all error-checking!) which +demonstrates this process. It parallel-searches two servers (or more +of you add them the list), displaying the first record in the +result-set of each server as soon as it becomes available. + + use ZOOM; + @servers = ('z3950.loc.gov:7090/Voyager', + 'bagel.indexdata.com:210/gils'); + for ($i = 0; $i < @servers; $i++) { + $z[$i] = new ZOOM::Connection($servers[$i], 0, + async => 1, # asynchronous mode + count => 1, # piggyback retrieval count + preferredRecordSyntax => "usmarc"); + $r[$i] = $z[$i]->search_pqf("mineral"); + } + while (($i = ZOOM::event(\@z)) != 0) { + $ev = $z[$i-1]->last_event(); + print("connection ", $i-1, ": ", ZOOM::event_str($ev), "\n"); + if ($ev == ZOOM::Event::ZEND) { + $size = $r[$i-1]->size(); + print "connection ", $i-1, ": $size hits\n"; + print $r[$i-1]->record(0)->render() + if $size > 0; + } + } + =head1 SEE ALSO The ZOOM abstract API,