Major Objects

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Revision as of 04:10, 26 March 2017 by M (talk | contribs)

Overview

  • Major Objects
    • Use Major Objects for fast in-memory handling of large amount of data that is thread-safe but must be persisted
    • We must support complex objects with simple keys, crud, and fast lookup by multiple keys.
    • Our most useful containers are vector, set (key in object) and map (<key,value> pair). Set can give us almost every positive feature, when used to store the PersistentIDObject class.
    • Use an unordered_set of const pointers to objects derived from PersistentIDObject
    • The default container should index by db_id primary key
    • Always use the db_id for foreign keys
    • Other containers can be created with alternate keys using object members; just define new hash functions.
  • PersistentIDObject
    • Add a dirty flag to all objects, set to true on any change that must be persisted
    • Use an internal in-memory counter to generate the next db_id for a newly created object
    • This means that when creating new objects, there is NO NEED to access db, VERY IMPORTANT!
    • Use delayed-write tactics to write all dirty objects on idle time
  • Memory Model
    • Use a Datastore manager (aka "MemoryModel") to hold sets
    • It can look up objects by any key, and strip away const to return a mutable object. NOTE that the user must not damage the key values!
    • Derive a class from the memory model for persistence; it can use any persistence method (local, remote, sql, nosql, etc.).
    • Make sure that the base MemoryModel class is concrete not abstract, thread-safe and self-contained; this makes parallel calculations trivial, helps scalability, etc.

Delayed delete pattern

           1) all deletion work should be done in one place:
               bool SqliteLocalModel::deleteBrokerAccount(BrokerAccount& ba)
                 a) delete from db
                 b) call inherited::() and use container to delete from all container indices
                 c) delete memory allocation
           2) deletion check should happen in delayed write check:
               if (pau->bDirtyOrDeleted())
                   bNeeded = true;
               ----
               if (pa->bDeleted())
                   deleteBrokerAccount(*pa);
               else...
           3) to dynamically delete an object: 
               ba.setDeleted();
           4) include deleted status in active check:
               bool bActive() const { return b_active_ && !bDeleted(); }