The singleton pattern is used in MVEL, with knowledge of the
tradeoff. MVEL
has a strong emphasis on maintaining interpreted-mode performance.
MVEL contains two runtime systems: an interpreter, and a compiler/
runtime.
Unlike other ELs, MVEL does not simply bootstrap the compiler, and
execute
that way. Instead, MVEL has a real-time interpreter which
evaluates
to a
stack during parsing. Therefore, the general design decisions,
particularly
around extendability tend to favor singleton-patterns, instead of
heavyweight configuration sessions which would completely bog down
the
performance.
http://artexpressive.blogspot.com/2007/11/juel-vs-mvel.html
For an example of how performant MVEL's interpreter is with no
factory
caching.
In a simple property expression, with no caching (so parsing
before
executing every time), MVEL was able to parse/reduce the
expression
"foo.bar" 100,000 times in 94ms. It took JUEL 2749ms to do the
same.
Compiled performance was: 5.8ms to 34.2ms in favor of MVEL too.
So I would err on the side of performance here. If that doesn't
cut
it for
web applications, I guess that's fine. I don't really target MVEL
towards
web applications, really.
Brian Pontarelli wrote:
Taking a brief look at the MVEL type conversion API it could be
somewhat difficult to get this information into the converter
on a
per
request basis, especially if converters are singleton scoped.
This
information isn't available on the source in most cases. It is
usually
externalized in the request or the container object. The API
looks a
pretty lightweight, which is nice, but also restrictive. From
what I
could see I would have to monkey around with things and use
something
like a ThreadLocal to pass this information to the converter.
The source-from-many pattern seems to be somewhat backwards for
the
web. It is more likely the case that a single converter will
convert
to many classes from a String or String[]. The JCatapult type
converter passes in the type being converted to and then the
String
value(s). Although this is very web centric, it cleans up the API
and
makes things simpler to implement. MVEL is obviously more
generic,
which means some massaging is necessary to tune it for the web.
It also seems to be lacking a good set of exceptions thrown out
of
the
API. At least from the docs, since I couldn't find JavaDoc and
the
distribution only has source (ouch). This doesn't mean that
Struts
can't provide good runtime exceptions and then just catch those,
but
it leaves things much more open for developers writing new
converters.
I'd rather see the API define these exceptions clearly and for
them
to
be checked.
I think that using generic languages like OGNL or MVEL are decent
solutions, but a web centric solution would be best. I'm also in
favor
or dropping most if not all of the extra features and only
providing
property/field getting and setting. I think adding in another
language
just clouds the waters. FreeMarker and JSP both have languages
that
cover most of the common cases.
Feel free to take a look at the JCatapult MVC expression
evaluator
for
what I feel should be supported.
-bp
On Oct 11, 2008, at 12:52 PM, Chris Brock wrote:
MVEL has a pluggable type-conversion API, just like OGNL. Since
it's
source-from-many in it's design, you can easily design
converters
that
perform as much introspection as necessary to determine
formatting,
etc.
Brian Pontarelli wrote:
Yeah. That's good. The last thing I would toss in as criteria
is a
good type conversion interface. In JCatapult, I actually took
things a
step further. I found that complex types usually needed more
information than just the data to perform the type conversion.
For
example, conversion of dates generally requires the date
format.
Likewise, conversion to money generally requires the currency
code.
In
many MVCs this information is statically configured for the
entire
application, configured per action in XML or properties files
or
fixed
and not configurable at all.
For maximum flexibility, I built a system where tags could
provide
this additional data via extra attributes (it can also be
configured
application wide as well). My tags look like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] name="user.lifeSavings" currencyCode="USD"/]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] name="user.birthDay" dateTimeFormat="MM/dd/yyyy"/]
This information then gets passed to the type converters as
part of
the API.
This then reveals another shortcoming of OGNL and the wrapper
in
Struts, what if a required attribute is missing? This is a
different
case then if the type conversion fails. So, I created two
distinct
checked exceptions to handle these two cases. This makes the
type
conversion system more powerful and easy to interact with.
Plus, it
reveals good exceptions for coding problems.
-bp
On Oct 10, 2008, at 3:00 AM, Chris Brock wrote:
MVEL will handle type coercion for method parameters,
properties,
and even on
egress of those values if the generic type information can be
deduced on
ingress. In situtations where the generic type is dependent
on
the
root of
the object graph though, MVEL cannot infer generic type data
(ie. a
bound
variable, that's say a Map) because of erasure. There is no
generic
type
information held on a per-instance basis.
However, if the parameterized type is a class member say:
class Foo {
public Map<String, Integer> map;
}
And you use an instance of Foo as a context or as a bound
variable,
MVEL's
compiler can certainly extract the generic type information,
and
provide
automatic coercion and verification accordingly. MVEL's type
verifier will
always extrapolate whatever type data is available.
Brian Pontarelli wrote:
This is not quite the same unless it can detect generics
while
setting
values and creating values. An example might be values from a
form
going into something like:
List<String>
or
Map<String, List<Integer>>
or the always fun
List<List<Integer>>
that sorta thing. I know that OGNL had (might not any longer)
many
issues with generics in this respect. I think OGNL also got
mad
when
it encountered something simple like:
int[]
or
String[]
coming from checkbox lists and multiple selects. I believe
that
it
would stuff the values into the String[] like this:
{"value1,value2,value3"}
rather than
{"value1", "value2", "value3"}
This was a while ago, so all of this might be fixed.
-bp
On Oct 9, 2008, at 7:32 PM, Chris Brock wrote:
MVEL 2.0 has full support for generics (and static typing):
http://mvel.codehaus.org/Strong+Typing+Mode
Brian Pontarelli wrote:
On Oct 7, 2008, at 3:08 PM, Dave Newton wrote:
Just to muddy the EL/templating waters:
http://mvel.codehaus.org/Performance+of+MVEL
(v. OGNL)
Not sure about MVEL or OGNL at this point, but everything
was
lacking
in support for generics, collections and arrays. I wrote my
own
for
the JCatapult MVC and it was really not all that hard. It
only
handles
getting and setting, but I figure that's all that should be
allowed
at
that point anyways.
-bp
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