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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-190?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14702102#comment-14702102
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Bryan Bende commented on NIFI-190:
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Sounds like a consensus to use distributed map cache... given that, do we feel 
we still want to support the processors being able to expire signals that have 
passed a certain time threshold (as the original pull request did)? 

I'm wondering if the eviction strategy and max-entries of the distribute map 
cache handles this. Otherwise one of the processors would have to pull back the 
whole map over the network and iterate through it, determining what was too old 
and calling remove, which may not be the best idea now that the map is not 
local.


> HoldFile processor
> ------------------
>
>                 Key: NIFI-190
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/NIFI-190
>             Project: Apache NiFi
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Extensions
>            Reporter: Joseph Gresock
>            Assignee: Bryan Bende
>            Priority: Minor
>         Attachments: HoldFile_example.xml
>
>
> Our team has developed a processor for the following use case:
> * Format A needs to be sent to Endpoint A
> * Format B needs to be sent to Endpoint B, but should not proceed until A has 
> reached Endpoint A.  We most commonly have this restriction when Endpoint B 
> requires some output of Endpoint A.
> The proposed HoldFile processor takes 2 types of flow files as input:
> * Files to be held
> * Signal files that can release corresponding held files, based on the value 
> of a configurable "release" attribute
> Signal files are distinguished from held files by the presence of the 
> "flow.file.release.value" attribute.  The processor is configured with a 
> "Release Signal Attribute".  Held files with this attribute whose value 
> matches a received signal value will be released.
> An example:
> HoldFile is configured with Release Signal Attribute = "myId".  Its 'Hold' 
> relationship routes back onto itself.
> 1. flowFile 1 { myId : "123" } enters HoldFile.  It is routed to the 'Hold' 
> relationship
> 2. flowFile 2 { flow.file.release.value : "123" } enters HoldFile.  flowfile 
> 1 is then routed to 'Release', and flow file 2 is removed from the session.
> Signal flow files will also copy their attributes to matching held files, 
> unless otherwise indicated.  This is what allows the output of Endpoint A to 
> pass to Endpoint B, above.



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