Hi all,

Why not do, what we (ok I) wrote on the Website?
- If a protocol/device supports something, we use that directly 
- If a protocol/device doesn't directly support something, we try to emulate it

So in this context I wouldn't care in my application how the subscription 
works. All I care about is that I subscribe to something and I get data.
So if for example this application is based on the subscriber, then when using 
ADS, this would simply be used and if for example the application uses S7, then 
the Driver internally uses the "PollingSubscriber" (Or whatever we call it) and 
just offers the same functionality. 

I bet there never will be a user that is connected to a device that supports 
subscriptions natively, but requests to use the polling mechanism.

I would strongly suggest not to add another type.

Chris



Am 13.09.18, 08:59 schrieb "Sebastian Rühl" 
<[email protected]>:

    Hi,
    
    We could also do something like a PlcPolledReader which extends the 
PlcSubscriber. 
    With that in mind we would use the same API but avoid confusion as drivers 
in this case return an empty Optional for PlcSubscriber but an actual Reader 
for the polled case.
    But at the moment I would think some util in driver-base would be 
sufficient too.
    
    Sebastian
    
    > Am 12.09.2018 um 15:45 schrieb Christofer Dutz 
<[email protected]>:
    > 
    > Hi,
    > 
    > why not implement this in driver-base? Usually a driver could implement 
the subscription part directly or use the simulated subscriber, but any other 
combination doesn't really make sense, does it?
    > 
    > Chris
    > 
    > Am 12.09.18, 15:31 schrieb "Sebastian Rühl" 
<[email protected]>:
    > 
    >    Hi,
    > 
    >    I agree with Julian here; we could implement these things in a 
plc4j-util module or something like that (or pooling in a plc4j-pool).
    > 
    >    Regarding implementing a plcSubscriber based on PlcReader: I think I 
did that in the camel component when no plcSubscriber is available if I 
remember correctly.
    >    I would vote against implementing such thing in the core module as 
PlcSubscriber shall only be used for „real“ notifications and not polled reads.
    > 
    >    Sebastian
    > 
    >> Am 12.09.2018 um 13:33 schrieb Julian Feinauer 
<[email protected]>:
    >> 
    >> Hi Andrey,
    >> 
    >> we use this heavily (as we want frequent updates from S7 plcs) and have 
built a complete layer on top of the communication in the last year.
    >> So I strongly suggest to add this to the project but as another level.
    >> I think we can also provide some code for this feature.
    >> 
    >> The main reason why this should be "standalone" from my perspective is 
that it has to deal with things like ThreadPools or Executors and handling of 
connection losses and all those things.
    >> And questions on how to deal with timeouts (if the plc is pretty busy) 
and things like that.
    >> Patterns like circuit breaker or request collapsing can be useful if you 
poll enough messages (or are even necessary).
    >> So in-depth we spent a lot of time with these things and do not see how 
we could make a simple and easy to use solution for the core.
    >> 
    >> Best
    >> Julian
    >> 
    >> Am 12.09.18, 13:04 schrieb "Andrey Skorikov" 
<[email protected]>:
    >> 
    >>   Hello all,
    >> 
    >>   since not all protocols and devices support the subscriber model, I 
    >>   believe that it is sensible to emulate the PlcSubscriber based on a 
    >>   PlcReader as a fallback. This could be realized by polling the device 
at 
    >>   a fixed rate in the client process. However, I am not sure whether 
this 
    >>   should be part of the core plc4j component, or implemented separately 
on 
    >>   top of it. What do you think?
    >> 
    >>   Regards,
    >>   Andrey Skorikov
    >> 
    >> 
    >> 
    > 
    > 
    > 
    
    

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