On 08/07/2012 03:44 PM, Sergiu Dumitriu wrote:
On 08/07/2012 03:43 PM, Denis Gervalle wrote:
 From the current interface, I would use getContentOutputStream(), since
this would be the opposite of getContentInputStream(). This seems to me
very descriptive compare to a setContent() returning an OutputStream,
since
a set is not supposed to return anything. I would use
setContent(OutputStream) if it was your goal, but this probably not what
you expect.

So, +1 for  getContentOutputStream()

+1 as well.

Actually, one thing I don't like is that the API is getting even bigger, with lots of different ways of doing the same thing. Ideally, there should be only one way of providing the content, and only one way of retrieving it. And IMO working with byte streams is the right way, and I think that the current setContent(InputStream) method is the one that's best.

Returning an OutputStream where the caller can write the content is opening the door to lots of potential problems. Providing such a method becomes API, and APIs should be well designed. And an OutputStream in my head means some implicit constraints that must be well documented:

- should the stream be closed at the end?
- must the response be written before a transaction ends?
- what if nothing is written in the stream, does that mean that the old content is preserved, or that the attachment is going to be truncated?

Basically, this is a _push_ API, and I for one prefer _pull_ APIs, since the backend will get the data when it needs it, it doesn't have to document how long it's going to wait for something to be pushed.


I agree that our current way of dealing with Hibernate is not right. We should use proper blob streams for big data, like attachment content. And Hibernate's LobCreator expects a Blob object that offers access to its content via an InputStream that can be read. Again, Hibernate expects an input stream from which it will read when it needs to, it doesn't allow you to write the content into an OutputStream when you want.


So, consider this a -1 until you can convince me that it's indeed something we want to include in our APIs.

+0 for getOutputStream()
-0 for other previous proposals.

On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 9:01 PM, Caleb James DeLisle <
[email protected]> wrote:

getOutputStream() is not very descriptive although I suppose a good
javadoc comment would alleviate
the issue, I wrestled with the name myself and settled on setContent()
because it overloads the existing setContent() so it should be a bit
easier to remember.

If you guys like getOutputStream(), I'm happy enough with it.

Caleb


On 08/07/2012 03:24 AM, Thomas Mortagne wrote:
+1 for the idea in general but same comment than Marius

On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 7:35 AM, Marius Dumitru Florea
<[email protected]> wrote:
I understand the need and I'm +1 but I don't like the method name
(neither setContent() nor addContent()). WDYT about getOutputStream()
?

Thanks,
Marius

On Tue, Aug 7, 2012 at 12:06 AM, Caleb James DeLisle
<[email protected]> wrote:
Hi,
In the development of Cassandra attachments, I found I want to
load an
attachment one chunk at a time and
write that chunk to a provided OutputStream, this is how I envision
next generation Hibernate attachments working too.

I would like to add to XWikiAttachmentContent:

public OutputStream addContent();

which returns an OutputStream that allows writing the attachment
content and upon close,
sets the attachment content as dirty and resets the size field.

WDYT?

Caleb

--
Sergiu Dumitriu
http://purl.org/net/sergiu/
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