/event-handler

Notification in, document out.

Primary LanguageJavaGNU General Public License v3.0GPL-3.0

Build Status Coverage Status Stories in Ready

event-handler

Notification in, document out.

Specifically, this event handler is designed to handle events (in the form of notifications and/or document events) from one system and produce canonical document messages (per the EIP) to be shared with any interested systems asynchronously. This library provides a pattern for doing this kind of thing which standardizes some solutions for the types of concerns you may have with document messages like throttling, priority, and stale data.

A document event is an event which corresponds with some canonical document message. Sometimes it is useful to perform certain optimizations on these messages by processing them in batches, and merging some together or removing duplicates. Generally you want to associate them with a priority. Processing a document event means looking up the data for that entity, building a canonical message, and sending it off to some endpoint to be shared. Generally, document events should be pulled with some throttle when their associated data is able to be shared. You don't want to push document messages because if they are unable to be shared, that document's data may no longer be current by the time it is actually distributed.

Notifications are minimal documents which tell about an insert or update which occurred on some data with which you wish to share with external consumers. Based on what has changed and/or the current state of related data, you may wish to produce one or more document events from a given notification. This can be as simple as a one-to-one relationship: a user's email was updated, so create a user document event (which would correspond to a user message). It may be as complex as an order was placed, so create document events for the order, the user, and that user's company if they have one, etc. In other words, processing a notification means applying some logic specific to your business. Generally, these resulting document events should be pushed to some document event store.

It's worth noting that you don't necessarily have to use both event types, but we've found it generally useful to have these two concepts if it makes sense. Push notifications, push document events, but pull document messages.

Sure. So how do I use it?

Current status: Beta

To consume this library, you will want to write (or reuse) an implementation of a standard set of interfaces to get at notifications and/or document events. Additionally, you will need to write implementations of notifications and/or document events which house your business logic.

Modules

lib

High level code and interfaces for outlining these patterns.

lightblue

An implementation of an event handler which reads notifications from an cooperating instance of lightblue, specifically one with entities configured to use the lightblue-notification-hook.

Releasing

  1. Make sure you can push to org.esbtools respositories. Open a ticket up with the Sonatype Jira (you will need to create an account), with the OSSRH community project, choose "Task" type (not "New Project"), and simply ask for permissions to push to org.esbtools releases and snapshots. A currently permitted member may be asked to comment to confirm.
  2. Make sure lightblue entity class versions are not SNAPSHOT-ed. (documentEvent and eventHandlerConfig)
  3. mvn release:prepare -P release
  4. Set versions appropriately, and name the tag simply "V#.#.#" (instead of event-handler-parent-#.#.#)
  5. mvn release:perform -P release
  6. Resnapshot lightblue entity class versions

For more information, see the Maven release plugin documentation.

Retrying a release

To re-release a previous tag:

  1. Create a release.properties file in root project folder with contents like:
scm.url=scm:git:https://github.com/esbtools/event-handler.git
scm.tag=VERSION TAG HERE
  1. From root project folder, run mvn release:perform -P release