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#NodeKeeper

NodeKeeper is a simple to use library on the top of ZooKeeper. It allows to create, read, update and delete zk-nodes, supports custom datatypes and allows to listen and react on node events (create, update, delete) based on path patterns.

NEW RELEASE: NodeKeeper 1.2 is now available in maven central. Look here how you can use it via dependency (maven, gradle, etc).

NEW FEATURE: NodeKeeper now has a better re-connection strategy, supports recursive node deletion and has an improved boostraping module.

##The NodeKeeper Instance The NodeKeeper instance must be initialized using the constructor:

public NodeKeeper(String connectionString, int sessionTimeout, Properties properties, String startNode)
  • connectionString: the ZooKeeper connection string
  • sessionTimeout: the ZooKeeper timeout
  • properties: NodeKeeper stores the current version of nodes as properties. This allows to connect and disconnect to a running zookeeper without any data loss.
  • startNode: if NodeKeeper just watches on subnodes of startNode (null == "/")

As soon as NodeKeeper is instantiated, it is already connected to ZooKeeper. To shutdown the connection use

public void shutdown()

##Nodes and DataHandlers NodeKeeper nodes are implemented using Generics. In combination with specific DataHandlers, NodeKeeper allows to handle node data in various formats. The nodes support only 3 fields with getters and setters:

Node<T> {
    String path;
    T data;
    int version;
}

To support T as DataFormat a specific DataHandler must be implemented using the DataHandler interface:

public interface DataHandler<T> {
    public T parse(byte[] data) throws IOException;
    public byte[] serialize(T data) throws IOException;
    public Class<T> getType();
}

The DataHandler<?> must be added to the NodeKeeper object using:

public void addDataHandler(DataHandler dataHandler)

##Read and Write

NodeKeeper supports the following node operations:

public <T> Node<T> readNode(String path, Class<T> clazz);
public <T> void writeNode(Node<T> node, Class<T> clazz);
public <T> void deleteNode(Node<T> node);
public <T> Set<Node<T>> listChildrenNodes(String path, Class<T> clazz);
  • readNode returns a Node object; null if the node does not exist
  • writeNode creates or updates the node; the path is created recursively
  • deleteNode deletes the node
  • listNodes returns all direct children of a path

##NodeListener

NodeKeeper allows to add listeners to pathPatterns, so you can handle CRUD events on that nodes. The listener must extend the abstract class NodeListener:

public abstract void onNodeCreated(Node<T> node) throws InterruptedException, NodeKeeperException;
public abstract void onNodeUpdated(Node<T> node) throws InterruptedException, NodeKeeperException;
public abstract void onNodeDeleted(Node<T> node) throws InterruptedException, NodeKeeperException;

public abstract Class<T> getType();

To append a listener to NodeKeeper, you have to use:

addListener(String pathPattern, NodeListener listener);

To enable all appended listeners, the process must be started using

startListeners();

After that all nodes that matches at least one pattern are checked, if they changed regarding the properties. If so, the listener methods are called immediately.

#A simple example

Properties properties = new Properties();
String basicPath = "/basic/path"

//create instance
NodeKeeper nodeKeeper = new NodeKeeper("127.0.0.1:8121",5000,basicPath);

//add custom listener
nodeKeeper.addListener(/basic/path/nodes/.+,new MyNodeListener());
nodeKeeper.startListeners();

String nodePath1 = basicPath+"/nodes/node1";
String data = "data";

//write string node
nodeKeeper.writeNode(new Node<String>(nodePath1,data),String.class);

//read string node
Node<String> node = nodeKeeper.readNode(nodePath1,String.class);

Event-Binding-Action rules

NodeKeeper supports Event-Binding-Action rules since version 1.1. This means:

  • Event: A node is created, updated or deleted. The node itself can be specified via a regex pattern
  • Binding: Bind values like node paths, node labels, node data, etc. to variable names. A lot of useful functions supports you in this step.
  • Action: Create, update or delete nodes by using and combining variables that are defined on step 2

NodeKeeper of course supports several rules in parallel.

The rule syntax

Here you can see a sample rule that is described inline with comments

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<rules>

    <!-- A single rule that can be identified with its unique name -->
    <rule name="test_rule">

        <!-- if a node with the given pattern is created -->
        <event type="nodeCreated">
            <param>/my/event/.+</param>
        </event>

        <!-- bind this variables -->
        <bindings>

            <!-- 'data' is the data of the current node -->
            <binding name="data" type="currentNodeData"/>

            <!-- 'label' is the label of the current node in upper case -->
            <binding name="label" type="toUpperCase">
                <param type="currentNodeLabel"/>
            </binding>

        </bindings>

        <!-- and do this actions -->
        <actions>

            <!-- create or update a node with the given path and data. The data in '{}' is replaced with the bound variables -->
            <action type="createUpdateNode">
                <param>/my/action/{label}</param>
                <param>Hello {data}</param>
            </action>

        </actions>
    </rule>
</rules>

Binding functions

All supported binding functions are at the moment in the package at.salzburgresearch.nodekeeper.eca.function. In the next version the functions should be bound by ClassLoader, so that they are easily extendable.

Example

This is a simple code example how you can load rules. Of course rules can also be created pragmatically. For more information have a look at the Testcases.

InputStream in = new FileInputStream("rules.xml");

RuleHandler handler = new RuleHandler(nodeKeeper);
handler.readRules(in);

nodeKeeper.writeNode(new Node<String>("/my/event/node","World"),String.class);

//with the rule described above, a new node '/my/action/NODE' with value 'Hello World' is created

#Contact Thomas Kurz, Salzburg Research Forschungsgesellschaft, Salzburg, Austria

thomas.kurz@salzburgresearch.at

#License Apache License, Version 2.0 (http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html)

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