While the recent refactoring...
206c67cc
...was a step into the right direction, it pushed too hard,
overlooking the requirement to protect the scheduler contents
and thus all of the Activity-chains against concurrent modification.
Moreover, the recent solution still seems not quite orthogonal.
Thus the handling of notifications was thoroughly reworked:
- the explicit "double-dispatch" was removed, since actual usage
of the language indicates that we only need notifications to
Gate (and Hook), but not to any other conceivable Activity.
- thus it seems unnecessary to turn "notification" into some kind
of secondary work mode. Rather, it is folded as special case
into the regular dispatch.
This leads to new processing rules:
- a POST goes into λ-post (obviously... that's its meaning)
- a NOTIFY now passes its *target* into λ-post
- λ-post invokes ''dispatch''
- and **dispatching a Gate now implies to notify the Gate**
This greatly simplifies the »state machine« in the Activity-Language,
but also incurs some limitations (which seems adequate, since it is
now clear that we do not ''schedule'' or ''dispatch'' arbitrary
Activities — rather we'll do this only with POST and NOTIFY,
and all further processing happens by passing activation
along the chain, without involving the Scheduler)
...it seems impossible to solve this conundrum other than by
opening a path to override a contextual deadline setting from
within the core Activity-Language logic.
This will be used in two cases
- when processing a explicitly coded POST (using deadline from the POST)
- after successfully opening a Gate by NOTIFY (using deadline from Gate)
All other cases can now supply Time::NEVER, thereby indicating that
the processing layer shall use contextual information (intersection
of the time intervals)
In the first draft version, a blocked Gate was handled by
»polling« the Gate regularly by scheduling a re-invocation
repeatedly into the future (by a stepping defined through
ExecutionCtx::getWaitDelay()).
Yet the further development of the Activity-Language indicates
that the ''Notification mechanism'' is sufficient to handle all
foreseeable aspects of dependency management. Consequently this
''Gate poling is no longer necessary,'' since on Notification
the Gate is automatically checked and the activation impulse
is immediately passed on; thus the re-scheduled check would
never get an opportunity actually to trigger the Gate; such
an active polling would only be necessary if the count down
latch in the Gate is changed by "external forces".
Moreover, the first Scheduler integration tests with TestChainLoad
indicate that the rescheduled polling can create a considerable
additional load when longer dependency chains miss one early
prerequisite, and this additional load (albeit processed
comparatively fast by the Scheduler) will be shifted along
needlessly for quite some time, until all of the activities
from the failed chain have passed their deadline. And what
is even more concerning, these useless checks have a tendency
to miss-focus the capacity management, as it seems there is
much work to do in a near horizon, which in fact may not be
the case altogether.
Thus the Gate implementation is now *changed to just SKIP*
when blocked. This helped to drastically improve the behaviour
of the Scheduler immediately after start-up -- further observation
indicated another adjustment: the first Tick-duty-cycle is now
shortened, because (after the additional "noise" from gate-rescheduling
was removed), the newly scaled-up work capacity has the tendency
to focus in the time horizon directly behind the first jobs added
to the timeline, which typically is now the first »Tick«.
ð¡ this leads to a recommendation, to arrange the first job-planning
chunk in such a way that the first actual work jobs appear in the area
between 5ms and 10ms after triggering the Scheduler start-up.Scheduler¡
...to bring it more in line with all the other calls dealing with Activity*
...allows also to harmonise the ActivityLang::dispatchChain()
...and to compose the calls in Scheduler directly
NOTE: there is a twist: our string-formatting helper did not render
custom string conversions for objects passed as pointer. This was a
long standing problem, caused by ambiguous templates overloads;
now I've attempted to solve it one level more down, in util::StringConv.
This solution may turn out brittle, since we need to exclude any direct
string conversion, most notably the ones for C-Strings (const char*)
In case this solution turns out unsustainable, please feel free
to revert this API change, and return to passing Activity& in λ-post,
because in the end this is cosmetics.
At first sight, this seems confusing; there is a time window,
there is sometimes a `when` parameter, and mostly a `now` parameter
is passed through the activation chain.
However, taking the operational semantics into account, the existing
definitions seem to be (mostly) adequate already: The scheduler is
assumed to activate a chain only ''when'' the defined start time is reached.
No new functionality, and implementation works as expected.
This test case covers an especially tricky setup, where a calculation
shall be triggered from an external event, while ensuring that the actual
processing can start only after also the regular time-bound scheduling
has taken place (this might be used to prevent an unexpectedly early
external signal to cause writing into an output buffer before the
defined window of data delivery)
...based on the new ability in the ActivityDetector, we can now assign
a custom λ, which deflects back the ctx.post() call into the ActivityLang
instance used for this test case.
While the previously seen behaviour was correct, it was not the call sequence
expected in the real implementation; with this change, on the main-chain
activation the post() now immediately dispatches the notification, which in turn
dispatches the rest of the chain, so that the JobFunctor is indeed
called in this second test case as expected
...seems to work, but not really happy with the test setup,
since in real usage the post()-calls would dispatch, while here,
using the ActivityDetector, these calls just log invoation,
and thus the activation is not passed on
...regarding the kind of activity (the verb),
and also for some special case access of payload data;
deliberately asserting the correct verb, but no mandatory check,
since this whole Activity-Language is conceived as cohesive
and essentially sealed (not meant to be extended)
...to show in test that indeed the actual time is retrieved on each activation,
we can assign a λ -- which is rigged to increase the time on each access
It is not sufficient just to pass this "current time" as parameter
into the ActivityLang::dispatchChain(), since some Activities within
this chain will essentially be long-running (think rendering); thus
we need a real callback from within the chain. The obvious solution
is to make this part of the Execution Context, which is an abstraction
of the scheduler environment anyway
...turns out there is still a lot of leeway in the possible implementation,
and seemingly it is too early to decide which case to consider the default.
Thus I'll proceed with the drafted preliminary solution...
- on primary-chain, an inhibited Gate dispatches itself into future for re-check
- on Notification, activation happens if and only if this very notification opens the Gate
- provide a specifically wired requireDirectActivation() to allow enforcing a minimal start time
...assembled from parts already implemented
TODO
- need a way to access the »current scheduler time«
- need builder extension points to connect notifications
...this completes the basic setup
- Term builder mechanism working properly
- Memory allocator behaves sane
- the simple default wiring allows to invoke a Job
Solved by special treatment of a notification, which happens
to decrement the latch to zero: in this case, the chain is
dispatched, but also the Gate is locked permanently to block
any further activations scheduled or forwareded otherwise
TODO: while correct as implemented, the handling of the
notification seems questionable, since re-scheduling the chain immediately
may lead to multiple invocations of the chain, since it might have been "spinned"
and thus re-scheduled already, and we have no way to find out about that
...can not take a shortcut here, since the timing information
embedded into the POST-Activity must somehow be transported
to the Scheduler; key point to note is that the chain will
be performed in »management mode« (single threaded)
...continue to proceed test-driven
...scheduler internals turn out to be intricate and cohesive,
and thus the only hope is to adhere to strict testing discipline
- decision to favour small memory footprint
- rather use several Activity records to express invocation
- design Activity record as »POD with constructor«
- conceptually, Activity is polymorphic, but on implementation
level, this is "folded down" into union-based data storage,
layering accessor functions on top