org.apache.cassandra.index.transactions.UpdateTransaction Maven / Gradle / Ivy
Go to download
Show more of this group Show more artifacts with this name
Show all versions of cassandra-all Show documentation
Show all versions of cassandra-all Show documentation
A fork of the Apache Cassandra Project ready to embed Elasticsearch.
/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
* distributed with this work for additional information
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
* to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
* with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
* WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
* See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
* limitations under the License.
*/
package org.apache.cassandra.index.transactions;
import org.apache.cassandra.db.DeletionTime;
import org.apache.cassandra.db.RangeTombstone;
import org.apache.cassandra.db.rows.Row;
/**
* Handling of index updates on the write path.
*
* Instances of an UpdateTransaction are scoped to a single partition update
* A new instance is used for every write, obtained from the
* newUpdateTransaction(PartitionUpdate) method. Likewise, a single
* CleanupTransaction instance is used for each partition processed during a
* compaction or cleanup.
*
* We make certain guarantees about the lifecycle of each UpdateTransaction
* instance. Namely that start() will be called before any other method, and
* commit() will be called at the end of the update.
* Each instance is initialized with 1..many Index.Indexer instances, one per
* registered Index. As with the transaction itself, these are scoped to a
* specific partition update, so implementations can be assured that all indexing
* events they receive relate to the same logical operation.
*
* onPartitionDelete(), onRangeTombstone(), onInserted() and onUpdated()
* calls may arrive in any order, but this should have no impact for the
* Indexers being notified as any events delivered to a single instance
* necessarily relate to a single partition.
*
* The typical sequence of events during a Memtable update would be:
* start() -- no-op, used to notify Indexers of the start of the transaction
* onPartitionDeletion(dt) -- if the PartitionUpdate implies one
* onRangeTombstone(rt)* -- for each in the PartitionUpdate, if any
*
* then:
* onInserted(row)* -- called for each Row not already present in the Memtable
* onUpdated(existing, updated)* -- called for any Row in the update for where a version was already present
* in the Memtable. It's important to note here that existing is the previous
* row from the Memtable and updated is the final version replacing it. It is
* *not* the incoming row, but the result of merging the incoming and existing
* rows.
* commit() -- finally, finish is called when the new Partition is swapped into the Memtable
*/
public interface UpdateTransaction extends IndexTransaction
{
void onPartitionDeletion(DeletionTime deletionTime);
void onRangeTombstone(RangeTombstone rangeTombstone);
void onInserted(Row row);
void onUpdated(Row existing, Row updated);
UpdateTransaction NO_OP = new UpdateTransaction()
{
public void start(){}
public void onPartitionDeletion(DeletionTime deletionTime){}
public void onRangeTombstone(RangeTombstone rangeTombstone){}
public void onInserted(Row row){}
public void onUpdated(Row existing, Row updated){}
public void commit(){}
};
}
© 2015 - 2024 Weber Informatics LLC | Privacy Policy