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## Measures the time for down- and up-messages for each protocol individually
## JIRA: https://issues.redhat.com/browse/JGRP-2640

## See [1] for an explanation of why the COMPILE directive requires AS TRIGGER or the type
## definition of org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
## [1] https://issues.redhat.com/browse/BYTEMAN-425

## For UNICAST3 and NAKACK2, an up message (or batch) is added to the table for the given sender, then passed up.
## When the thread returns, it checks if there are messages to deliver in the table. If so, and no other thread is
## already delivering messges up the stack, the current thread continues draining the table (possibly fed by other
## threads, and passing them up.
## In terms of timestamps, this works as follows:
## - up(MessageBatch) is called with a new timestamp set by the protocol below
## - the batch is added to the table
## - if another thread is already delivering messages from that table -> return (no time recorded for this action)
## - else deliver batch. As soon as up(batch) for the protocol above is called, the time will be recorded
##   - the batch is passed all the way to the top, each protocol sets a new timestamp in the header (or batch directly)
##   - the thread return with a recent timestamp set by the top protocol
##   - the thread drains more messages (if available) and passes them up: the time is recorded by the next prot
##   ==> because the timestamp is updated by the top protocol, every iteration of message draining is started
##       with a 'fresh' timestamp, so the accumulated times are correct


RULE DiagnosticHandler creation
CLASS ^TP
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD handleConnect()
AT ENTRY
BIND tp=$this, diag=tp.getDiagnosticsHandler();
IF TRUE
   DO diagCreated(diag, tp);
ENDRULE


## If they're is an up_prot, compute the time for it from the header, then set the current time in the header
RULE down(Message) entry
CLASS ^org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD down(Message)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1, p:org.jgroups.stack.Protocol=$this, prot=p.getUpProtocol();
IF TRUE
   DO downTime(msg, prot);
ENDRULE



RULE down(Message) exit
CLASS ^TP
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD down(Message)
COMPILE
AT EXIT
BIND msg=$1, prot:org.jgroups.stack.Protocol=$this;
IF TRUE
   DO downTime(msg, prot);
ENDRULE


RULE up(Message)
CLASS ^org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD up(Message)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1, p:org.jgroups.stack.Protocol=$this, prot=p.getDownProtocol();
IF TRUE
   DO upTime(msg, prot);
ENDRULE


RULE up(MessageBatch)
CLASS ^org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD up(MessageBatch)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND batch=$1, p:org.jgroups.stack.Protocol=$this, prot=p.getDownProtocol();
IF TRUE
   DO upTime(batch, prot);
ENDRULE


RULE ProtocolStack.up(Message)
CLASS org.jgroups.stack.ProtocolStack
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD up(Message)
COMPILE
AT EXIT
BIND msg=$1, prot=$this;
IF TRUE
   DO upTime(msg, prot);
ENDRULE


RULE ProtocolStack.up(MessageBatch)
CLASS org.jgroups.stack.ProtocolStack
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD up(MessageBatch)
COMPILE
AT EXIT
BIND batch=$1, prot=$this;
IF TRUE
   DO upTime(batch, prot);
ENDRULE


RULE loopback
CLASS ^TP
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD loopback(Message,boolean)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1, prot:org.jgroups.stack.Protocol=$this;
IF TRUE
   DO upTime(msg, prot);
ENDRULE

RULE TP: set up-time for a single message
CLASS ^SubmitToThreadPool
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD process(Message,boolean)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1;
IF TRUE
   DO setTime(msg, false);
ENDRULE

RULE TP: set up-time for a message batch
CLASS ^SubmitToThreadPool
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
METHOD process(MessageBatch,boolean)
COMPILE
AT ENTRY
BIND batch=$1;
IF TRUE
   DO setTime(batch);
ENDRULE


# When creating new batches from existing ones (e.g. in MaxOneThreadPerSender), and passing the newly created batch up,
# the timestamp is 0. Setting the timestamp allows for accurate recording of the time for a given transport
RULE Set MessageBatch.timestamp on batch creation
CLASS MessageBatch
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
COMPILE
METHOD 
AT EXIT
BIND batch=$0;
IF NOT callerEquals("") ## exclude self() or super() methods
   DO batch.timestamp(System.nanoTime());
ENDRULE


RULE MaxOneSenderPerThread - reset batch.timestamp after each run()
CLASS SubmitToThreadPool$BatchHandler
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
COMPILE
METHOD run
AT ENTRY
BIND batch=$this.batch;
IF NOT callerEquals("run")
   DO batch.timestamp(System.nanoTime());
ENDRULE

# Retransmission of a message will cause an incorrect time measurement, as the start time was on the original send
# ProtPerfHeader.start_down is set to *0*, as we don't want to measure retransmissions times (they're very short,
# because they just fetch the message and send it down)
# This rule applies to (1) retransmission by sender, (2) resending of the first msg, and (3) retransmission via XMIT-REQ
RULE UNICAST3 retransmission
CLASS org.jgroups.protocols.UNICAST3
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
COMPILE
METHOD resend(Message)
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1;
IF TRUE
   DO setTime(msg, 0, true);
ENDRULE

# Same as above, but for NAKACKK2
RULE NAKACK2 retransmission
CLASS org.jgroups.protocols.pbcast.NAKACK2
HELPER org.jgroups.util.ProtPerfHelper
COMPILE
METHOD resend(Message)
AT ENTRY
BIND msg=$1;
IF TRUE
   DO setTime(msg, 0, true);
ENDRULE




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