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package oracle.toplink.essentials.threetier;

import oracle.toplink.essentials.sessions.*;
import oracle.toplink.essentials.exceptions.*;

/**
 * 

* Purpose: A single session that supports multiple user/clients connection at the same time. *

* Description: This session supports a shared session that can be used by multiple users * or clients in a three-tiered application. It brokers client sessions to allow read and write access * through a unified object cache. The server session provides a shared read only database connection that * is used by all of its client for reads. All changes to objects and the database must be done through * a unit of work acquired from the client session, this allows the changes to occur in a transactional object * space and under a exclusive database connection. *

* Responsibilities: *

    *
  • Connecting/disconnecting the default reading login. *
  • Reading objects and maintaining the object cache. *
  • Brokering client sessions. *
  • Disabling database modification through the shared connection. *
* @see ClientSession * @see oracle.toplink.essentials.sessions.UnitOfWork UnitOfWork */ public interface Server extends oracle.toplink.essentials.sessions.DatabaseSession { /** * PUBLIC: * Return a client session for this server session. * Each user/client connected to this server session must acquire there own client session * to communicate to the server through. * This method allows for a client session to be acquired sharing the same login as the server session. */ public ClientSession acquireClientSession() throws DatabaseException; /** * PUBLIC: * Return a client session for this server session. * Each user/client connected to this server session must acquire there own client session * to communicate to the server through. * This method allows for a client session to be acquired sharing its connection from a pool * of connection allocated on the server session. * By default this uses a lazy connection policy. */ public ClientSession acquireClientSession(String poolName); /** * PUBLIC: * Return a client session for this server session. * Each user/client connected to this server session must acquire there own client session * to communicate to the server through. * The client must provide its own login to use, and the client session returned * will have its own exclusive database connection. This connection will be used to perform * all database modification for all units of work acquired from the client session. * By default this does not use a lazy connection policy. */ public ClientSession acquireClientSession(Login login); /** * PUBLIC: * Return a client session for this server session. * The connection policy specifies how the client session's connection will be acquired. */ public ClientSession acquireClientSession(ConnectionPolicy connectionPolicy); /** * PUBLIC: * Add the connection pool. * Connections are pooled to share and restrict the number of database connections. */ public void addConnectionPool(String poolName, Login login, int minNumberOfConnections, int maxNumberOfConnections); /** * PUBLIC: * Connection are pooled to share and restrict the number of database connections. */ public void addConnectionPool(ConnectionPool pool); /** * PUBLIC: * Return the pool by name. */ public ConnectionPool getConnectionPool(String poolName); /** * PUBLIC: * The default connection policy is used by default by the acquireClientConnection() protocol. * By default it is a connection pool with min 5 and max 10 lazy pooled connections. */ public ConnectionPolicy getDefaultConnectionPolicy(); /** * PUBLIC: * Return the default connection pool. */ public ConnectionPool getDefaultConnectionPool(); /** * PUBLIC: * Return the number of non-pooled database connections allowed. * This can be enforced to make up for the resource limitation of most JDBC drivers and database clients. * By default this is 50. */ public int getMaxNumberOfNonPooledConnections(); /** * PUBLIC: * Handles allocating connections for read queries. *

* By default a read connection pool is created and configured automatically in the * constructor. A default read connection pool is one with two connections, and * does not support concurrent reads. *

The read connection pool is not used while in transaction. * @see #setReadConnectionPool(ConnectionPool) * @see #useExclusiveReadConnectionPool * @see #useExternalReadConnectionPool * @see #useReadConnectionPool */ public ConnectionPool getReadConnectionPool(); /** * PUBLIC: * Set the login. */ public void setDatasourceLogin(Login login); /** * PUBLIC: * The default connection policy is used by default by the acquireClientConnection() protocol. * By default it is a connection pool with min 5 and max 10 lazy pooled connections. */ public void setDefaultConnectionPolicy(ConnectionPolicy defaultConnectionPolicy); /** * PUBLIC: * Set the number of non-pooled database connections allowed. * This can be enforced to make up for the resource limitation of most JDBC drivers and database clients. * By default this is 50. */ public void setMaxNumberOfNonPooledConnections(int maxNumberOfNonPooledConnections); /** * PUBLIC: * Sets the read connection pool directly. *

* Either {@link #useExclusiveReadConnectionPool} or {@link #useExternalReadConnectionPool} is * called in the constructor. For a connection pool using concurrent reading * {@link #useReadConnectionPool} should be called on a new instance of this. * * @throws ValidationException if already connected */ public void setReadConnectionPool(ConnectionPool readConnectionPool); /** * PUBLIC: * Sets the read connection pool to be a standard ConnectionPool. *

* Minimum and maximum number of connections is determined from the ConnectionPolicy. The defaults are 2 for both. *

* Since the same type of connection pool is used as for writing, no * two users will use the same connection for reading at the same time. *

* This read connection pool is the default as some JDBC drivers do not support * concurrent reading. *

* Unless this {@link oracle.toplink.essentials.sessions.Session#hasExternalTransactionController hasExternalTransactionController()} * a read connection pool of this type will be setup in the constructor. * @see #getReadConnectionPool * @see #setReadConnectionPool(ConnectionPool) * @see #useReadConnectionPool * @see #useExternalReadConnectionPool */ public void useExclusiveReadConnectionPool(int minNumberOfConnections, int maxNumberOfConnections); /** * PUBLIC: * Sets the read connection pool to be an ExternalConnectionPool. *

* This type of connection pool will be created and configured automatically if * an external transaction controller is used. * @see oracle.toplink.essentials.sessions.Session#hasExternalTransactionController * @see #getReadConnectionPool * @see #setReadConnectionPool(ConnectionPool) * @see #useReadConnectionPool * @see #useExclusiveReadConnectionPool */ public void useExternalReadConnectionPool(); /** * PUBLIC: * Sets the read connection pool to be a ReadConnectionPool. *

* Since read connections are not used for writing, multiple users can * theoretically use the same connection at the same time. Most JDBC drivers * have concurrent reading which supports this. *

* Use this read connection pool to take advantage of concurrent reading. *

* @param minNumberOfConnections * @param maxNumberOfConnections As multiple readers can use the same connection * concurrently fewer connections are needed. * @see #getReadConnectionPool * @see #setReadConnectionPool(ConnectionPool) * @see #useExternalReadConnectionPool * @see #useExclusiveReadConnectionPool */ public void useReadConnectionPool(int minNumberOfConnections, int maxNumberOfConnections); }





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