org.jgroups.protocols
Class PRIO

java.lang.Object
  extended by org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
      extended by org.jgroups.protocols.PRIO

public class PRIO
extends Protocol

This protocol will provide message sending and receiving prioritization. The protocol assumes that any prioritized message will contain a PrioHeader header entry that will contain the byte value priority. Priority values are from 0 to 255 where 0 is the highest priority. When a message is received (up/down), it is added to the up/downMessageQueue. The up/downMessageThread will block on the queue until new message is added. Messages with the highest priority (0=highest) will bubble to the top of the queue and those be processed before other messages received at the same time. Example of setting a message priority: // Create a message to send to everyone Message message = new Message( null, null, messagePayload ); // Add the priority protocol header PrioHeader header = new PrioHeader( 1 ); short protocolId = ClassConfigurator.getProtocolId(PRIO.class); message.putHeader( protocolId, header);

Author:
Michael Earl

Field Summary
 
Fields inherited from class org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
down_prot, ergonomics, id, log, name, stack, stats, up_prot
 
Constructor Summary
PRIO()
           
 
Method Summary
 java.lang.Object down(Event evt)
          An event is to be sent down the stack.
 void start()
          This method is called on a Channel.connect(String).
 void stop()
          This method is called on a Channel.disconnect().
 java.lang.Object up(Event evt)
          An event was received from the layer below.
 
Methods inherited from class org.jgroups.stack.Protocol
destroy, dumpStats, enableStats, getConfigurableObjects, getDownProtocol, getDownServices, getId, getIdsAbove, getLevel, getName, getProtocolStack, getSocketFactory, getThreadFactory, getTransport, getUpProtocol, getUpServices, getValue, init, isErgonomics, printStats, providedDownServices, providedUpServices, requiredDownServices, requiredUpServices, resetStatistics, resetStats, setDownProtocol, setErgonomics, setId, setLevel, setProtocolStack, setSocketFactory, setUpProtocol, setValue, setValues, statsEnabled
 
Methods inherited from class java.lang.Object
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
 

Constructor Detail

PRIO

public PRIO()
Method Detail

start

public void start()
           throws java.lang.Exception
This method is called on a Channel.connect(String). Starts work. Protocols are connected and queues are ready to receive events. Will be called from bottom to top. This call will replace the START and START_OK events.

Overrides:
start in class Protocol
Throws:
java.lang.Exception - Thrown if protocol cannot be started successfully. This will cause the ProtocolStack to fail, so Channel.connect(String) will throw an exception

stop

public void stop()
This method is called on a Channel.disconnect(). Stops work (e.g. by closing multicast socket). Will be called from top to bottom. This means that at the time of the method invocation the neighbor protocol below is still working. This method will replace the STOP, STOP_OK, CLEANUP and CLEANUP_OK events. The ProtocolStack guarantees that when this method is called all messages in the down queue will have been flushed

Overrides:
stop in class Protocol

up

public java.lang.Object up(Event evt)
An event was received from the layer below. Usually the current layer will want to examine the event type and - depending on its type - perform some computation (e.g. removing headers from a MSG event type, or updating the internal membership list when receiving a VIEW_CHANGE event). Finally the event is either a) discarded, or b) an event is sent down the stack using down_prot.down() or c) the event (or another event) is sent up the stack using up_prot.up().

Overrides:
up in class Protocol

down

public java.lang.Object down(Event evt)
An event is to be sent down the stack. The layer may want to examine its type and perform some action on it, depending on the event's type. If the event is a message MSG, then the layer may need to add a header to it (or do nothing at all) before sending it down the stack using down_prot.down(). In case of a GET_ADDRESS event (which tries to retrieve the stack's address from one of the bottom layers), the layer may need to send a new response event back up the stack using up_prot.up().

Overrides:
down in class Protocol


Copyright © 1998-2012 Bela Ban / Red Hat. All Rights Reserved.