Mercurial > dive4elements > river
diff flys-artifacts/doc/datacage-config-manual/content.tex @ 3938:c0cab28ba1ea
merged flys-artifacts
author | Thomas Arendsen Hein <thomas@intevation.de> |
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date | Fri, 28 Sep 2012 12:15:03 +0200 |
parents | 1a79d47ed14b |
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--- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/flys-artifacts/doc/datacage-config-manual/content.tex Fri Sep 28 12:15:03 2012 +0200 @@ -0,0 +1,164 @@ +\section{Configuration of the Datacage} + +\subsection{Tasks and Recommendation types of the datacage} + +The datacage serves two purposes. +It handles automatic 'recommendations', which are instructions +sent by the client to add newly created artifacts to the collection. +From a user perspective, these artifacts mainly represent curves or data +points in the resulting diagrams. +The second task is to let the user add already existing artifacts (i.e. +previous calculations) or new artifacts with access to related data. + +Irrelevant of the type of elements (recommendations or user picked data) the +datacage can iterate over possible artifacts by accessing its own database. +Thus, to create a list of matching entries, database queries are used. + +\subsection{Structure of the datacage configuration file meta-data.conf} + +The datacages behaviour is defined in the file conf/meta-data.xml . + +In meta-data.xml, database queries are defined as \verb!<dc:statement>! elements, +for example +\begin{lstlisting} + <dc:statement> + SELECT id AS prot_id, + description AS prot_description + FROM wsts WHERE kind = 1 AND river_id = ${river_id} + </dc:statement> +\end{lstlisting} + +As can be seen from the example, the datacage configuration file can maintain +its own stack of variables (\${river\_id} in above example). + +The database query will usually deliver one or many results, over which is +iterated using the \verb!<dc:elements>! elements. + +Information from this results can be used for two goals. +It can be taken as output, in which +case the client will either request the creation of these artifacts (considering +recommendations), or shown by the client in a the 'datacage widget', +the graphical representation of data which can be added in the current +context. The later is seen when the user clicks on the Datacage button in +a diagram. +Or information can be used to feed a second (or third...) database query. +Following above example: + +\begin{lstlisting} + <dc:statement> + SELECT id AS prot_id, + description AS prot_description + FROM wsts WHERE kind = 1 AND river_id = ${river_id} + </dc:statement> + <dc:elements> + <additional> + <dc:attribute name="name" value="${prot_description}"/> + <dc:context> + <dc:statement> + SELECT id AS prot_column_id, + name AS prot_column_name, + position AS prot_rel_pos + FROM wst_columns WHERE wst_id = ${prot_id} + ORDER by position + </dc:statement> + <!-- ... --> +\end{lstlisting} + +In both cases, an \verb!<dc:elements>! element makes database queries available. +Also +note how the variables are defined in the first query and reused in the second +query (\$\{prot\_it\}). + +Any alement not prefixed with "dc" represents a (sub-) node in the resulting +tree. The client will display these nodes and maybe subnodes in the datacage +widget - \verb!<additional>! in above example. The elements name is translated by +the client. + +While iterating the final results, \verb!<dc:attributes>! have to be specified +to define how the artifact is to be created. + +\begin{lstlisting} + <dc:elements> + <column> + <dc:attribute name="name" value="${prot_column_name}"/> + <dc:attribute name="ids" value="additionals-wstv-${prot_rel_pos}-${prot_id}"/> + <dc:attribute name="factory" value="staticwkms"/> + </column> + </dc:elements> +\end{lstlisting} + +The "name" attribute is what is to be displayed in the client, the "ids" are given +to the server and pass important information about the chosen data. +The "factory" is chosen according to the type of data displayed. + +So far, three other elements have not yet been mentioned: \verb!<dc:comment>!, +\verb!<dc:if>! and the \verb!<dc:when><dc:otherwise>! structure. +\verb!<dc:comment>! is an element to allow comments. Choose these over standard +\verb=<!-- -->= xml comments, because they are not transferred to the client. +\verb!<dc:if>! and \verb!<dc:when>! allow control (rather: definition) flow within +the configuration and work in analogy to the XSL-elements \verb!<xsl:if>! +and \verb!<xsl:when>!. + +When dealing with the behaviour specification of the datacage, multiple +interpretations for the term "context" are possible. +A \verb!<dc:context>! element essentially means a database binding. Thus each +query (\verb!<dc:statement>!) needs to be nested in its own context. +Furthermore, two types of databases with own bindings exist: +The "system" (default for \verb!<dc:context>!, \verb!<dc:context connection="system">!) +context allows queries related to the backend database with existing +data (e.g. measurements). +The "user" context (\verb!<dc:context connection="user">!) allows queries against +the database which stores information about already existing artifacts and +calculations. + +Another connotation for the term "context" is the situation from which +the datacage is queried. The standard case is a from the datacage widget. +When the user opens the datacage from the graphical client, this is done +from one of possible multiple diagrams. +When the datacage is queried, it gets as an argument the "out" of +the current artifact. The out corresponds to the diagram type. + +For example the inner block of + +\begin{lstlisting} + <dc:if test="dc:contains($artifact-outs, 'longitudinal_section')"> + <longitudinal_section> + <dc:call-macro name="annotations"/> + </longitudinal_section> + </dc:if> +\end{lstlisting} + +will only be executed if called from the datacage within a +longitudinal\_section diagram. + +In the given example another concept of the datacage configuration is +encountered: Macros. + +Macros help to avoid duplication of parts of the document. As the datacage +of some diagrams should include the same type of data, the same query should +be executed in multiple situations. + +Therefore a macro can be defined, like in + +\begin{lstlisting} + <dc:macro name="basedata_4_heightmarks-wq"> + <heightmarks> + <dc:context> + <dc:statement> + SELECT id AS prot_id, + description AS prot_description + FROM wsts WHERE kind = 4 AND river_id = ${river_id} + </dc:statement> + <dc:elements> + <!-- ... --> + </dc:macro> +\end{lstlisting} + +and invoked from another location within the document, e.g. with + +\begin{lstlisting} + + <dc:call-macro name="basedata_4_heightmarks"/> +\end{lstlisting} +. +