A
- the type of the accumulatorR
- the type of the final resultpublic interface AggregateOperation<A,R> extends Serializable
AggregateOperations
to find the one
you need and, if you don't find it there, construct one by using the
aggregate operation builder
and reading the
description below.
Jet aggregates the data by updating a mutable container,
called the accumulator, with the data from each stream item.
It does this by applying the accumulate
primitive
to the the accumulator and a given item. Jet provides some accumulator
objects in the accumulator
package
that you can reuse, and you can also write your own if needed. The
accumulator must be serializable because Jet may need to send it to
another member to be combined with other accumulators or store it in state
snapshot.
After it processes all the items in a batch/window, Jet transforms the
accumulator into the final result by applying the finish
primitive.
Since it is a distributed/parallel computation engine, Jet will create
several independent processing units to perform the same aggregation,
and it must combine their partial results before applying the finish
primitive and emitting the final result. This is the role of the
combine
primitive.
Finally, AggregateOperation
also defines the deduct
primitive, which allows Jet to efficiently aggregate infinite
stream data into a sliding window by evicting old data from the
existing accumulator instead of building a new one from scratch each time
the window slides forward. Providing a deduct
primitive that makes
the computation more efficient than rebuilding the accumulator from scratch
isn't always possible. Therefore it is optional.
Depending on usage, the data items may come from one or more inbound
streams, and the AggregateOperation
must provide a separate
accumulate
primitive for each of them. If you are creating the
aggregating pipeline stage using the builder object
, then you'll identify each contributing stream to the
AggregateOperation
using the tags you got from the
builder.
If, on the other hand, you are calling one of the direct methods such
as stage.aggregate2()
, then you'll deal with specializations of this interface
such as AggregateOperation2
and you'll identify the input stages by
their index; zero index corresponds to the stage you're calling the
method on and the higher indices correspond to the stages you pass in as
arguments.
This is a summary of all the primitives involved:
create
a new accumulator object
accumulate
the data of an item by mutating
the accumulator
combine
the contents of the right-hand
accumulator into the left-hand one, optional
deduct
the contents of the right-hand accumulator
from the left-hand one (undo the effects of combine
), optional
export
: calculate the result value from an
accumulator while preserving the accumulator state for further
accumulation. Used for aggregations with speculative results or for
rolling aggregations
finish
: calculate the result value from an
accumulator. After this conversion the accumulator will no longer be
used, it's allowed, for example, to use the identity()
function
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
<T> BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super T> |
accumulateFn(int index)
A primitive that updates the accumulator state to account for a new
item.
|
default <T> BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super T> |
accumulateFn(Tag<T> tag)
A primitive that updates the accumulator state to account for a new
item.
|
<R_NEW> AggregateOperation<A,R_NEW> |
andThen(FunctionEx<? super R,? extends R_NEW> thenFn)
Returns a copy of this aggregate operation, but with the
export
and finish primitives composed with the supplied thenFn . |
int |
arity()
Returns the number of contributing streams this operation is set up to
handle.
|
BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super A> |
combineFn()
A primitive that accepts two accumulators and updates the state of the
left-hand one by combining it with the state of the right-hand one.
|
SupplierEx<A> |
createFn()
A primitive that returns a new accumulator.
|
BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super A> |
deductFn()
A primitive that accepts two accumulators and updates the state of the
left-hand one by deducting the state of the right-hand one from it.
|
FunctionEx<? super A,? extends R> |
exportFn()
A primitive that transforms the accumulator into a result of the
aggregation.
|
default FunctionEx<? super A,? extends R> |
finishFn()
A primitive that transforms the accumulator into a result of the
aggregation.
|
AggregateOperation<A,R> |
withAccumulateFns(BiConsumerEx... accumulateFns)
Returns a copy of this aggregate operation, but with all the
accumulate primitives replaced with the ones supplied here. |
default <T> AggregateOperation1<T,A,R> |
withCombiningAccumulateFn(FunctionEx<T,A> getAccFn)
Returns a copy of this aggregate operation, but with the
accumulate primitive replaced with one that expects to find accumulator
objects in the input items and combines them all into a single
accumulator of the same type. |
static <A> AggregateOperationBuilder<A> |
withCreate(SupplierEx<A> createFn)
Returns a builder object, initialized with the supplied
create primitive, that can be used to construct the definition of an
aggregate operation in a step-by-step manner. |
AggregateOperation<A,A> |
withIdentityFinish()
Returns a copy of this aggregate operation, but with the
finish
primitive replaced with the identity function. |
int arity()
accumulateFn(int)
must be less than
this number.@Nonnull SupplierEx<A> createFn()
deduct
primitive is defined, the accumulator object must
properly implement equals()
. See deductFn()
for an
explanation.
The accumulator produced by the supplier must be serializable. For performance, you should prefer Hazelcast custom serialization.
The supplier must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull default <T> BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super T> accumulateFn(@Nonnull Tag<T> tag)
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull <T> BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super T> accumulateFn(int index)
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nullable BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super A> combineFn()
null
.
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nullable BiConsumerEx<? super A,? super A> deductFn()
The effect of this primitive must be the opposite of combine
so that:
combine(acc, x); deduct(acc, x);leaves
acc
in the same state as it was before the two
operations.
This primitive is only used in sliding window aggregation and even in that case it is optional, but its presence may significantly reduce the computational cost. With it, the current sliding window can be obtained from the previous one by deducting the trailing frame and combining the leading frame; without it, each window must be recomputed from all its constituent frames. The finer the sliding step, the more pronounced the difference in computation effort will be.
If this method returns non-null, then createFn()
must
return an accumulator which properly implements equals()
. After calling deductFn
, Jet will use equals()
to determine whether the accumulator is now "empty" (i.e., equal to a
fresh instance), which signals that the current window contains no more
items with the associated grouping key and the entry must be removed
from the results. For example:
acc = create(); combine(acc, x); deduct(acc, x); assert acc.equals(create()) : "improper combine/deduct behavior";
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull FunctionEx<? super A,? extends R> exportFn()
finish
primitive, this operation
must not:
ArrayList
, you must copy
it before returning it. If the elements of the list are mutated, they
must be copied as well.
The returned function must never return null
. In other words,
for any accumulator it must return a non-null exported value.
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull default FunctionEx<? super A,? extends R> finishFn()
export
primitive: the accumulator is guaranteed to be no longer used after this
operation. For example, when accumulating into an ArrayList
, you
can return the accumulator list directly without copying it.
The returned function must never return null
. In other words,
for any accumulator it must return a non-null finished value.
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull AggregateOperation<A,R> withAccumulateFns(BiConsumerEx... accumulateFns)
accumulate
primitives replaced with the ones supplied here. The
argument at position i
replaces the primitive at index i
, as returned by accumulateFn(int)
.
The functions must be stateless and cooperative.
@Nonnull AggregateOperation<A,A> withIdentityFinish()
finish
primitive replaced with the identity function. It will return the
accumulator object as-is. The returned aggregate operation does not
support the export
primitive.@Nonnull default <T> AggregateOperation1<T,A,R> withCombiningAccumulateFn(@Nonnull FunctionEx<T,A> getAccFn)
accumulate
primitive replaced with one that expects to find accumulator
objects in the input items and combines them all into a single
accumulator of the same type. It's used in the second aggregation stage
of a two-stage aggregation setup. The first stage emits its accumulators
to the second stage.
The function must be stateless and cooperative.
T
- the type of stream itemgetAccFn
- the function that extracts the accumulator from the stream item@Nonnull <R_NEW> AggregateOperation<A,R_NEW> andThen(FunctionEx<? super R,? extends R_NEW> thenFn)
export
and finish
primitives composed with the supplied thenFn
.
This replaces exportFn
with exportFn.andThen(thenFn)
,
same for finishFn
. The main use case is to transform the result
of an existing (library-provided) aggregate operation.
The given function must be stateless and cooperative.
R_NEW
- the type of the returned aggregate operation's resultthenFn
- the function to apply to the results of export
and finish
primitives@Nonnull static <A> AggregateOperationBuilder<A> withCreate(@Nonnull SupplierEx<A> createFn)
create
primitive, that can be used to construct the definition of an
aggregate operation in a step-by-step manner.
The same builder is used to construct both fixed- and variable-arity aggregate operations:
andAccumulate0()
, optionally followed by .andAccumulate1()
,
.andAccumulate2()
. The return type of these methods changes as the
static types of the contributing streams are captured.
andAccumulate(tag)
.
andExportFinish()
method returns the constructed aggregate operation.
Its static type receives all the type parameters captured in the above
method calls. For optimization purposes you may want to specify a finish
primitive that is different from export
, for example
return the accumulator itself without copying. In that case you'll use
builder.andExport(exportFn).andFinish(finishFn)
.
The given function must be stateless and cooperative.
A
- the type of the accumulatorcreateFn
- the create
primitivecreate
primitive definedCopyright © 2021 Hazelcast, Inc.. All rights reserved.