@ColdFire TL;DR - In languages like C, the direction of dependencies was downwards, calling function depends on called function. In OO, the direction is reversed, the calling function depends on an interface and not a concrete implementation, and so you can have actual abstraction.
(He explains it much better than I do, but I'll be happy to answer questions if you have them)
@motaa 1st of all, you yourself know the process PID you spawn, or at least you can get it with zt-process-killer PidUtil#getMyPid 2) You can save that PID to temporary pidfile or wherever 3) you 'reattach' PidProcess process = Processes.newPidProcess(pid); 4) you kill e.g. ProcessUtil.destroyGracefullyOrForcefullyAndWait(process, 30, TimeUnit.SECONDS, 10, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
@unserializable that I got :) OS is an option because 3 fully dedicated servers are unix and another 3 are windows ^^ I was thinking about what you mentioned earlier about me knowing the Entryclass. So I came up with that crazy idea (since JPS outputs the PID + full classname e.g. com.subpack.Entryclass) that I could check every running jvm on vm1 startup whether there currently is one jvm running with that specific Entryclass :)
with the now mentioned crazy idea I was hoping of getting around the fact that I have to store the PID somewhere. So whenever vm1 starts up if any vm is running with the serverclass as entry class I would kill it (even forcibly)
but anyways it works putting the pid into a file :D and for that +2! :)
@motaa but still ... why don't you just do it the way the parent spawns child, child starts, gets its own PID, writes it to say $TMP/theChild.pid
@motaa when parent comes up it kills the child by the PID, if necessary.
@motaa everything for that is quite easy ^^ and available.
@motaa ... and, returning to your architecture and suicidal ideas, when your parent and child are communicating via RMI anyway, then child can perform either seppuku or harakiri when the parent goes away.
@motaa since it is all on the same physical machine both should be rather simple and reliable.
nono its fine since i am a student i work 24/7 haha
but since i already was 10hours at work I could not work more since law says that we are not allowed to work more than 10hours a day :D
I'll check your messages in a bit but first of all I need a beer :)
@unserializable u are absolutely right with your idea and thats the way how I implemented it... without using zt-process (I found the Management stuff on another SO post) Unfortunately JPS is only included in JDK and most of the computers that could run as a remote server only have JRE
I implemented it using a file and if my teamleader thinks that I should go with the DB stuff I will adapt it then :)
cmon at least google first :) @rbashish I googled your question and got this: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19421027/how-to-create-a-daemon-thread-and-what-for
and the 2nd question, ill be more on point, i want to create a blockingqueue, but how can i keep the app running if the queue is empty? i want him to wait for an element to be inserted to the queue on 1 thread and get the element from another thread
so lets say you game has a button and whenever a user clicks on that button a specific observer should be notified and that Observer for example invokes a method that could access and/or change your View
@unserializable @motaa i still didnt write the .start() function yet, i'm suppose to get commands from the blockingqueue, but what if no command has been inserted yet? like when launching the game? i dont know how to implement the thread/runnable here
class JokeListener implements Observer { final private String name;
JokeListener( String name ) { this.name = name; }
@Override public void update( Observable o, Object arg ) { System.out.println( name + " laughs about: \"" + arg + "\"" ); } }
and now the last part
public class Party { public static void main( String[] args ) { Observer o1 = new JokeListener( "o1" ); Observer o2 = new JokeListener( "o2" ); JokeTeller dude = new JokeTeller();
so the update needs to know if he got a model or a view, if its a view he just needs to display the level, if its a model, he needs to update his level so the view can display the updated one, i just dont understand how all of this happens automaticly
let me read it again
my story is different than the joke teller, i have 1 oberver which is the control, and 2 observables(view,model)
@unserializable well it could be a way but my university project tells me to do it like i said, controller updates both, model and view have 0 communication with each other
could you guys help me with implementing the blockingqueue?
.. but as for model and view having 0 communication... that sounds very wrong. For View to actually render the state it must have (immutable) access to Model state.
At least in that direction the data must flow, or you end up implementing not MVC, but something else.
Yeah, one can compose Model and View into Controller... ^^ like you mention. But then doing the little ui.displayData(little bit of Model) etc calls where Controller modifies the View in little bits is IMHO not MVC anymore.
@Gilad they don't 'interact' as in 'interact'. But View is based on Model state. That's the idea. One has abstraction of game state (Model, Sokoban field). And View presents that state (Model) to end-user in understandable form.
Controller is usually there to a) let end-user interact with it b) let Model know what input comes from the outside (e.g. end-user).