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Deep history #33
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Hi Voskuijlen, Thanks for reporting this issue. I will look into this problem and come back to you later. |
Hi Hekailiang, Thank you for looking in to this problem. When do you think this might be solved? |
Hi Voskuijlen, I think your thoughts is reasonable. However, my concern is about memory consumption. By doing that you recommended it will cause all the historical information being stored no matter necessary or not. Since this is not a functional problem I will keep this issue open, and try to provider better solution later when I have time. In the mean time if you have better solution I will be happy to take a look. I am sorry for the late reply. |
Hi Hekailiang, I don't know how the memory consumption will act further down the road. Perhaps adding this else-statement to the if-statement something like the following will be better then?: if(getParentState().getHistoryType()!=HistoryType.NONE) { stateContext.getStateMachineData().write().lastActiveChildStateFor(getParentState().getStateId(), getStateId()); } else { ImmutableState<T, S, E, C> parent = getParentState(); while (parent != null) { if(parent.getHistoryType()==HistoryType.DEEP) { stateContext.getStateMachineData().write().lastActiveChildStateFor(parent.getStateId(), getStateId()); parent = null; } else { parent = parent.getParentState(); } } } This will look for the parent state as long as they exist and if historytype deep is found, the state will saved. Although I am not sure if this also solves the following problem: |
Hi Voskuijlen, you changes looks fine for me. Can you submit a pull request and with test case provided for your changes. The linked state backed by a state machine to process its event. Currently implementation(actually is not good) stores all the state machine instances within linked states, and will terminate backend state machine instance when linked state exit, which cause historical information of backend state machine lost. I guess nobody use this feature right now(otherwise it should be many issues) you can ignore about linked state. |
Hi Hekailiang, I think I did something wrong. I forked the project, and don't really know how to create a pull request from this.. any advise? |
Ok found it! |
Currently to my experience every child of a state with a deep historytype has to define a historytype, which is kind of strange because that statemachine will return to the last active state on every transition in that statemachine.
I looked at the code and guess that commenting/removing line 170 and 172 of the fsm.impl.StateImpl.java (if(getParentState().getHistoryType()!=HistoryType.NONE) {}) will solve this problem, because currently the state is only saved if a historytype is defined. Removing this, will to my idea, result in not having to define a historytype in every layer of the statemachine, being a better implementation of the deep history.
This comes because not only the direct parentstate, but maybe the parent of the parent of the parentstate might have the deep history defined.
I would like to know your opinion on this matter.
For example:
Giving these states:
@States({
@State(name="Ref17_A", historyType=HistoryType.DEEP),
@State(name="Ref17_A_A1", parent="Ref17_A", initialState=true),
@State(name="Ref17_A_A1_A1_1", parent="Ref17_A_A1", initialState=true),
@State(name="Ref17_A_A1_A1_2", parent="Ref17_A_A1"),
@State(name="Ref17_B"),
})
By transiting to Ref17_A_A1_A1_2, and after that going to Ref17_B, then returning to Ref17_A will only set the statemachine back to Ref17_A_A1_A1_1 instead of the supposed Ref17_A_A1_A1_2.
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