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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2011-11-02 14:29:23 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2011-11-02 14:29:23 +0200
commit1dab2da7c969e328281765d59d2fe90d618fadc6 (patch)
tree5271af031172c7751ab09e1adc5fb731c6c846d7 /optimistic/README
parent9b10c11da5fdc5e64187d390b33ab62f6d2c49c0 (diff)
Add example for optimistic concurrency support
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+This example shows how to use optimistic concurrency in ODB.
+
+The example consists of the following files:
+
+person.hxx
+ Header file defining the 'person' persistent class. Besides the standard
+ persistent class pragmas, this definition also uses the 'optimistic'
+ pragma to indicate to the ODB compiler that the class must support
+ optimistic concurrency. It also uses the 'version' pragma to specify
+ which data member will contain the object version.
+
+person-odb.hxx
+person-odb.ixx
+person-odb.cxx
+person.sql
+ The first three files contain the database support code and the last file
+ contains the database schema for the person.hxx header.
+
+ These files are generated by the ODB compiler from person.hxx using the
+ following command line:
+
+ odb -d <database> --generate-schema person.hxx
+
+ Where <database> stands for the database system we are using, for example,
+ 'mysql'.
+
+database.hxx
+ Contains the create_database() function which instantiates the concrete
+ database class corresponding to the database system we are using.
+
+driver.cxx
+ Driver for the example. It includes the person.hxx and person-odb.hxx
+ headers to gain access to the persistent classes and their database support
+ code. It also includes database.hxx for the create_database() function
+ declaration.
+
+ In main() the driver first calls create_database() to obtain the database
+ instance and persists a sample 'person' object. It then emulates the
+ parallel execution of two processes that try to concurrently update or
+ delete this object. For each step the driver prints the versions of the
+ object as seen by each process.
+
+To run the example we may first need to create the database schema (for some
+database systems, such as SQLite, the schema is embedded into the generated
+code which makes this step unnecessary). Using MySQL as an example, this
+can be achieved with the following command:
+
+mysql --user=odb_test --database=odb_test < person.sql
+
+Here we use 'odb_test' as the database login and also 'odb_test' as the
+database name.
+
+Once the database schema is ready, we can run the example (using MySQL as
+the database):
+
+./driver --user odb_test --database odb_test