001/*
002 * CDDL HEADER START
003 *
004 * The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the
005 * Common Development and Distribution License, Version 1.0 only
006 * (the "License").  You may not use this file except in compliance
007 * with the License.
008 *
009 * You can obtain a copy of the license at
010 * docs/licenses/cddl.txt
011 * or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/cddl1.php.
012 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions
013 * and limitations under the License.
014 *
015 * When distributing Covered Code, include this CDDL HEADER in each
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022 * CDDL HEADER END
023 *
024 *
025 *      Copyright 2010-2017 Ping Identity Corporation
026 */
027package com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.scripting;
028
029import java.io.Serializable;
030import java.sql.SQLException;
031import java.util.LinkedList;
032import java.util.List;
033import java.util.Iterator;
034import java.util.concurrent.BlockingQueue;
035import java.util.concurrent.atomic.AtomicLong;
036
037import com.unboundid.ldap.sdk.Entry;
038import com.unboundid.util.Extensible;
039import com.unboundid.util.ThreadSafety;
040import com.unboundid.util.ThreadSafetyLevel;
041import com.unboundid.util.args.ArgumentException;
042import com.unboundid.util.args.ArgumentParser;
043import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.common.internal.Configurable;
044import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.config.JDBCSyncSourceConfig;
045import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.internal.SynchronizationServerExtension;
046import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.types.DatabaseChangeRecord;
047import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.types.SetStartpointOptions;
048import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.types.SyncOperation;
049import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.types.SyncServerContext;
050import com.unboundid.directory.sdk.sync.types.TransactionContext;
051
052/**
053 * This class defines an API that must be implemented by scripted extensions
054 * in order to synchronize data out of a relational database. Since the
055 * UnboundID Synchronization Server is LDAP-centric,
056 * this API allows you to take database content and convert it into LDAP
057 * entries which can then be processed by the Synchronization Server. The
058 * lifecycle of
059 * a sync operation is as follows:
060 * <ol>
061 * <li>Detect change at the synchronization source</li>
062 * <li>Fetch full source entry</li>
063 * <li>Perform any mappings and compute the equivalent destination entry</li>
064 * <li>Fetch full destination entry</li>
065 * <li>Diff the computed destination entry and actual (fetched) destination
066 * entry</li>
067 * <li>Apply the minimal set of changes at the destination to bring it in sync
068 * </li>
069 * </ol>
070 * This implies that the
071 * {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)} method will be
072 * called once for every change that is returned by
073 * {@link #getNextBatchOfChanges(TransactionContext, int, AtomicLong)}.
074 * <p>
075 * During realtime synchronization (i.e. when a Sync Pipe is running), there is
076 * a sliding window of changes being processed, and this API provides a
077 * distinction between some different points along that window:
078 * <ul>
079 *   <li><b>Old changes</b>: These are changes that the Sync Server has
080 *       processed and acknowledged back to the Sync Source. The Sync Source is
081 *       under no obligation to re-detect these changes.</li>
082 *   <li><b>Startpoint</b>: This marks where the Sync Source will start
083 *       detecting changes if it is restarted.</li>
084 *   <li><b>Detected but unacknowledged</b>: These changes have been returned by
085 *       <code>getNextBatchOfChanges()</code> but not completely processed and
086 *       acknowledged back to the Sync Source.</li>
087 *   <li><b>Undetected changes</b>: The next call to
088 *       <code>getNextBatchOfChanges()</code> should return the first changes
089 *       that have not been detected.  This should be somewhere at or ahead of
090 *       the startpoint.</li>
091 * </ul>
092 * <p>
093 * In several places a {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
094 * controlled access to the target database. By default, methods in this class
095 * are always provided with a fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the
096 * Synchronization Server will always commit or rollback the transaction
097 * automatically, depending on whether the method returned normally or threw an
098 * exception. Implementers may optionally perform their own transaction
099 * management within these methods if necessary.
100 * <p>
101 * Several of these methods throw {@link SQLException}, which should be used in
102 * the case of any database access error. For other types of errors, runtime
103 * exceptions may be used (IllegalStateException, NullPointerException, etc.).
104 * The Synchronization Server will automatically retry operations that fail, up
105 * to a configurable amount of attempts. The exception to this rule is if a
106 * SQLException is thrown with a SQL state string beginning with "08"; this
107 * indicates a connection error, and in this case the operation is retried
108 * indefinitely.
109 * <BR>
110 * <H2>Configuring Groovy Scripted JDBC Sync Sources</H2>
111 * In order to configure a scripted JDBC sync source based on this API and
112 * written in the Groovy scripting language, use a command like:
113 * <PRE>
114 *      dsconfig create-sync-source \
115 *           --source-name "<I>{source-name}</I>" \
116 *           --type groovy-scripted-jdbc \
117 *           --set "server:{server-name}" \
118 *           --set "script-class:<I>{class-name}</I>" \
119 *           --set "script-argument:<I>{name=value}</I>"
120 * </PRE>
121 * where "<I>{source-name}</I>" is the name to use for the JDBC sync source
122 * instance, "<I>{server-name}</I>" is the name of the JDBC external server that
123 * will be used as the sync source, "<I>{class-name}</I>" is the fully-qualified
124 * name of the Groovy class written using this API, and "<I>{name=value}</I>"
125 * represents name-value pairs for any arguments to provide to the JDBC sync
126 * source.  If multiple arguments should be provided to the JDBC sync source,
127 * then the "<CODE>--set script-argument:<I>{name=value}</I></CODE>" option
128 * should be provided multiple times.
129 */
130@Extensible()
131@SynchronizationServerExtension(appliesToLocalContent=false,
132                                appliesToSynchronizedContent=true)
133public abstract class ScriptedJDBCSyncSource implements Configurable
134{
135  /**
136   * {@inheritDoc}
137   */
138  public void defineConfigArguments(final ArgumentParser parser)
139         throws ArgumentException
140  {
141    // No arguments will be allowed by default.
142  }
143
144  /**
145   * This hook is called when a Sync Pipe first starts up, when the
146   * <i>resync</i> process first starts up, or when the set-startpoint
147   * subcommand is called from the <i>realtime-sync</i> command line tool.
148   * Any initialization of this sync source should be performed here. This
149   * method should generally store the {@link SyncServerContext} in a class
150   * member so that it can be used elsewhere in the implementation.
151   * <p>
152   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
153   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
154   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
155   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
156   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
157   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
158   * if necessary.
159   * <p>
160   * The default implementation is empty.
161   *
162   * @param ctx
163   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
164   *          database.
165   * @param  serverContext  A handle to the server context for the server in
166   *                        which this extension is running.
167   * @param  config         The general configuration for this sync source.
168   * @param  parser         The argument parser which has been initialized from
169   *                        the configuration for this JDBC sync source.
170   */
171  public void initializeJDBCSyncSource(final TransactionContext ctx,
172                                          final SyncServerContext serverContext,
173                                          final JDBCSyncSourceConfig config,
174                                          final ArgumentParser parser)
175  {
176    // No initialization will be performed by default.
177  }
178
179  /**
180   * This hook is called when a Sync Pipe shuts down, when the <i>resync</i>
181   * process shuts down, or when the set-startpoint subcommand (from the
182   * <i>realtime-sync</i> command line tool) is finished. Any clean up of this
183   * sync source should be performed here.
184   * <p>
185   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
186   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
187   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
188   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
189   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
190   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
191   * if necessary.
192   * <p>
193   * The default implementation is empty.
194   *
195   * @param ctx
196   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
197   *          database.
198   */
199  public void finalizeJDBCSyncSource(final TransactionContext ctx)
200  {
201    //no implementation required
202  }
203
204  /**
205   * This method should effectively set the starting point for synchronization
206   * to the place specified by the <code>options</code> parameter. This should
207   * cause all changes previous to the specified start point to be disregarded
208   * and only changes after that point to be returned by
209   * {@link #getNextBatchOfChanges(TransactionContext, int, AtomicLong)}.
210   * <p>
211   * There are several different startpoint types (see
212   * {@link SetStartpointOptions}), and this implementation is not required to
213   * support them all. If the specified startpoint type is unsupported, this
214   * method should throw an {@link UnsupportedOperationException}.
215   * <p>
216   * <b>IMPORTANT</b>: The <code>RESUME_AT_SERIALIZABLE</code> startpoint type
217   * must be supported by your implementation, because this is used when a Sync
218   * Pipe first starts up.
219   * <p>
220   * This method can be called from two different contexts:
221   * <ul>
222   * <li>When the 'set-startpoint' subcommand of the realtime-sync CLI is used
223   * (the Sync Pipe is required to be stopped in this context)</li>
224   * <li>Immediately after a Sync Pipe starts up and a connection is first
225   *     established to the source server (e.g. before the first call to
226   * {@link #getNextBatchOfChanges(TransactionContext, int, AtomicLong)})</li>
227   * </ul>
228   * <p>
229   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
230   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
231   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
232   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
233   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
234   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
235   * if necessary.
236   *
237   * @param ctx
238   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
239   *          database.
240   * @param options
241   *          an object which indicates where exactly to start synchronizing
242   *          (e.g.
243   *          the end of the changelog, specific change number, a certain time
244   *          ago, etc)
245   * @throws SQLException
246   *           if there is any error while setting the start point
247   */
248  @ThreadSafety(level = ThreadSafetyLevel.METHOD_NOT_THREADSAFE)
249  public abstract void setStartpoint(final TransactionContext ctx,
250                                     final SetStartpointOptions options)
251                                          throws SQLException;
252
253  /**
254   * Gets the current value of the startpoint for change detection. This is the
255   * "bookmark" which indicates which changes have already been processed and
256   * which have not. In most cases, a change number is used to detect changes
257   * and is managed by the Synchronization Server, in which case this
258   * implementation needs only to return the latest acknowledged
259   * change number. In other cases, the return value may correspond to a
260   * different value, such as the SYS_CHANGE_VERSION in Microsoft SQL Server.
261   * In any case, this method should return the value that is updated by
262   * {@link #acknowledgeCompletedOps(TransactionContext, LinkedList)}.
263   * <p>
264   * This method is called periodically and the return value is saved in the
265   * persistent state for the Sync Pipe that uses this script as its Sync
266   * Source.
267   * <p>
268   * <b>IMPORTANT</b>: The internal value for the startpoint should only be
269   * updated after a sync operation is acknowledged back to this script (via
270   * {@link #acknowledgeCompletedOps(TransactionContext, LinkedList)}).
271   * Otherwise it will be possible for changes to be missed when the
272   * Synchronization Server is restarted or a connection error occurs.
273   * @return a value to store in the persistent state for the Sync Pipe. This is
274   *         usually
275   *         a change number, but if a changelog table is not used to detect
276   *         changes,
277   *         this value should represent some other token to pass into
278   *         {@link #setStartpoint(TransactionContext, SetStartpointOptions)}
279   *         when the sync pipe starts up.
280   */
281  @ThreadSafety(level = ThreadSafetyLevel.METHOD_NOT_THREADSAFE)
282  public abstract Serializable getStartpoint();
283
284  /**
285   * Return the next batch of change records from the database. Change records
286   * are just hints that a change happened; they do not include the actual data
287   * of the change. In an effort to never synchronize stale data, the
288   * Synchronization Server will go back and fetch the full source entry for
289   * each change record.
290   * <p>
291   * On the first invocation, this should return changes starting from the
292   * startpoint that was set by
293   * {@link #setStartpoint(TransactionContext, SetStartpointOptions)}. This
294   * method is responsible for updating the internal state such that subsequent
295   * invocations do not return duplicate changes.
296   * <p>
297   * The resulting list should be limited by <code>maxChanges</code>. The
298   * <code>numStillPending</code> reference should be set to the estimated
299   * number of changes that haven't yet been retrieved from the changelog table
300   * when this method returns, or zero if all the current changes have been
301   * retrieved.
302   * <p>
303   * <b>IMPORTANT</b>: While this method needs to keep track of which changes
304   * have already been returned so that it does not return them again, it should
305   * <b>NOT</b> modify the official startpoint. The internal value for the
306   * startpoint should only be updated after a sync operation is acknowledged
307   * back to this script (via
308   * {@link #acknowledgeCompletedOps(TransactionContext, LinkedList)}).
309   * Otherwise it will be possible for changes to be missed when the
310   * Synchronization Server is restarted or a connection error occurs. The
311   * startpoint should not change as a result of this method.
312   * <p>
313   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
314   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
315   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
316   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
317   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
318   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
319   * if necessary.
320   * <p>
321   * This method <b>does not need to be thread-safe</b>. It will be invoked
322   * repeatedly by a single thread, based on the polling interval set in the
323   * Sync Pipe configuration.
324   * @param ctx
325   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
326   *          database.
327   * @param maxChanges
328   *          the maximum number of changes to retrieve
329   * @param numStillPending
330   *          this should be set to the number of unretrieved changes that
331   *          are still pending after this batch has been retrieved. This will
332   *          be passed in
333   *          as zero, and may be left that way if the actual value cannot be
334   *          determined.
335   * @return a list of {@link DatabaseChangeRecord} instances, each
336   *         corresponding
337   *         to a row in the changelog table (or the equivalent if some other
338   *         change
339   *         tracking mechanism is being used). If there are no new changes to
340   *         return, this
341   *         method should return an empty list.
342   * @throws SQLException
343   *           if there is any error while retrieving the next batch of changes
344   */
345  public abstract List<DatabaseChangeRecord> getNextBatchOfChanges(
346                                              final TransactionContext ctx,
347                                              final int maxChanges,
348                                              final AtomicLong numStillPending)
349                                                      throws SQLException;
350
351  /**
352   * Return a full source entry (in LDAP form) from the database, corresponding
353   * to the {@link DatabaseChangeRecord} that is passed in through the
354   * {@link SyncOperation}. This method should perform any queries necessary to
355   * gather the latest values for all the attributes to be synchronized.
356   * <p>
357   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
358   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
359   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
360   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
361   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
362   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
363   * if necessary.
364   * <p>
365   * This method <b>must be thread safe</b>, as it will be called repeatedly and
366   * concurrently by each of the Sync Pipe worker threads as they process
367   * entries.
368   * @param ctx
369   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
370   *          database.
371   * @param operation
372   *          the SyncOperation which identifies the database "entry" to
373   *          fetch. The DatabaseChangeRecord can be obtained by calling
374   *          <code>operation.getDatabaseChangeRecord()</code>.
375   *          This is returned by
376   *        {@link #getNextBatchOfChanges(TransactionContext, int, AtomicLong)}
377   *          or by
378   *        {@link #listAllEntries(TransactionContext, String, BlockingQueue)}
379   *          .
380   * @return a full LDAP Entry, or null if no such entry exists.
381   * @throws SQLException
382   *           if there is an error fetching the entry
383   */
384  public abstract Entry fetchEntry(final TransactionContext ctx,
385                                   final SyncOperation operation)
386                                            throws SQLException;
387
388  /**
389   * Provides a way for the Synchronization Server to acknowledge back to the
390   * script which sync operations it has processed. This method should update
391   * the official startpoint which was set by
392   * {@link #setStartpoint(TransactionContext, SetStartpointOptions)} and is
393   * returned by {@link #getStartpoint()}.
394   * <p>
395   * <b>IMPORTANT</b>: The internal value for the startpoint should only be
396   * updated after a sync operation is acknowledged back to this script (via
397   * this method). Otherwise it will be possible for changes to be missed when
398   * the Synchronization Server is restarted or a connection error occurs.
399   * <p>
400   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided in case the acknowledgment needs
401   * to make it all the way back to the database itself (for example if you were
402   * using Oracle's Change Data Capture). The context will contain a fresh
403   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
404   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
405   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
406   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
407   * if necessary.
408   *
409   * @param ctx
410   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
411   *          database.
412   * @param completedOps
413   *          a list of {@link SyncOperation}s that have finished processing.
414   *          The records are listed in the order they were
415   *          first detected.
416   * @throws SQLException
417   *           if there is an error acknowledging the changes back to the
418   *           database
419   */
420  public abstract void acknowledgeCompletedOps(
421                                   final TransactionContext ctx,
422                                   final LinkedList<SyncOperation> completedOps)
423                                             throws SQLException;
424
425  /**
426   * Performs a cleanup of the changelog table (if desired). There is a
427   * background thread that periodically invokes this method. It should remove
428   * any rows in the changelog table that are more than
429   * <code>maxAgeMillis</code> milliseconds old.
430   * <p>
431   * <b>NOTE:</b> If the system clock on the database server is not in sync with
432   * the system clock on the Synchronization Server, this method should query
433   * the database for its current time in order to determine the cut-off point
434   * for deleting changelog records.
435   * <p>
436   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
437   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
438   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
439   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
440   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
441   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
442   * if necessary.
443   * <p>
444   * If a separate mechanism will be used to manage the changelog table, this
445   * method may be implemented as a no-op and always return zero. This is how
446   * the default implementation behaves.
447   * @param ctx
448   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
449   *          database.
450   * @param maxAgeMillis
451   *          the period of time (in milliseconds) after which a changelog table
452   *          record should be deleted
453   * @return the number of rows that were deleted from the changelog table
454   * @throws SQLException
455   *           if there is an error purging records from the changelog table
456   */
457  public int cleanupChangelog(final TransactionContext ctx,
458                              final long maxAgeMillis)
459                                  throws SQLException
460  {
461    //no implementation provided by default; this is an opt-in feature.
462    return 0;
463  }
464
465  /**
466   * Gets a list of all the entries in the database for a given entry type. This
467   * is used by the 'resync' command line tool. The default implementation
468   * throws a {@link UnsupportedOperationException}; subclasses should override
469   * if the resync functionality is needed.
470   * <p>
471   * The <code>entryType</code> is user-defined; it will be
472   * passed in on the command line for resync. The <code>outputQueue</code>
473   * should contain {@link DatabaseChangeRecord} objects with the
474   * <code>ChangeType</code> set to <i>resync</i>.
475   * <p>
476   * This method should not return until all the entries of the given entryType
477   * have been added to the output queue. Separate threads will concurrently
478   * drain entries from the queue and process them. The queue should not
479   * actually contain full entries, but rather DatabaseChangeRecord objects
480   * which identify the full database entries. These objects are then
481   * individually passed in to
482   * {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}. Therefore,
483   * it is important to make sure that the DatabaseChangeRecord instances
484   * contain enough identifiable information (e.g. primary keys) for each entry
485   * so that the entry can be found again.
486   * <p>
487   * The lifecycle of resync is similar to that of real-time sync, with a few
488   * differences:
489   * <ol>
490   * <li>Stream out a list of all IDs in the database (for a given entryType)
491   * </li>
492   * <li>Fetch full source entry for an ID</li>
493   * <li>Perform any mappings and compute the equivalent destination entry</li>
494   * <li>Fetch full destination entry</li>
495   * <li>Diff the computed destination entry and actual destination entry</li>
496   * <li>Apply the minimal set of changes at the destination to bring it in sync
497   * </li>
498   * </ol>
499   * If the total set of entries is very large, it is fine to split up the work
500   * into multiple database queries within this method. The queue will not grow
501   * out of control because it blocks when it becomes full. The queue capacity
502   * is fixed at 1000.
503   * <p>
504   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
505   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
506   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
507   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
508   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
509   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
510   * if necessary.
511   *
512   * @param ctx
513   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
514   *          database.
515   * @param entryType
516   *          the type of database entry to be fetched (this is specified
517   *          on the CLI for the resync command)
518   * @param outputQueue
519   *          a queue of DatabaseChangeRecord objects which will be individually
520   *          fetched via
521   *          {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}
522   * @throws SQLException
523   *           if there is an error retrieving the list of entries to resync
524   */
525  public void listAllEntries(final TransactionContext ctx,
526                             final String entryType,
527                             final BlockingQueue<DatabaseChangeRecord>
528                                      outputQueue) throws SQLException
529  {
530    throw new UnsupportedOperationException(
531            "The listAllEntries(TransactionContext,String,BlockingQueue) " +
532            "method must be implemented in the " +
533            getClass().getName() + " extension.");
534  }
535
536  /**
537   * Note: This method is deprecated and may be removed in a future release.
538   * All new and existing code should be changed to use the version of this
539   * method which includes the <code>entryType</code> parameter.
540   * <p>
541   * Gets a list of all the entries in the database from a given file input.
542   * This is used by the 'resync' command line tool. The default implementation
543   * throws a {@link UnsupportedOperationException}; subclasses should override
544   * if the resync functionality is needed for specific database records, which
545   * can be specified in the input file.
546   * <p>
547   * The format for the <code>inputLines</code> (e.g. the content of the file)
548   * is user-defined; it may be key/value pairs, primary keys, or full SQL
549   * statements, for example. The use of this method is triggered via the
550   * <i>--sourceInputFile</i> argument on the resync CLI. The
551   * <code>outputQueue</code> should contain {@link DatabaseChangeRecord}
552   * objects with the <code>ChangeType</code> set to <i>resync</i>.
553   * <p>
554   * This method should not return until all the entries specified by the input
555   * file have been added to the output queue. Separate threads will
556   * concurrently drain entries from the queue and process them. The queue
557   * should not actually contain full entries, but rather DatabaseChangeRecord
558   * objects which identify the full database entries. These objects are then
559   * individually passed in to
560   * {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}. Therefore,
561   * it is important to make sure that the DatabaseChangeRecord instances
562   * contain enough identifiable information (e.g. primary keys) for each entry
563   * so that the entry can be found again.
564   * <p>
565   * The lifecycle of resync is similar to that of real-time sync, with a few
566   * differences:
567   * <ol>
568   * <li>Stream out a list of all IDs in the database (using the given input
569   *  file)</li>
570   * <li>Fetch full source entry for an ID</li>
571   * <li>Perform any mappings and compute the equivalent destination entry</li>
572   * <li>Fetch full destination entry</li>
573   * <li>Diff the computed destination entry and actual destination entry</li>
574   * <li>Apply the minimal set of changes at the destination to bring it in sync
575   * </li>
576   * </ol>
577   * If the total set of entries is very large, it is fine to split up the work
578   * into multiple database queries within this method. The queue will not grow
579   * out of control because it blocks when it becomes full. The queue capacity
580   * is fixed at 1000.
581   * <p>
582   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
583   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
584   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
585   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
586   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
587   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
588   * if necessary.
589   *
590   * @param ctx
591   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
592   *          database.
593   * @param inputLines
594   *          an Iterator containing the lines from the specified input file to
595   *          resync (this is specified on the CLI for the resync command).
596   *          These lines can be any format, for example a set of primary keys,
597   *          a set of WHERE clauses, a set of full SQL queries, etc.
598   * @param outputQueue
599   *          a queue of DatabaseChangeRecord objects which will be individually
600   *          fetched via {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}
601   * @throws SQLException
602   *           if there is an error retrieving the list of entries to resync
603   */
604  @Deprecated
605  public void listAllEntries(final TransactionContext ctx,
606                             final Iterator<String> inputLines,
607                             final BlockingQueue<DatabaseChangeRecord>
608                                      outputQueue) throws SQLException
609  {
610    throw new UnsupportedOperationException(
611            "The listAllEntries(TransactionContext,Iterator,BlockingQueue) " +
612            "method must be implemented in the " +
613            getClass().getName() + " extension.");
614  }
615
616  /**
617   * Gets a list of all the entries in the database from a given file input.
618   * This is used by the 'resync' command line tool. The default implementation
619   * throws a {@link UnsupportedOperationException}; subclasses should override
620   * if the resync functionality is needed for specific database records, which
621   * can be specified in the input file.
622   * <p>
623   * The format for the <code>inputLines</code> (e.g. the content of the file)
624   * is user-defined; it may be key/value pairs, primary keys, or full SQL
625   * statements, for example. The use of this method is triggered via the
626   * <i>--sourceInputFile</i> argument on the resync CLI. The
627   * <code>outputQueue</code> should contain {@link DatabaseChangeRecord}
628   * objects with the <code>ChangeType</code> set to <i>resync</i>.
629   * <p>
630   * This method should not return until all the entries specified by the input
631   * file have been added to the output queue. Separate threads will
632   * concurrently drain entries from the queue and process them. The queue
633   * should not actually contain full entries, but rather DatabaseChangeRecord
634   * objects which identify the full database entries. These objects are then
635   * individually passed in to
636   * {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}. Therefore,
637   * it is important to make sure that the DatabaseChangeRecord instances
638   * contain enough identifiable information (e.g. primary keys) for each entry
639   * so that the entry can be found again.
640   * <p>
641   * The lifecycle of resync is similar to that of real-time sync, with a few
642   * differences:
643   * <ol>
644   * <li>Stream out a list of all IDs in the database (using the given input
645   *  file)</li>
646   * <li>Fetch full source entry for an ID</li>
647   * <li>Perform any mappings and compute the equivalent destination entry</li>
648   * <li>Fetch full destination entry</li>
649   * <li>Diff the computed destination entry and actual destination entry</li>
650   * <li>Apply the minimal set of changes at the destination to bring it in sync
651   * </li>
652   * </ol>
653   * If the total set of entries is very large, it is fine to split up the work
654   * into multiple database queries within this method. The queue will not grow
655   * out of control because it blocks when it becomes full. The queue capacity
656   * is fixed at 1000.
657   * <p>
658   * A {@link TransactionContext} is provided, which allows
659   * controlled access to the target database. The context will contain a fresh
660   * fresh connection (i.e. a new transaction), and the Synchronization Server
661   * will always commit or rollback the transaction automatically, depending on
662   * whether this method returns normally or throws an exception. Implementers
663   * may optionally perform their own transaction management within this method
664   * if necessary.
665   *
666   * @param ctx
667   *          a TransactionContext which provides a valid JDBC connection to the
668   *          database.
669   * @param entryType
670   *          the type of database entry to be fetched (this is specified
671   *          on the CLI for the resync command)
672   * @param inputLines
673   *          an Iterator containing the lines from the specified input file to
674   *          resync (this is specified on the CLI for the resync command).
675   *          These lines can be any format, for example a set of primary keys,
676   *          a set of WHERE clauses, a set of full SQL queries, etc.
677   * @param outputQueue
678   *          a queue of DatabaseChangeRecord objects which will be individually
679   *          fetched via {@link #fetchEntry(TransactionContext, SyncOperation)}
680   * @throws SQLException
681   *           if there is an error retrieving the list of entries to resync
682   */
683  public void listAllEntries(final TransactionContext ctx,
684                             final String entryType,
685                             final Iterator<String> inputLines,
686                             final BlockingQueue<DatabaseChangeRecord>
687                                      outputQueue) throws SQLException
688  {
689    throw new UnsupportedOperationException(
690        "The listAllEntries(TransactionContext,String,Iterator,BlockingQueue) "+
691        "method must be implemented in the " +
692        getClass().getName() + " extension.");
693  }
694}