Extenders: Pattern or Anti-Pattern?
The first difficulty is knowing when an extender has finished processing a bundle. For example, a bundle containing a blueprint XML file will transition to ACTIVE state as soon as any bundle activator has been driven. But that’s not the whole story. Administrators are interested in when the bundle is ready for use and so the management code in Virgo tracks the progress of the extender and presents an amalgamated state for the install artefact representing the bundle. The install artefact stays in STARTING state until the application context has been published, at which point it transitions to ACTIVE. Without such additional infrastructure, administrator cannot tell when a bundle processed by an extender really is ready for business.
That’s the successful case, but there are complications in error cases too. The first complication is that since an extender runs in a separate thread to that which installed the bundle, if the extender throws an exception, this is not propagated to the code which installed the bundle. So the installer needs somehow to check for errors. Therefore Virgo has infrastructure to detect such errors and propagate them back to the thread which initiated deployment of the bundle: the deployment operation fails with a stack trace indicating what went wrong.
The other error complication is where there is a (possibly indefinite) delay in an extender processing a bundle. For this kind of error Virgo tracks the progress of extender processing and issues warnings to the event log (intended for the administrator’s eyes) saying which pieces of processing have been delayed and in some common situations, for example when a blueprint is waiting for a dependency, what is causing the delay.
Extenders suffer from needing to be able to see bundle lifecycle events and so for systems that partition the framework, it is necessary to install each extender into multiple partitions. On the flip side it is crucial to prevent multiple instances of an extender from ever seeing the same bundle event otherwise they will both attempt to extend the bundle.
Another issue with extenders is the need to keep them running and healthy as there is little indication that an extender is down or sickly other than bundles not being processed by the extender. Virgo takes care to ensure its extenders are correctly started and its infrastructure for detecting delays helps to diagnose extender crashes or sickness (both of which are extremely rare situations).
There is also an issue in passing parameters to an extender to affect its behaviour. This is typically done by embedding extender configuration in the bundles being processed or by attaching a fragment containing configuration to the extender bundle. But since the extender is not driven by an API, the normal approach of passing parameters on a call is not available. Essentially, an extender model implies that the programming model for deployment is restricted to BundleContext.installBundle.
With considerable investment in additional infrastructure, Virgo has managed to support the Blueprint and Spring DM extenders reasonably well. But in the case of the Web Applications extender, Virgo couldn’t make this sufficiently robust and so it drives the underlying web componentry directly from the Virgo deployment pipeline to avoid the above issues.
I understand at least one other server runtime project has encountered similar issues with extenders, so Virgo is not alone. There is a trade-off between loosely coupling the installer from the resource-specific processing, the main strength of the extender pattern (but far from unique to that pattern), and providing a robust programming model and usable management view — crucial features of a server runtime — which is far more straightforward without extenders.
Reference: Extenders: Pattern or Anti-Pattern? from our JCG partner Glyn Normington at the Mind the Gap blog.