AWS S3: Event notification configuration for [else/unmatched] [event/prefix/suffix] - amazon-web-services

In the notification document (link below) the examples for Notification Configurations, it explains that configurations with overlapping prefix/suffix combinations are invalid.
Notification How To
However, there aren't any details for a way to catch any unspecified prefixes. If I had an S3 bucket with the directories dir1/ and dir2/, with a notification configuration like:
<NotificationConfiguration>
<TopicConfiguration>
<Topic>arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123412341234:sns-notify-dir1</Topic>
<Event>s3:ObjectCreated:*</Event>
<Filter>
<S3Key>
<FilterRule>
<Name>prefix</Name>
<Value>dir1</Value>
</FilterRule>
</S3Key>
</Filter>
</TopicConfiguration>
<TopicConfiguration>
<Topic>arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123412341234:sns-notify-dir2</Topic>
<Event>s3:ObjectCreated:*</Event>
<Filter>
<S3Key>
<FilterRule>
<Name>prefix</Name>
<Value>dir2</Value>
</FilterRule>
</S3Key>
</Filter>
</TopicConfiguration>
</NotificationConfiguration>
Is it possible to add a catchall filter? I know that overlapping rules don't work, so I can't just add:
<TopicConfiguration>
<Topic>arn:aws:sns:us-east-1:123412341234:sns-notify-generic</Topic>
<Event>s3:ObjectCreated:*</Event>
</TopicConfiguration>
I'd like to know if I can have a more generic SNS notification in the event that an object is added under a 3rd directory, or in no directory, while still handling the first two cases specifically. Specifically, I'd like a filter that only catches things that haven't already been filtered, though I would also be happy with the ability to send multiple notifications (such as sending sns-notify-dir1 and sns-notify-generic for dir1, but just sns-notify-generic for dir3).
dir1/ -> Handled by sns-notify-dir1
dir2/ -> Handled by sns-notify-dir2
/ -> How can I handle with sns-notify-generic?
dir3/ -> How can I handle with sns-notify-generic?
I realize that alternative solutions will work, such as only writing a generic SNS and having my utilities sort out whether to listen to it, as well as sending everything to a lambda function to sort out which notification to trigger. However, I like the idea of coding this as cleanly as possible, if it is possible.
Please let me know if additional details would help, and thank you!

Related

Monadic bind with Cmd

I have a function
convertMsg : Msg1 -> List Msg2
where Msg1 and Msg2 are certain message types. And I would like to turn this into a function:
convertCmd : Cmd Msg1 -> Cmd Msg2
Which would for every message in the batch replace it with some messages possibly none or more than 1.
As a Haskell programmer at heart I immediately reach for a monadic bind ((>>=) in Haskell and andThen in the Elm parlance), a function with the type:
bind : (a -> Cmd b) -> Cmd a -> Cmd b
I can easily change my convertMsg to be the following:
convertMsg : msg1 -> Cmd Msg2
At which point it would be just perfect for the bind.
But looking in Platform.Cmd, there isn't such a function I can find. There's a map which is similar, but convertMsg can't really be convertMsg : Msg1 -> Msg2 since it doesn't always give back exactly one message.
Is there a way to achieve this? Is there some limitation to the Cmd type that would prevent this sort of thing?
What you're trying to do to messages, how you might, and whether it's a good plan
I promise I'll try to answer what I think you're trying to do, but first I think there's a more important thing...
You're perhaps assuming that Cmd is analogous to IO from Haskell, but Cmd is asynchronous and isn't designed to chain actions. Your update is what glues consequences to outputs:
update : Msg -> Model -> (Model,Cmd Msg)
At the end of your update, you can issue a Cmd Msg to ask elm to do something externally, usually passing it a constructor with which it can wrap its output. This output comes back to your update function.
What you don't do is chain Cmds together as you would in a monad. There's no bind for Cmd, or to put it another way, the only bind for Cmd is your update function!
Now I suppose that if you wanted to catch a MyComplexMsg : Msg and turn it into [SimpleMsg1,SimpleMsg2], you could pattern match for it in your update function, leave the model unchanged and issue a new Cmd Msg, but what command would you be running the second time?
You could certainly take a pure Msg -> List Msg function and use Cmd.map to apply it, or apply it manually in the pattern match at the beginning of update, like
update msg model = case msg of
MyComplexMsg -> myHandler [SimpleMsg1,SimpleMsg2]
...
or even go full state monad style with
update msg model0 = case msg of
MyComplexMsg ->
let
(model1,cmd1) = update SimpleMsg1 model0
(model2,cmd2) = update SimpleMsg2 model1
in
(model2,Cmd.batch [cmd1,cmd2])
to try to emulate monadic bind, but I don't know why you might ever want this, and a lot of advice in the elm literature and community is that if you're calling update from update you're probably doing it wrong. Make a separate single-purpose helper function for that stuff instead of re-running your entire program logic twice!
Let go of your need to have a monad
I suspect that what's going wrong is that you're not letting go of a monadic control flow mentality. update is where it's at. update is where you make things happen. User input and asynchronous messages are your drivers, not sequencing. Cmd is just for communicating externally. You don't plumb the results back in, the elm architecture does that for you. Just handle the result of your Cmd (which will arrive as a message) as a branch in your update and it'll all progress nicely, and if the user presses some button of their own choice without you making it happen, so be it. You can handle that too.
I worry that you're trying to write a monad transformer stack in elm, which is a bit like trying to write an object oriented programming library in haskell. Haskell doesn't do object oriented programming, and the sooner folks drop the OO thinking and let go of their need to bundle data and functions together, the sooner they're writing good haskell code. Elm doesn't do typeclasses, it does model/view/update, and does it extraordinarily well. Let go of your need to find and use a monad to control the flow of your program, and instead respond to what messages you're given. Make a Msg for something you want to happen, provide a way to trigger it appropriately in your view and then handle it in your update.
When should one message become three messages?
If one of your messages is really three messages, why isn't it three messages already? If it's just that in response to that particular message, you just need to do three things to your model and issue five commands, why not just have one message and get update to do those three things to your model using pure code and issue the five commands in a batch?
If you need to log the successful login, then get the user's photo, then query the database for their recent activity, then display it all, then I disagree about the immediateness, and they're all asynchronous. You can issue commands to do each of those things in a batch, and when the responses come back you will need to separately deal with each - update your model with the image when it arrives, with the list of recent activity when it arrives. Once your model is in the state that the picture and the recent activity are both there you can change the view, but why not show each as soon as they're there?
Using monads sometimes trains us to think sequentially when we're doing effects programming when we needn't, but now, finally, I'll address what to do when there is a compelling need to sequence commands.
Genuinely necessary sequential commands
Perhaps there really is something sequential that you need. Maybe you have to query some data store for something before you send some request elsewhere. You still don't use a bind, you just use your update:
update msg model = case msg of
StartsMultiStageProcess userID ->
({model|multiStageProcessStatus = RequestedData}
, getDataPart1 userID PartOneReceived )
PartOneReceived userData ->
({model|multiStageProcessStatus = Fired}
, fireRockets userData.nemesis.location RocketResult)
RocketResult r -> if model.multiStageProcessStatus == Fire then
case r of
Ok UtterlyDestroyed ->
....
Ok DamagedBeyondUse ->
....
Err disappointment ->
....
...
A handy point is that if your model doesn't have the required data, it automatically won't show the missing data in the view (sum types for the win), and you can store whatever state your multistage process is in in the model.
You might prefer to put all of those messages into a new type so it becomes indented once further in the handler and won't ever be mixed with other ones in the order, like
MSPmsg msg -> case msg of
Started userId ->
...
GotPartOne userData ->
but much more likely use a helper function like MSPmsg msg -> updateMultiStageProcess.
Concluding advice
Maybe there's some great use case for delving into messages and commands and editing them that you haven't made explicit, but Cmd is opaque and all you can do is issue them and handle the resulting messages, so I'm sceptical but definitely interested.
Also in giving you update to write, it's almost like they've given you the app-specific bind to write (but it's not a functor and you absolutely do look at the data), so they've given you the keys to the Tesla. It takes a bit of getting used to but you're really going to like what happens at the traffic lights. Don't attempt to dismantle the door hinges until you've learned to drive it.
Edit: Your specific use case: inter-page communication
It turns out in chat that you're trying to get messages from one page to be usable in other pages or the overall update - sometimes one page needs to tell the app to change page and tell the new page to start an animation. I might have skipped all the advice above if I'd known that initially, but I think it's good advice for anyone coming from Haskell and I'm leaving it in!
Multiple messages
I still think it's important to accept that sometimes a single message needs to cover multiple actions, and you sort that out in your update function rather than try to create multiple messages in response to a single user action.
Lots of elm folks give the advice that your messages, rather than describing something to do like AddProduct they should describe something that happened in the past, partly because that's how messages come to you in your update so your mental model of what the elm runtime is doing is accurate, and partly because you're less likely to want to make two messages and do weird message translations when you ought to make one message.
Do multiple things in your ClickedViewOffers branch of update rather than try to make both a SwitchToOffersPage and a
AnimatePickOfTheDay message.
I'd like to point out that your idea to convert your messages and filter them somehow within the messages type is doing it in the wrong place. Filtering so that your Home page doesn't get all the messages for your Login page is something you have to do in update anyway - don't try to filter them while you're making or passing the messages. update is where it's at for deciding what to do in response to user input. Messages are for describing user input.
OK, but how do you get messages to cross the barriers between pages?!
There are a few ways to achieve this and it might be worth looking into different ways of making a Single Page Application (SPA) in Elm. I found this article by Rogério Chaves on Medium quite enlightening on the topic of various ways of organising messages from child page to parent app. He's done the TodoMVC app all the different ways in this repo A stack overflow post is better if it inlines ideas, so here we go:
Common Msg type across all pages
This can work by having a separate module for your message types which all your modules import. Messages look like ProductsMsg (UserCreatedNewProduct productRecord), as they might well do anyway, but because all the message types are global you can call another page's methods.
Individual pages also return an OutMsg from their update function
Use better names than these (eg Login.Msg rather than LoginMsg), but...
loginPageUpdate : LoginMsg -> LoginModel -> (LoginModel,Cmd LoginMsg,OutMsgFromLogin)
update : GlobalMsg -> GlobalModel -> (GlobalModel,Cmd GlobalMsg)
update msg model = case msg of
LoginMsg loginMsg ->
let (newLoginModel,cmd,outMsgFromLogin) = loginPageUpdate loginMsg model.loginModel
in
...
(You'd need NoOp :: OutMsgFromLogin or use Maybe OutMsgFromLogin there. I'm not a fan of NoOp. It's terribly tempting to use it for unimplemented features, and it's the king of all divorced-from-user-intentions messages that doesn't explain why you ought to do nothing or how you came to write something where you generated a purposeless message. I think it's a code smell that there's a better way of writing something.)
Have a record of messages that you later use to translate your page's Msgs messages into global messages.
(Again, use better domain-specific names, I'm trying to convey usage in my names.)
type LoginMessagesRecord globalMsg =
{ internalLoginMsgTag : LoginMsg -> globalMsg
, loginSucceeded : User -> globalMsg
, loginFailed : globalMsg
, newUserSuccessfullyRegistered : User -> globalMsg
}
and in your main, you would specify these:
loginMessages : LoginMessagesRecord GlobalMsg
loginMessages =
{ internalLoginMsgTag = LocalLoginMsg
, loginSucceeded = LoginSucceeded
, loginFailed = LoginFailed
, newUserSuccessfullyRegistered = NewUserSuccessfullyRegistered
}
You can either parameterise functions in your Login code with those so they all consume a LoginMessagesRecord and produce a msg, or you can use a genuinely local message type and write a translation helper in your Login module:
type HereOrThere here there = Here here | There there
type LocalLoginMessage = EditedUserName String | EditedPassword String | ....
type MessageForElsewhere = LoggedIn User | DidNotLogIn | MadeNewAccount User
type alias LoginMsg = HereOrThere LocalLoginMessage MessageForElsewhere
loginMsgTranslator : LoginMessagesRecord msg -> LoginMsg -> msg
loginMsgTranslator
{ internalLoginMsgTag
, loginSucceeded
, loginFailed
, newUserSuccessfullyRegistered
}
loginMsg = case loginMsg of
Here msg -> internalLoginMsgTag msg
There msg -> case msg of
LoggedIn user -> loginSucceeded user
DidNotLogIn -> loginFailed
MadeNewAccount user -> newUserSuccessfullyRegistered user
and then you can use Html.map loginMsgTranslator loginView in your global view, or Element.map loginMsgTranslator loginView if you're using the utterly brilliant html&css-free way to write elm apps, elm-ui.
Summary / takeaway
Have a single message describing a user intention and use update to handle all the consequences.
Don't edit the messages, respond appropriately in the update
The user is in control. The runtime is in control. You're not in control. Don't generate messages yourself, just respond to them. If you're generating messages rather than the user or the runtime, you're using elm in a weird way that'll be hard.
Your program logic largely resides in update. It doesn't reside in message. Don't try to make things happen in message, just describe what the user did or what the system did in the message.
Use case statements and descriptive tags in message types to help choose which update helper function to run. It can often help to use union types to describe how local a message is. Sometimes you use a local updating function, sometimes a global one.
You might want to also read this reddit thread about scaling elm apps that Rogério Chaves references.

Jberet - Retryable exception class working?

Is there a way to see in the log that the retry is happening? I need to know if this is working in our test environment before implementing it into production.
There are rare instances when we get the following due to a portion of the key being a timestamp and data coming in to the table from various sources. We need to have the writer retry when we get a - DB2 SQL Error: SQLCODE=-803, SQLSTATE=23505
<chunk>
...
<retryable-exception-classes>
<include class="com.ibm.db2.jcc.am.SqlIntegrityConstraintViolationException"></include>
</retryable-exception-classes>
</chunk>
JBeret does not log these event, but you can implement some listeners defined by batch spec to act on you own. For example, RetryReadListener, RetryWriteListener, or RetryProcessListener.

Should I have concern about datastoreRpcErrors?

When I run dataflow jobs that writes to google cloud datastore, sometime I see the metrics show that I had one or two datastoreRpcErrors:
Since these datastore writes usually contain a batch of keys, I am wondering in the situation of RpcError, if some retry will happen automatically. If not, what would be a good way to handle these cases?
tl;dr: By default datastoreRpcErrors will use 5 retries automatically.
I dig into the code of datastoreio in beam python sdk. It looks like the final entity mutations are flushed in batch via DatastoreWriteFn().
# Flush the current batch of mutations to Cloud Datastore.
_, latency_ms = helper.write_mutations(
self._datastore, self._project, self._mutations,
self._throttler, self._update_rpc_stats,
throttle_delay=_Mutate._WRITE_BATCH_TARGET_LATENCY_MS/1000)
The RPCError is caught by this block of code in write_mutations in the helper; and there is a decorator #retry.with_exponential_backoff for commit method; and the default number of retry is set to 5; retry_on_rpc_error defines the concrete RPCError and SocketError reasons to trigger retry.
for mutation in mutations:
commit_request.mutations.add().CopyFrom(mutation)
#retry.with_exponential_backoff(num_retries=5,
retry_filter=retry_on_rpc_error)
def commit(request):
# Client-side throttling.
while throttler.throttle_request(time.time()*1000):
try:
response = datastore.commit(request)
...
except (RPCError, SocketError):
if rpc_stats_callback:
rpc_stats_callback(errors=1)
raise
...
I think you should first of all determine which kind of error occurred in order to see what are your options.
However, in the official Datastore documentation, there is a list of all the possible errors and their error codes . Fortunately, they come with recommended actions for each.
My advice is that your implement their recommendations and see for alternatives if they are not effective for you

apple logger (ASL) ignoring rule in /etc/asl.conf for specific facility

I've got a C/C++/Objective-C project that send asl logging messages.
The default configuration in asl.conf route all log message with level above notice to system log (see below rule), and I'd like to cancel this rule for my specific facility only.
This means, that all log messages under my facility will be routed to my log file only, and not to system.log.
here's the configuraiton where my facility is defined to com.bla.bla
asl.conf
? [<= Level notice] file system.log
my_asl.conf
? [<= Level notice] [=Facility com.bla.bla] skip / ignore
I've tried both skip and ignore, but i didn't made any change. the only thing that work is to erase the rule from asl.conf, but i don't want to change the behavior of other processes / facilities and to modify some default rules.
is there any rule i can add to ban my messages only from system.log ?
thanks
After re-reading asl.conf man page over and over again, I've found out that i can use 'claim' command to ignore asl.conf base configuration file for my specific rule
claim Messages that match the query associated with a 'claim' action are not processed by the main ASL configuration file /etc/asl.conf. While claimed messages are not pro-cessed processed cessed by /etc/asl.conf, they are not completely private. Other modules may also claim messages, and in some cases two or more modules may have claim actions that match the same messages. This action only blocks processing by /etc/asl.conf.
The `claim' action may be followed by the keyword 'only'. In this case, only those messages that match the 'claim only' query will be processed by subsequent
rules in the module.
I followed the description of the tag 'claim' and added the following configuration to my config file :
? [= com.bla.bla] file /var/log/my-log
? [= com.bla.bla] claim

What is the best way to include a ResourceAdapter (rar) with the Liberty Buildpack?

We have a situation where a Liberty application accesses a custom resource adapter through a JNDI lookup to a connection factory, defined in the server.xml. The combination of the connectionFactory, resourceAdapter, and enterpriseApplication nodes in the server.xml appears to make it impossible to bundle the rar inside the ear and push an ear as a single entity without major app refactoring, which is a non-starter.
I see two options for getting around this right now:
Push the rar/ear combo as a bundled server package, or
Modify the Liberty buildpack to pull in the rar at push time, generating the expected nodes in the server.xml
Am I missing a third option?
Thanks, Tom
The third option would be to embed the RAR in your app, but I didn't understand your comment about why that would require extensive app refactoring. In theory, the app shouldn't change, just the config...
See the IBM Knowledge Center topic http://www-01.ibm.com/support/knowledgecenter/SSEQTP_8.5.5/com.ibm.websphere.wlp.doc/ae/twlp_jca_config_resadapters.html?lang=en for details on configuring a connection factory for use with an embedded resource adapter.
For the standalone resource adapter, I assume you had something like this in server.xml:
<connectionFactory jndiName="eis/NAME" type="javax.resource.cci.ConnectionFactory">
<properties.rarName dataStoreName="name" hostName="otherName"/>
</connectionFactory>
<resourceAdapter id="rarName" location="rarName.rar"/>
when you embed the rar in the ear, as you noted, that resourceAdapter node goes away and instead you would use something like this:
<application location="C:/applications/app1.ear"/>
<connectionFactory jndiName="eis/NAME” type='javax.resource.cci.ConnectionFactory’>
<properties.app1.rarName dataStoreName="name" hostName="otherName"/>
</connectionFactory>
Note that for an embedded resource adapter, the properties element must now also include the application name (in this case “app1”) in the name of the element.
As indicated in the Knowledge Center topic, if you wanted to override the default name of the resource adapter, you could instead do:
<application location="C:/applications/app1.ear”>
<resourceAdapter id=“rarName" alias="MyEmbeddedRA"/>
</application>
<connectionFactory jndiName="eis/NAME" type="javax.resource.cci.ConnectionFactory">
<properties.app1.MyEmbeddedRA dataStoreName="name" hostName="otherName"/>
</connectionFactory>