1

I'm writing an app that raises events, similar to how Phil Windley's personal data manager application works. However, if I try to use any event domain but explicit, the events don't get propagated. The following rules work fine with explicit as the domain, but not with driverreg.

rule driver_info_submit {
    select when web pageview ".*"
    pre {
        driver_name = "Joe Driver";
        driver_phone = "111-555-1212";
        msg = <<
            Current driver info: #{ent:driver_name}, #{ent:driver_phone}
        >>;
    }
    notify("Started", msg);
    fired {
        raise explicit event new_driver_data with driver_name=driver_name and driver_phone=driver_phone;
    }
}

// Save driver name
rule save_driver_name {
    select when explicit new_driver_data
    pre {
        driver_name = event:param("driver_name") || ent:driver_name;
        driver_phone = event:param("driver_phone") || ent:driver_phone;
    }
    noop();
    always {
        set ent:driver_name driver_name;
        set ent:driver_phone driver_phone;
        raise explicit event driver_data_updated;
    }
}

rule driver_info_updated {
    select when explicit driver_data_updated
    {
        notify("Driver name", ent:driver_name);
        notify("Driver phone", ent:driver_phone);
    }
}

It doesn't seem to be a problem with whether the app is deployed, as I've tried it both ways. What am I missing?

1 Answer 1

2

Only certain domains are allowed as domains in the raise statement:

  • explicit
  • http
  • system
  • notification
  • error
  • pds

This may be relaxed in the future.

This is covered in the documents here: https://kynetxdoc.atlassian.net/wiki/display/docs/Raising+Explicit+Events+in+the+Postlude (note that this is a temporary home for the documentation)

1
  • Got it. I had assumed that pds was arbitrary; didn't know there was a whitelist. Thanks!
    – Steve Nay
    Feb 27, 2012 at 22:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.