First off, there's a bit of background to this issue available on my blog:
- http://www.codebork.com/coding/2008/06/25/message-passing-a-plug-framework.html
- http://www.codebork.com/coding/2008/07/31/message-passing-2.html
I'm aware that the descriptions aren't hugely clear, so I'll try to summarise what I'm attempting as best I can here. The application is a personal finance program. Further background on the framework itself is available at the end of this post.
There are a number of different types of plug-in that the framework can handle (e.g., accounts, export, reporting, etc.). However, I'm focussing on one particular class of plug-in, so-called data plug-ins, as it is this class that is causing me problems. I have one class of data plug-in for accounts, one for transactions, etc.
I'm midway through a vast re-factoring that has left me with the following architecture for data plug-ins:
- The data plug-in object (implementing intialisation, installation and plug-in metadata) [implements
IDataPlugin<FactoryType>] - The data object (such as an account) [implements, e.g.,
IAccount] - A factory to create instances of the data object [implements, e.g.,
IAccountFactory]
Previously the data object and the plug-in object were combined into one, but this meant that a new transaction plug-in had to be instantiated for each transaction recorded in the account which caused a number of problems. Unfortunately, that re-factoring has broken my message passing. The data object implements INotifyPropertyChanged, and so I've hit a new problem, and one that I'm not sure how to work around: the plug-in object is registering events with the message broker, but it's the data objects that actually fire the events. This means that the subscribing plug-in currently has to subscribe to each created account, transaction, etc.! This is clearly not scalable.
As far as I can tell at the moment I have two possible solutions:
- Make the data plug-in object a go-between for the data-objects and message broker, possibly batching change notifications. I don't like this because it adds another layer of complexity to the messaging system that I feel I should be able to do without.
- Junk the current event-based implementation and use something else that's more easily manageable (in-memory WCF?!).
So I guess I'm really asking:
- How would you solve this problem?
- What potential solutions do you think I've overlooked?
- Is my approach even vaguely on-track/sensible?! :-)
As you will be able to tell from the dates of the blog posts, some variant of this problem has been taxing me for quite a long time now! As such, any and all responses will be greatly appreciated.
The background to the framework itself is as follows:
My plug-in framework consists of three main components: a plug-in broker, a preferences manager and a message broker. The plug-in broker does the bread-and-butter plug-in stuff: discovering and creating plug-ins. The preferences manager manages user preferences for the framework and individual plug-ins, such as which plug-ins are enabled, where data should be saved, etc. Communication is via publish/subscribe, with the message broker sitting in the middle, gathering all published message types and managing subscriptions. The publish/subscribe is currently implemented via the .NET
INotifyPropertyChangedinterface, which provides one event calledPropertyChanged; the message broker builds a list of all plug-ins implementingINotifyPropertyChangedand subscribes other plug-ins this event. The purpose of the message passing is to allow the account and transaction plug-ins to notify the storage plug-ins that data has changed so that it may be saved.