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I am trying to get the grips of using Iteratees in Play 2 to stream comet results. I have got the handle go creating an enumerator from a callback and an enumeratee from a map. My issue is with the Enumeratee.map, this takes a function that takes a pure input and returns a pure output (e.g. the String to Int conversion in the doc). What I would like to do is take a pure input and return a promise of a result. After all, an enumerator feeds an enumeratee with promises, an enumeratee converts one enumerator to the other, so there should be a way to make an enumeratee that maps to promises.

Now, let me make an example to make this a bit clearer. Let's say that I have an http request coming in with a list of IDs to query in my database. Let's say that these ids represent rows in a database table and the request does a set of (long) computations on these rows and then returns a set of json objects representing the computation. As I have long blocking stuff to do, it would be cool to stream that one ID at a time, so I would like to have an enumeratee pipeline that does:

  1. query a row in the database (returns a promise of the row)
  2. make a long computation on the row (takes a row and returns a promise of a computation)
  3. convert the long computation to JSON
  4. &> this out to the Comet enumeratee provided by Play 2

1 is kinda easy, I can construct an enumerator with a fromCallback that will return a promise of the query result. 3 is also kinda easy, as it's a simple Enumeratee.map

But I can't wrap my head around how to implement the applyOn of the enumeratee of step 2. I can of understood that I have bo build a new iteratee that get the promise from the "inner" iteratee, flatMap the long calculation and return the new promise. What I don't get is how to make this given the odd applyOn signature: def applyOn[A](it: Iteratee[To, A]): Iteratee[From, Iteratee[To, A]]

Can someone help me with that?

Thanks

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  • just a note, in this simple example, I could clearly merge 1 and 2 in a simple enumerator, but the real application is actually a bit more complex ;)
    – Mortimer
    May 21, 2012 at 16:42

2 Answers 2

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There is a method on master Enumeratee.mapM[E] that takes f: E => Promise[NE] and returns Enumeratee[E, NE]

https://github.com/playframework/Play20/blob/master/framework/src/play/src/main/scala/play/api/libs/iteratee/Enumeratee.scala#L150

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  • I have already porter generateM to work in 2.0.1, I will try mapM too, merci ;)
    – Mortimer
    Jun 2, 2012 at 3:52
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The signature of applyOn makes more sense when you think that the enumeratee combines with an iteratee on the right like in enumerator |>> (enumeratee &> iteratee). iteratee has type Iteratee[E, A] and enumerator expects a Iteratee[Promise[E], Iteratee[E, A] so that the inner iteratee can be extracted. So applyOn will have to a Iteratee[E, A] and return a Iteratee[Promise[E], Iteratee[E, A].

Here is the outline of an implementation. It defines a step function that takes an input and return the expected result. Then recursively steps through the promise elements.

import play.api.libs.concurrent._
import play.api.libs.iteratee._

def unpromise[E]: Enumeratee[Promise[E], E] = new Enumeratee[Promise[E], E] {
  def applyOn[A](inner: Iteratee[E, A]): Iteratee[Promise[E], Iteratee[E, A]] = {
    def step(input: Input[Promise[E]], i: Iteratee[E, A]): Iteratee[Promise[E], Iteratee[E, A]] = {
      input match {
        case Input.EOF => Done(i, Input.EOF)
        case Input.Empty => Cont(step(_, i))
        case Input.El(pe) =>
          val pe2 = pe.map(e => i.feed(Input.El(e))).flatMap(identity)
          val i2 = Iteratee.flatten(pe2)
          i2.pureFlatFold(
            (a, e2) => Done(i2, Input.Empty),
            k => Cont(step(_, i2)),
            (msg, e2) => Done(i2, Input.Empty))
      }
    }
    // should check that inner is not done or error - skipped for clarity
    Cont(step(_, inner))
  }
}

I'm discarding e2, so there is probably more code to ensure some input is not lost.

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  • ok, it seems to be a solution to my problem: have a map enumeratee that produces promises then convert with unpromise and keep going on like this. I will have to study this as I am still pretty confuse to what e2 and i2 are. For checking the error/done, I think I might be able to use Enumeratee.CheckDone. Thanks.
    – Mortimer
    May 23, 2012 at 21:45
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    @Mortimer, pe is a Promise[E]. pe.map(e => i.feed(Input.El(e))) should be a Promise[Promise[Iteratee[E, A]]]. pe2 is a Promise[Iteratee[E, A]]. i2 is an Iteratee[E, A] and is the next step of the computation in process. e2 is the left over input if the computation in process is done or is an error. Most of the time it will be Input.Empty but it could be a value of type E if the input was not fully consumed (think of peek for instance).
    – huynhjl
    May 23, 2012 at 23:46

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