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Posted to dev@chemistry.apache.org by "Florian Müller (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2016/01/26 12:24:39 UTC

[jira] [Commented] (CMIS-968) Broswer binding failed to check the property list for secondary type when update/create properties for secondary type

    [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CMIS-968?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=15117075#comment-15117075 ] 

Florian Müller commented on CMIS-968:
-------------------------------------

Does the repository support client managed retention? Does it expose the secondary type "cmis:rm_clientMgtRetention"?
If not, than this is the expected error message. OpenCMIS can't find the type and the properties because the repository does not provide them.

Do you add the secondary type "cmis:rm_clientMgtRetention" to the list of of secondary types in your code ({{secondObjTypeIds}})?
If not, please change your code and try again. OpenCMIS checks the primary type and all provided secondary types. If the secondary type is missing, OpenCMIS doesn't know where to look to for the properties.

> Broswer binding failed to check the property list for secondary type when update/create properties for secondary type 
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CMIS-968
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CMIS-968
>             Project: Chemistry
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: opencmis-server
>    Affects Versions: OpenCMIS 0.13.0
>         Environment: Windows2008R2 
>            Reporter: Xian Zou
>
> I am developing retention management in CMIS1.1 which cmis:secondaryObjectTypeIds is cmis:rm_destructionRetention. After complete the server code for CM repository, I tried to develop a JUNIT case to create/update a document with the cmis:rm_expirationDate and cmis:rm_destructionDate property. All create/update operations works as design for atompub binding, but failed in browser binding with the following error.
> org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.commons.exceptions.CmisInvalidArgumentException: cmis:rm_expirationDate is unknown!
> 	at org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.client.bindings.spi.browser.AbstractBrowserBindingService.convertStatusCode(AbstractBrowserBindingService.java:249)
> 	at org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.client.bindings.spi.browser.AbstractBrowserBindingService.post(AbstractBrowserBindingService.java:377)
> 	at org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.client.bindings.spi.browser.ObjectServiceImpl.updateProperties(ObjectServiceImpl.java:400)
> 	at org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.client.runtime.AbstractCmisObject.updateProperties(AbstractCmisObject.java:349)
> 	at org.apache.chemistry.opencmis.client.runtime.AbstractCmisObject.updateProperties(AbstractCmisObject.java:313)
> 	at com.ibm.ecm.cmis.test.opencmis.util.TestUtils.updateDocument(TestUtils.java:2568)
> 	at com.ibm.ecm.cmis.test.opencmis.object.common.DocumentCRUD.createDocument(DocumentCRUD.java:172)
> Here is my sample code for the update logic as the example.
> Map<String, Object> updateProperties = new HashMap<String, Object>();
>             String newName = "updatedname" + TestUtils.getRandomInt(10000);
>             updateProperties.put("cmis:name", newName);
>             updateProperties.put("clbNonGroup.CMISString", newName);
>             Calendar c = getTestCalendar(2);
>             Calendar c2 = getTestCalendar(3);
>             updateProperties.put(PropertyIds.SECONDARY_OBJECT_TYPE_IDS, secondObjTypeIds);
>             updateProperties.put(PropertyIds.EXPIRATION_DATE, c);
>             updateProperties.put(PropertyIds.DESTRUCTION_DATE, c2);
>             Document updatedDoc = TestUtils.updateDocument(session, doc.getId(), updateProperties);
> I checked the chemistry code and found the following logic may cause the "cmis:rm_expirationDate is unknown!" error" in createNewProperties and createUpdateProperties methods in AbstractBrowserServiceCall.java.
>  PropertiesImpl result = new PropertiesImpl();
>         for (Map.Entry<String, List<String>> property : properties.entrySet()) {
>             PropertyDefinition<?> propDef = typeCache.getPropertyDefinition(property.getKey());
>             if (propDef == null && objectIds != null) {
>                 for (String objectId : objectIds) {
>                     typeCache.getTypeDefinitionForObject(objectId);
>                     propDef = typeCache.getPropertyDefinition(property.getKey());
>                     if (propDef != null) {
>                         break;
>                     }
>                 }
>             }
>             if (propDef == null) {
>                 throw new CmisInvalidArgumentException(property.getKey() + " is unknown!");
>             }
>             result.addProperty(createPropertyData(propDef, property.getValue()));
>         }
> Actually, when we create/update an document, the type definition in the code above will be gotten from the primary object type. The properties for secondary object types will not be gotten in the type definitions , so I think it should be a bug for browser binding. Here are some possible solutions for the issue.
> Possible solution 1: Don't check the properties and throw the CmisInvalidArgumentException(property.getKey() + " is unknown!"); exception for browser binding like other bindings.
> Possible solution 2: Check the properties in type definitions in both primary object type and all possible/passed secondary types. If we find the property in either of them. We will not throw the exception.
> If I develop the code in wrong way, please tell me how to write it correctly.
> Thanks.



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