public interface MultiDoc
MultiDoc
specifies the interface for an object that
supplies more than one piece of print data for a Print Job. "Doc" is a short,
easy-to-pronounce term that means "a piece of print data," and a "multidoc"
is a group of several docs. The client passes to the Print Job an object that
implements interface MultiDoc
, and the Print Job calls methods on
that object to obtain the print data.
Interface MultiDoc
provides an abstraction similar to a "linked list"
of docs. A multidoc object is like a node in the linked list, containing the
current doc in the list and a pointer to the next node (multidoc) in the
list. The Print Job can call the multidoc's getDoc()
method
to get the current doc. When it's ready to go on to the next doc, the Print
Job can call the multidoc's next()
method to get the next
multidoc, which contains the next doc. So Print Job code for accessing a
multidoc might look like this:
void processMultiDoc(MultiDoc theMultiDoc) { MultiDoc current = theMultiDoc; while (current != null) { processDoc (current.getDoc()); current = current.next(); } }Of course, interface
MultiDoc
can be implemented in any way that
fulfills the contract; it doesn't have to use a linked list in the
implementation.
To get all the print data for a multidoc print job, a Print Service proxy could use either of two patterns:
- The interleaved pattern: Get the doc from the current multidoc. Get the print data representation object from the current doc. Get all the print data from the print data representation object. Get the next multidoc from the current multidoc, and repeat until there are no more. (The code example above uses the interleaved pattern.)
- The all-at-once pattern: Get the doc from the current multidoc, and save the doc in a list. Get the next multidoc from the current multidoc, and repeat until there are no more. Then iterate over the list of saved docs. Get the print data representation object from the current doc. Get all the print data from the print data representation object. Go to the next doc in the list, and repeat until there are no more.
To address this problem, and to simplify the design of clients providing
multiple docs to a Print Job, every Print Service proxy that supports
multidoc print jobs is required to access a MultiDoc
object using the
interleaved pattern. That is, given a MultiDoc
object, the print
service proxy will call getDoc()
one or more times until it
successfully obtains the current Doc
object. The print service proxy
will then obtain the current doc's print data, not proceeding until all the
print data is obtained or an unrecoverable error occurs. If it is able to
continue, the print service proxy will then call next()
one
or more times until it successfully obtains either the next MultiDoc
object or an indication that there are no more. An implementation of
interface MultiDoc
can assume the print service proxy will follow
this interleaved pattern; for any other pattern of usage, the
MultiDoc
implementation's behavior is unspecified.
There is no restriction on the number of client threads that may be simultaneously accessing the same multidoc. Therefore, all implementations of interface MultiDoc must be designed to be multiple thread safe. In fact, a client thread could be adding docs to the end of the (conceptual) list while a Print Job thread is simultaneously obtaining docs from the beginning of the list; provided the multidoc object synchronizes the threads properly, the two threads will not interfere with each other.
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Method Details
-
getDoc
Obtain the current doc object.- Returns:
- current doc object
- Throws:
IOException
- if an error occurred when reading the document
-
next
Go to the multidoc object that contains the next doc object in the sequence of doc objects.- Returns:
- multidoc object containing the next doc object, or
null
if there are no further doc objects - Throws:
IOException
- if an error occurred locating the next document
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