It would be helpful to have a small example though, if you have on Galen, to see how you're passing it around.
On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 11:10 AM Austin Cawley-Edwards < austin.caw...@gmail.com> wrote: > Looking through the statefun Context interface, it indeed doesn't give > access to the underlying context.Context and the only implementation is > package-private [1]. I don't think there would be a way to update the > statfun.Context interface without introducing breaking changes, but if we > were to make that implementation public, that might be a stopgap solution. > e.g., > > ``` > type StatefunContext struct { > // expose embedded context > context.Context > > // make the mutext private > mu sync.Mutex > > // keep internals private > self Address > caller *Address > storage *storage > response *protocol.FromFunction_InvocationResponse > } > ``` > > You could then do a type assertion in the handlers for this type of > context, and modify the context on it directly. It would be a bit ugly, but > may work. > > ``` > func (s aFunc) Invoke(ctx Context, message Message) error { > if sCtx, ok := ctx.(*statefun.StatefunContext); ok { > sCtx.Context = context.WithValue(sCtx.Context, "logger", aLogger) > } > // ... > } > ``` > > Let me know what you all think, > Austin > > > [1]: > https://github.com/apache/flink-statefun/blob/1dfe226d85fea05a46c8ffa688175b4c0f2d4900/statefun-sdk-go/v3/pkg/statefun/context.go#L66-L73 > > > On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 11:03 AM Galen Warren <ga...@cvillewarrens.com> > wrote: > >> Sorry Austin, I didn't see your response before I replied. Yes, we're >> saying the same thing. >> >> On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 10:56 AM Austin Cawley-Edwards < >> austin.caw...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> > Hey all, jumping in. This makes sense to me – for instance to attach a >> > logger with some common metadata, e.g trace ID for the request? This is >> > common in go to add arbitrary items without updating the method >> signatures, >> > similar to thread local storage in Java. >> > >> > On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 10:53 AM Till Rohrmann <trohrm...@apache.org> >> > wrote: >> > >> > > Thanks for the clarification Galen. If you call the other Go >> functions, >> > > then you could also pass the other values as separate arguments to >> these >> > > functions, can't you? >> > > >> > > Cheers, >> > > Till >> > > >> > > On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 3:31 PM Galen Warren <ga...@cvillewarrens.com >> > >> > > wrote: >> > > >> > > > The former. >> > > > >> > > > I think there's potential for confusion here because we're using the >> > > > word *function >> > > > *in a couple of senses. One sense is a *stateful function*; another >> > sense >> > > > is a *Go function*. >> > > > >> > > > What I'm looking to do is to put values in the Context so that >> > downstream >> > > > Go functions that receive the context can access those values. Those >> > > > downstream Go functions would be called during one invocation of the >> > > > stateful function. >> > > > >> > > > On Fri, Feb 18, 2022 at 6:48 AM Till Rohrmann <trohrm...@apache.org >> > >> > > > wrote: >> > > > >> > > > > Hi Galen, >> > > > > >> > > > > Am I understanding it correctly, that you would like to set some >> > values >> > > > in >> > > > > the Context of function A that is then accessible in a downstream >> > call >> > > of >> > > > > function B? Or would you like to set a value that is accessible >> once >> > > > > function A is called again (w/ or w/o the same id)? >> > > > > >> > > > > Cheers, >> > > > > Till >> > > > > >> > > > > On Thu, Feb 17, 2022 at 10:59 PM Galen Warren < >> > ga...@cvillewarrens.com >> > > > >> > > > > wrote: >> > > > > >> > > > > > Also, a potentially simpler way to support this would be to add >> a >> > > > > > SetContext method to the statefun.Context interface, and have it >> > > assign >> > > > > the >> > > > > > wrapped context. This would not require changes to the function >> > spec, >> > > > or >> > > > > > anything else, and would be more flexible. >> > > > > > >> > > > > > On Thu, Feb 17, 2022 at 1:05 PM Galen Warren < >> > > ga...@cvillewarrens.com> >> > > > > > wrote: >> > > > > > >> > > > > > > Thanks for the quick reply! >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > What I'm trying to do is put some things into the context so >> that >> > > > > they're >> > > > > > > available in downstream calls, perhaps in methods with pointer >> > > > > receivers >> > > > > > to >> > > > > > > the function struct (MyFunc) but also perhaps in methods that >> are >> > > > > further >> > > > > > > downstream that don't have access to MyFunc. If I'm >> understanding >> > > > > > > correctly, your proposal would work for the former but not the >> > > > latter. >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > An example would be to put a configured Logger into the >> context >> > > via a >> > > > > > > WithLogger method (logging package - knative.dev/pkg/logging >> - >> > > > > > pkg.go.dev >> > > > > > > <https://pkg.go.dev/knative.dev/pkg/logging#WithLogger>) and >> > then >> > > > pull >> > > > > > it >> > > > > > > out downstream via FromContext (logging package - >> > > > > > knative.dev/pkg/logging >> > > > > > > - pkg.go.dev < >> > > https://pkg.go.dev/knative.dev/pkg/logging#FromContext >> > > > > >). >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > > On Wed, Feb 16, 2022 at 5:50 PM Seth Wiesman < >> > sjwies...@gmail.com> >> > > > > > wrote: >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > >> Hi Galen, >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> No, that is not currently supported, the current idiomatic >> way >> > > would >> > > > > be >> > > > > > to >> > > > > > >> pass those values to the struct implementing the Statefun >> > > interface. >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> type MyFunc struct { someRuntimeInfo string } func (m >> *MyFunc) >> > > > > > Invoke(ctx >> > > > > > >> statefun.Context, message statefun.Message) error { } func >> > main() >> > > { >> > > > > > >> builder >> > > > > > >> := statefun.StatefulFunctionsBuilder() >> > > > > > >> f := MyFunc { someRuntimeInfo: "runtime-provided" } >> > > builder.WithSpec >> > > > > > >> (statefun.StatefulFunctionSpec{ FunctionType: >> > > statefun.TypeNameFrom( >> > > > > > >> "example/my-func"), Function: f }) >> > > > > > >> http.Handle("/statefun", builder.AsHandler()) >> > > > > > >> _ = http.ListenAndServe(":8000", nil) } >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> Would this work for you? Or what is the context (pun >> intended) >> > you >> > > > are >> > > > > > >> looking for? >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> Seth >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> On Wed, Feb 16, 2022 at 4:35 PM Galen Warren < >> > > > ga...@cvillewarrens.com >> > > > > > >> > > > > > >> wrote: >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > >> > When stateful functions are invoked, they are passed an >> > instance >> > > > of >> > > > > > >> > statefun.Context, which wraps the context.Context received >> by >> > > the >> > > > > HTTP >> > > > > > >> > request. Is there any way to customize that context.Context >> > to, >> > > > say, >> > > > > > >> hold >> > > > > > >> > custom values, using ctx.WithValue()? I don't see a way >> but I >> > > > wanted >> > > > > > to >> > > > > > >> > ask. >> > > > > > >> > >> > > > > > >> > If not, would you be interested in a PR to add this >> > > > functionality? A >> > > > > > >> simple >> > > > > > >> > way might be to add a property to StatefulFunctionSpec, >> say: >> > > > > > >> > >> > > > > > >> > TransformContext func(ctx context.Context) context.Context >> > > > > > >> > >> > > > > > >> > ... that, if supplied, would be called to create a >> customized >> > > > > context >> > > > > > >> that >> > > > > > >> > would be used downstream? >> > > > > > >> > >> > > > > > >> > Thanks. >> > > > > > >> > >> > > > > > >> >> > > > > > > >> > > > > > >> > > > > >> > > > >> > > >> > >> >