Aggregate Operator Predicate Dimension Sample

This topic describes AggregateByPredicate.sbapp, the Aggregate operator predicate dimension sample.

Running the Aggregate Predicate-Based Sample

This sample demonstrates use of the predicate-based Aggregate operator. The predicate-based aggregate uses Boolean strings sent to a control port to open, emit from, and close aggregate windows. Data entered on the TradesIn port are not processed until true is sent to the EmitWindow or CloseWindow field of the control port, or both.

The following table lists the predicate expressions entered in the three predicate dimension fields of the Edit Dimension dialog for this sample.

Predicate Field Expression Entered
Open a window in the current group when input1.OpenWindow
For windows in the current group, Emit if input1.EmitWindow || input1.CloseWindow
For windows in the current group, Close if input1.CloseWindow

The input1 in these expressions refers to input port 1 of the Aggregate operator. In this sample's case, a Union operator precedes the input port of the Aggregate operator, which combines two input streams, WindowControl and TradesIn. You send tuples to the WindowControl stream to open, emit, or close windows. OpenWindow, EmitWindow, and CloseWindow are all fields of type bool in the schema of the WindowControl stream. So you need only send true or false to one or more of these ports to cause a window control action.

Thus, opening an aggregate window is a matter of sending a tuple containing true in the OpenWindow field of the WindowControl port. With a window open, you can now send tuples to the TradesIn stream. However, a computation based on the input trade values is not emitted from the window until you send a tuple containing true to the EmitWindow field of the WindowControl port.

Running AggregateByPredicate.sbapp in StreamBase Studio

  1. In the Package Explorer, double-click to open the AggregateByPredicate.sbapp application. Make sure the application is the currently active tab in the EventFlow Editor.

  2. Click the Run button. This opens the SB Test/Debug perspective and starts the application.

  3. No output is displayed in the Application Output view yet, but the dequeuer is prepared to receive output. This view will eventually show the output of the application.

  4. In the Manual Input view, select the WindowControl stream from the Input stream drop-down list.

  5. In the OpenWindow field, type true, then click Send Data.

  6. Select TradesIn in the Input stream drop-down list.

  7. Enter several volume and price pairs, clicking Send Data after each pair. For example, enter Volume=1000, Price=39.45. Make up any pairs of numbers and send them to the application. Notice that no output is showing in the Application Output view, but you can see the tuples you are sending by switching to the Application Input view.

  8. In the Input stream drop-down, re-select WindowControl.

  9. Click Clear, then enter true in the EmitWindow field and click Send Data. Notice that a single tuple now appears in the Application Output view, showing the calculated VWAP for the volume and price tuples you sent. (Select the tuple to see it in more detail in the Details pane.)

  10. Re-select TradesIn in the Input stream drop-down list, and send several more pairs of volume and price data.

  11. Re-select WindowControl in the Input stream drop-down list. Again click Clear, then enter true in both the EmitWindow and CloseWindow fields. Click Send Data. Another tuple displays in the Application Output view.

  12. When done, press F9 or click the Stop Running Application button.

Running AggregateByPredicate.sbapp in Terminal Windows

This section describes how to run the sample in UNIX terminal windows or Windows command prompt windows. On Windows, be sure to use the StreamBase Command Prompt from the Start menu as described in the Test/Debug Guide, not the default command prompt.

  1. Open four terminal windows on UNIX, or four StreamBase Command Prompts on Windows. In each window, navigate to your workspace copy of the sample, as described above.

  2. In window 1, type:

    sbd AggregateByPredicate.sbapp

    The window shows an INFO line reporting that the server is now listening.

  3. In window 2, type:

    sbc dequeue

    No output is displayed at this point, but the dequeuer is prepared to receive output. This window will eventually show the output of the application.

  4. In window 3, type:

    sbc enq WindowControl

  5. In window 4, type:

    sbc enq TradesIn

  6. In window 3, send true to the OpenWindow field of the WindowControl port:

    true,null,null

  7. In window 4, send several pairs of volume and price pairs. Use any numbers that come to mind, such as:

    4000,23.45

    5000,45.22

    550,119.55

    4000,45.55

    Notice that no output shows in the dequeue window 2 yet.

  8. In window 3, send true to the EmitWindow field of the WindowControl port:

    null,true,null

    Now you see a tuple in the dequeue window 2.

  9. In window 4, send several more pairs of volume and price pairs.

  10. In window 3, send true to the EmitWindow and CloseWindow fields of the WindowControl port:

    null,true,true

    Another tuple shows in the dequeue window 2.

  11. In windows 3 and 4, type Ctrl+C to stop the enqueuer. Then type sbadmin shutdown to terminate the server and the dequeuer.

Importing This Sample into StreamBase Studio

In StreamBase Studio, import this sample with the following steps:

  • From the top menu, click FileLoad StreamBase Sample.

  • Select operator from the Data Constructs and Operators category.

  • Click OK.

StreamBase Studio creates a single project for the all operator samples.

Sample Location

When you load the sample into StreamBase Studio, Studio copies the sample project's files to your Studio workspace, which is normally part of your home directory, with full access rights.

Important

Load this sample in StreamBase Studio, and thereafter use the Studio workspace copy of the sample to run and test it, even when running from the command prompt.

Using the workspace copy of the sample avoids the permission problems that can occur when trying to work with the initially installed location of the sample. The default workspace location for this sample is:

studio-workspace/sample_operator

See Default Installation Directories for the location of studio-workspace on your system.

In the default TIBCO StreamBase installation, this sample's files are initially installed in:

streambase-install-dir/sample/operator

See Default Installation Directories for the default location of studio-workspace on your system.