Resplit success and failure functions: the latter now reports and
authorMike Taylor <mike@indexdata.com>
Thu, 3 May 2007 14:43:31 +0000 (14:43 +0000)
committerMike Taylor <mike@indexdata.com>
Thu, 3 May 2007 14:43:31 +0000 (14:43 +0000)
stores details of what went wrong.  This will be useful for alerting
administrators.

lib/ZOOM/IRSpy/Test/Ping.pm

index 5c93fb7..a85adc5 100644 (file)
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-# $Id: Ping.pm,v 1.23 2007-04-30 11:26:57 mike Exp $
+# $Id: Ping.pm,v 1.24 2007-05-03 14:43:31 mike Exp $
 
 # See the "Main" test package for documentation
 
@@ -27,64 +27,70 @@ sub start {
 }
 
 
-sub connected { maybe_connected(@_, 1) }
-sub not_connected { maybe_connected(@_, 0) }
-
-sub maybe_connected {
-    my($conn, $task, $__UNUSED_udata, $event, $ok) = @_;
-
-    $conn->log("irspy_test", ($ok ? "" : "not "), "connected");
-    my $rec = $conn->record();
-    $rec->append_entry("irspy:status", "<irspy:probe ok='$ok'>" .
-                      isodate(time()) . "</irspy:probe>");
-
-    if ($ok) {
-       foreach my $opt (qw(search present delSet resourceReport
-                           triggerResourceCtrl resourceCtrl
-                           accessCtrl scan sort extendedServices
-                           level_1Segmentation level_2Segmentation
-                           concurrentOperations namedResultSets
-                           encapsulation resultCount negotiationModel
-                           duplicationDetection queryType104
-                           pQESCorrection stringSchema)) {
-           #print STDERR "\$conn->option('init_opt_$opt') = '", $conn->option("init_opt_$opt"), "'\n";
-           $conn->record()->store_result('init_opt', option => $opt)
-               if $conn->option("init_opt_$opt");
-       }
+sub connected {
+    my($conn, $__UNUSED_task, $__UNUSED_udata, $__UNUSED_event) = @_;
+
+    $conn->log("irspy_test", "connected");
+    $conn->record()->store_result("probe", ok => 1);
+
+    foreach my $opt (qw(search present delSet resourceReport
+                       triggerResourceCtrl resourceCtrl
+                       accessCtrl scan sort extendedServices
+                       level_1Segmentation level_2Segmentation
+                       concurrentOperations namedResultSets
+                       encapsulation resultCount negotiationModel
+                       duplicationDetection queryType104
+                       pQESCorrection stringSchema)) {
+       #print STDERR "\$conn->option('init_opt_$opt') = '", $conn->option("init_opt_$opt"), "'\n";
+       $conn->record()->store_result('init_opt', option => $opt)
+           if $conn->option("init_opt_$opt");
+    }
 
-       foreach my $opt (qw(serverImplementationId
-                           serverImplementationName
-                           serverImplementationVersion)) {
-           my $val = $conn->option($opt);
-           next if !defined $val; # not defined for SRU, for example
-
-           # There doesn't seem to be a reliable way to tell what
-           # character set the server uses for these.  At least one
-           # server (z3950.bcl.jcyl.es:210/AbsysCCFL) returns an ISO
-           # 8859-1 string containing an o-acute, which breaks the
-           # XML parser if we just insert it naively.  It seems
-           # reasonable, though, to guess that the great majority of
-           # servers will use ASCII, Latin-1 or Unicode.  The first
-           # of these is a subset of the second, so that brings it to
-           # down to two.  The strategy is simply this: assume it's
-           # ASCII-Latin-1, and try to convert to UTF-8.  If that
-           # conversion works, fine; if not, assume it's because the
-           # string was already UTF-8, so use it as is.
-           Text::Iconv->raise_error(1);
-           my $maybe;
-           eval {
-               $maybe = $conv->convert($val);
-           }; if (!$@ && $maybe ne $val) {
-               $conn->log("irspy", "converted '$val' from Latin-1 to UTF-8");
-               $val = $maybe;
-           }
-           $conn->record()->store_result($opt, value => $val);
+    foreach my $opt (qw(serverImplementationId
+                       serverImplementationName
+                       serverImplementationVersion)) {
+       my $val = $conn->option($opt);
+       next if !defined $val; # not defined for SRU, for example
+
+       # There doesn't seem to be a reliable way to tell what
+       # character set the server uses for these.  At least one
+       # server (z3950.bcl.jcyl.es:210/AbsysCCFL) returns an ISO
+       # 8859-1 string containing an o-acute, which breaks the XML
+       # parser if we just insert it naively.  It seems reasonable,
+       # though, to guess that the great majority of servers will use
+       # ASCII, Latin-1 or Unicode.  The first of these is a subset
+       # of the second, so that brings it to down to two.  The
+       # strategy is simply this: assume it's ASCII-Latin-1, and try
+       # to convert to UTF-8.  If that conversion works, fine; if
+       # not, assume it's because the string was already UTF-8, so
+       # use it as is.
+       Text::Iconv->raise_error(1);
+       my $maybe;
+       eval {
+           $maybe = $conv->convert($val);
+       }; if (!$@ && $maybe ne $val) {
+           $conn->log("irspy", "converted '$val' from Latin-1 to UTF-8");
+           $val = $maybe;
        }
+       $conn->record()->store_result($opt, value => $val);
     }
 
+    return ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_GOOD;
+}
+
+
+sub not_connected {
+    my($conn, $__UNUSED_task, $__UNUSED_udata, $exception) = @_;
+
+    $conn->log("irspy_test", "not connected: $exception");
+    $conn->record()->store_result("probe",
+                                 ok => 0,
+                                 errcode => $exception->code(),
+                                 errmsg => $exception->message(),
+                                 addinfo => $exception->addinfo(),
+                                 diagset => $exception->diagset());
 
-    return $ok ? ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_GOOD :
-                ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_BAD;
+    return ZOOM::IRSpy::Status::TEST_BAD;
 }