Core¶
Hazelcast Core objects and constants.
- class MemberInfo(address: Address, member_uuid: UUID, attributes: Dict[str, str], lite_member: bool, version: MemberVersion, _, address_map: Dict[EndpointQualifier, Address])[source]¶
Bases:
object
Represents a member in the cluster with its address, uuid, lite member status, attributes, version, and address map.
- address¶
Address of the member.
- uuid¶
UUID of the member.
- attributes¶
Configured attributes of the member.
- lite_member¶
True
if the member is a lite member,False
otherwise. Lite members do not own any partition.
- version¶
Hazelcast codebase version of the member.
- address_map¶
Dictionary of server socket addresses per
EndpointQualifier
of this member.
- class Address(host: str, port: int)[source]¶
Bases:
object
Represents an address of a member in the cluster.
- host¶
Host of the address.
- port¶
Port of the address.
- class ProtocolType[source]¶
Bases:
object
Types of server sockets.
A member typically responds to several types of protocols for member-to-member, client-member protocol, WAN communication etc. The default configuration uses a single server socket to listen for all kinds of protocol types configured, while Advanced Network Config of the server allows configuration of multiple server sockets.
- MEMBER = 0¶
Type of member server sockets.
- CLIENT = 1¶
Type of client server sockets.
- WAN = 2¶
Type of WAN server sockets.
- REST = 3¶
Type of REST server sockets.
- MEMCACHE = 4¶
Type of Memcached server sockets.
- class EndpointQualifier(protocol_type: int, identifier: Optional[str])[source]¶
Bases:
object
Uniquely identifies groups of network connections sharing a common
ProtocolType
and the same network settings, when Hazelcast server is configured with Advanced Network Configuration enabled.In some cases, just the
ProtocolType
is enough (e.g. since there can be only a single member server socket).When just the
ProtocolType
is not enough (for example when configuring outgoing WAN connections to 2 different target clusters), anidentifier
is used to uniquely identify the network configuration.- property protocol_type: int¶
Protocol type of the endpoint.
- property identifier: Optional[str]¶
Unique identifier for same-protocol-type endpoints.
- class DistributedObjectEventType[source]¶
Bases:
object
Type of the distributed object event.
- CREATED = 'CREATED'¶
DistributedObject is created.
- DESTROYED = 'DESTROYED'¶
DistributedObject is destroyed.
- class DistributedObjectEvent(name: str, service_name: str, event_type: str, source: UUID)[source]¶
Bases:
object
Distributed Object Event
- name¶
Name of the distributed object.
- service_name¶
Service name of the distributed object.
- event_type¶
Event type. Either
CREATED
orDESTROYED
.
- source¶
UUID of the member that fired the event.
- class SimpleEntryView(key: KeyType, value: ValueType, cost: int, creation_time: int, expiration_time: int, hits: int, last_access_time: int, last_stored_time: int, last_update_time: int, version: int, ttl: int, max_idle: int)[source]¶
Bases:
Generic
[KeyType
,ValueType
]EntryView represents a readonly view of a map entry.
- key¶
The key of the entry.
- value¶
The value of the entry.
- cost¶
The cost in bytes of the entry.
- creation_time¶
The creation time of the entry.
- expiration_time¶
The expiration time of the entry.
- hits¶
Number of hits of the entry.
- last_access_time¶
The last access time for the entry.
- last_stored_time¶
The last store time for the value.
- last_update_time¶
The last time the value was updated.
- version¶
The version of the entry.
- ttl¶
The last set time to live milliseconds.
- max_idle¶
The last set max idle time in milliseconds.
- class HazelcastJsonValue(value: Any)[source]¶
Bases:
object
HazelcastJsonValue is a wrapper for JSON formatted strings.
It is preferred to store HazelcastJsonValue instead of Strings for JSON formatted strings. Users can run predicates and use indexes on the attributes of the underlying JSON strings.
HazelcastJsonValue is queried using Hazelcast’s querying language.
In terms of querying, numbers in JSON strings are treated as either Long or Double in the Java side. str, bool and None are treated as String, boolean and null respectively.
HazelcastJsonValue keeps given string as it is. Strings are not checked for being valid. Ill-formatted JSON strings may cause false positive or false negative results in queries.
HazelcastJsonValue can also be constructed from JSON serializable objects. In that case, objects are converted to JSON strings and stored as such. If an error occurs during the conversion, it is raised directly.
None values are not allowed.