Skip to main content

SeriesCacheService

Trait SeriesCacheService 

Source
pub trait SeriesCacheService {
    // Required methods
    fn get_chunks(
        &self,
        auth_: BearerToken,
        logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier,
        get_chunks_parameters: GetChunksParameters,
    ) -> Result<GetChunksResponse, Error>;
    fn create_chunks(
        &self,
        auth_: BearerToken,
        logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier,
        create_chunks_parameters: CreateChunksParameters,
    ) -> Result<CreateChunksResponse, Error>;
    fn batch_create_chunks(
        &self,
        auth_: BearerToken,
        request: CreateChunksParameters,
    ) -> Result<CreateChunksResponse, Error>;
    fn delete_chunks(
        &self,
        auth_: BearerToken,
        logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier,
        request: DeleteChunksParameters,
    ) -> Result<DeleteChunksResponse, Error>;
}
Expand description

The Series Cache service manages internal chunks of data cached by Nominal’s backend.

Required Methods§

Source

fn get_chunks( &self, auth_: BearerToken, logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier, get_chunks_parameters: GetChunksParameters, ) -> Result<GetChunksResponse, Error>

Fetches “chunks” of series that are stored as Arrow files in S3. This endpoint is being deprecated for new series in favor of batchGetCachedSeries

Source

fn create_chunks( &self, auth_: BearerToken, logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier, create_chunks_parameters: CreateChunksParameters, ) -> Result<CreateChunksResponse, Error>

Source

fn batch_create_chunks( &self, auth_: BearerToken, request: CreateChunksParameters, ) -> Result<CreateChunksResponse, Error>

Source

fn delete_chunks( &self, auth_: BearerToken, logical_series_rid: ResourceIdentifier, request: DeleteChunksParameters, ) -> Result<DeleteChunksResponse, Error>

Deletes the chunks that intersect the given time range. Does not delete the corresponding files from S3.

Dyn Compatibility§

This trait is dyn compatible.

In older versions of Rust, dyn compatibility was called "object safety".

Implementors§