Adds five new MXAccess command kinds (WriteBulk, Write2Bulk,
WriteSecuredBulk, WriteSecured2Bulk, ReadBulk) that ride the existing
"one round-trip, per-entry results" bulk shape used by AddItemBulk and
SubscribeBulk today. MXAccess COM has no native bulk API; the worker
runs each bulk operation as a sequential loop on its STA, returning
one BulkWriteResult / BulkReadResult per requested entry so per-item
MXAccess failures surface as was_successful=false rather than throwing.
ReadBulk has no MXAccess analogue. The worker satisfies it by:
- Returning the last cached OnDataChange payload (was_cached=true)
when the requested tag is already in the session''s item registry
AND advised — the existing subscription is NOT touched, since the
caller did not create it.
- Otherwise taking the AddItem + Advise + wait-for-OnDataChange +
UnAdvise + RemoveItem snapshot lifecycle itself (was_cached=false)
and leaving the session exactly as it was. The wait pumps Windows
messages on the STA so the inbound MXAccess event can dispatch
while the executor still holds the thread.
The new MxAccessValueCache lives on each MxAccessSession, shared with
MxAccessBaseEventSink which populates it on every OnDataChange after
the event clears the outbound queue. Eviction on RemoveItem keeps
reused MXAccess handles from serving stale values from a previous
lifetime.
Gateway-side authorization wires WriteBulk/Write2Bulk to invoke:write,
WriteSecuredBulk/WriteSecured2Bulk to invoke:secure, ReadBulk to
invoke:read. The constraint-filter pipeline is refactored from a single
BulkConstraintPlan record into an abstract base plus three concretes
(SubscribeBulk, WriteBulk, ReadBulk), each owning its own denied-entry
merge so the dispatch site never branches on reply shape. A new
FilterWriteBulkAsync<TEntry> generic over the four write-entry shapes
runs CheckWriteHandleAsync per entry; denied entries surface as the
BulkWriteResult shape, preserving original-index order.
All five language clients (.NET, Go, Rust, Python, Java) gained the
five new methods following their existing bulk pattern, with regenerated
protobufs.
Tests added:
- MxAccessValueCacheTests (6 cases) — Set/TryGet, Remove resets the
version, TryWaitForUpdate signals on Set, pump step fires each poll.
- MxAccessBaseEventSinkTests — OnDataChange populates the cache,
ValueCache property exposes the bound instance.
- MxAccessCommandExecutorTests — four bulk-write variants (per-entry
success/failure, value+timestamp forwarding, secured user ids),
ReadBulk snapshot lifecycle on uncached tag (timeout surfaces as
was_successful=false), invalid-payload reply.
- GatewayGrpcScopeResolverTests — five new MxCommandKind cases.
- SessionManagerTests — WriteBulk and ReadBulk forwarding through
FakeWorkerHarness; ReadBulk forwards timeout_ms.
- Per-client (.NET, Go, Rust, Python, Java) — WriteBulk builds the
right command and returns per-entry results, ReadBulk forwards the
timeout and unpacks the was_cached flag.
Cross-language e2e CLI subcommands for the new bulks are deliberately
scoped out of this change (each of the five client CLIs would need
five new subcommands plus matching phases in
scripts/run-client-e2e-tests.ps1); coverage equivalent to the existing
bulk-subscribe coverage is provided by worker + gateway + per-client
unit tests.
Docs updated in the same commit: gateway.md (Public MXAccess Command
Surface), docs/DesignDecisions.md (new "Bulk Command Family" section
with the ReadBulk cache-then-snapshot rationale), and every client
README.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
Rust Client Workspace
The Rust client workspace contains the MXAccess Gateway client library, a
test CLI, and tests for generated contract wiring plus wrapper behavior. The
library uses
the shared protobuf inputs documented in
../../docs/ClientProtoGeneration.md so the Rust bindings compile against
the same public gateway and worker contracts as the server.
Layout
clients/rust/
Cargo.toml
build.rs
src/
tests/
crates/mxgw-cli/
build.rs reads the .proto files from
../../src/MxGateway.Contracts/Protos and generates tonic/prost bindings
into Cargo build output. src/generated.rs declares the Rust modules that
include those generated files. src/generated remains reserved for checked-in
generator output if the crate later changes to source-tree generation.
Build And Test
Run the Rust workspace checks from clients/rust:
cargo fmt --all --check
cargo test --workspace
cargo check --workspace
cargo clippy --workspace --all-targets -- -D warnings
The build script uses protoc from PATH or the Windows path recorded in
../../docs/ToolchainLinks.md.
Packaging
Create local release artifacts from clients/rust:
cargo build --workspace --release
cargo install --path crates/mxgw-cli --locked --force
cargo check --workspace regenerates the tonic and prost modules into
Cargo build output through build.rs.
CLI
The CLI exposes version, session, command, event stream, write, and smoke commands over the same client wrapper used by tests:
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- version --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- open-session --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- register --session-id <session-id> --client-name mxgw-rust-cli --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- add-item --session-id <session-id> --server-handle 1 --item TestChildObject.TestInt --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- advise --session-id <session-id> --server-handle 1 --item-handle 1 --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- stream-events --session-id <session-id> --max-events 1 --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- write --session-id <session-id> --server-handle 1 --item-handle 1 --value-type int32 --value 123 --json
Use --tls, --ca-file, and --server-name-override for TLS endpoints. The
CLI reads the API key from --api-key or from --api-key-env, which defaults
to MXGATEWAY_API_KEY. API keys are redacted by the library option and secret
types.
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- smoke --endpoint https://mxgateway.example.local:5001 --tls --ca-file C:\certs\mxgateway-ca.pem --server-name-override mxgateway.example.local --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --item TestChildObject.TestInt --json
Library Surface
ClientOptions configures endpoint, API key, plaintext or TLS transport,
timeouts, custom CA files, and server name override. GatewayClient::connect
creates an authenticated tonic client and attaches authorization: Bearer <api-key> metadata to unary and streaming calls.
GatewayClient exposes raw generated calls through open_session_raw,
close_session_raw, invoke_raw, stream_events, and raw_client. The
session helpers keep MXAccess handles visible:
let session = client.open_session(request).await?;
let server_handle = session.register("mxgw-rust").await?;
let item_handle = session.add_item(server_handle, "TestChildObject.TestInt").await?;
session.advise(server_handle, item_handle).await?;
let mut events = session.events().await?;
session.close().await?;
MxValue, MxArrayValue, and MxStatus wrap generated protobuf messages while
preserving the raw message for parity diagnostics. Command replies whose
protocol status is not PROTOCOL_STATUS_CODE_OK become Error::Command and
retain the raw MxCommandReply.
The session also exposes the full bulk family —
add_item_bulk, advise_item_bulk, remove_item_bulk, un_advise_item_bulk,
subscribe_bulk, unsubscribe_bulk, write_bulk, write2_bulk,
write_secured_bulk, write_secured2_bulk, and read_bulk. Each carries a
Vec of entries in one round-trip and returns one result per entry; per-entry
MXAccess failures populate was_successful = false and never raise. read_bulk
takes a per-tag timeout (u32 milliseconds, 0 = worker default) and returns
the cached OnDataChange value when the tag is already advised (was_cached = true) without touching the existing subscription.
Galaxy Repository browse
The Galaxy Repository service exposes a read-only browse over the AVEVA System
Platform Galaxy Repository (ZB SQL database). It uses the same API-key auth as
the gateway service but requires the metadata:read scope on the server.
GalaxyClient wraps the generated Galaxy bindings the same
way GatewayClient wraps the gateway bindings:
let mut galaxy = GalaxyClient::connect(
ClientOptions::new("http://localhost:5000")
.with_api_key(ApiKey::new(api_key)),
).await?;
let ok = galaxy.test_connection().await?;
let last_deploy = galaxy.get_last_deploy_time().await?; // Option<prost_types::Timestamp>
let objects = galaxy.discover_hierarchy().await?; // Vec<GalaxyObject>
get_last_deploy_time returns None when the server reports
present = false. discover_hierarchy returns the generated
GalaxyObject proto type (re-exported via
mxgateway_client::generated::galaxy_repository::v1) with all attributes
attached.
The CLI ships matching subcommands under galaxy:
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy test-connection --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy last-deploy-time --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy discover-hierarchy --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --json
Watching deploy events
watch_deploy_events opens the WatchDeployEvents server stream. The
server emits a bootstrap DeployEvent describing the
current cache state on subscribe, then one event each time the cached
galaxy.time_of_last_deploy changes. sequence is monotonic per server
start; gaps signal that the per-subscriber buffer dropped older events.
Pass last_seen_deploy_time to suppress the bootstrap event when the
client's cached deploy time matches the server's.
use futures_util::StreamExt;
let mut stream = galaxy.watch_deploy_events(None).await?;
while let Some(event) = stream.next().await {
let event = event?;
println!(
"seq={} objects={} attributes={}",
event.sequence, event.object_count, event.attribute_count,
);
}
// Drop the stream to cancel the gRPC call.
The matching CLI subcommand prints one line per event (--json switches to
one JSON object per event). --last-seen-deploy-time accepts an RFC3339
timestamp and is forwarded to the server. --max-events (default 0 = no
cap) lets you stop after a fixed number of events; otherwise the command
runs until the stream ends or Ctrl+C is pressed.
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy watch --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy watch --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --json
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- galaxy watch --endpoint http://localhost:5000 --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --last-seen-deploy-time 2026-04-28T15:30:00Z
Integration Checks
Run live checks only when a gateway and MXAccess-backed worker are available:
$env:MXGATEWAY_INTEGRATION = '1'
$env:MXGATEWAY_ENDPOINT = 'http://127.0.0.1:5000'
$env:MXGATEWAY_API_KEY = '<gateway-api-key>'
$env:MXGATEWAY_TEST_ITEM = 'TestChildObject.TestInt'
cargo run -p mxgw-cli -- smoke --endpoint $env:MXGATEWAY_ENDPOINT --plaintext --api-key-env MXGATEWAY_API_KEY --item $env:MXGATEWAY_TEST_ITEM --json