6.0 KiB
LmxProxy v2 Rebuild — Deviations & Key Technical Decisions
Decisions made during implementation that differ from or extend the original plan.
1. Grpc.Tools downgraded to 2.68.1
Plan specified: Grpc.Tools 2.71.0 Actual: 2.68.1 Why: protoc.exe from 2.71.0 crashes with access violation (exit code 0xC0000005) on windev (Windows 10, x64). The 2.68.1 version works reliably. How to apply: If upgrading Grpc.Tools in the future, test protoc on windev first.
2. STA Dispatch Thread replaced with Task.Run
Plan specified: Dedicated STA thread with BlockingCollection<Action> dispatch queue and Application.DoEvents() message pump for all COM operations.
Actual: Task.Run on thread pool (MTA) for all COM operations, matching the v1 pattern.
Why: The STA thread's message pump (Application.DoEvents()) between work items was insufficient — when a COM call like AdviseSupervisory was dispatched and the thread blocked waiting for the next work item, COM event callbacks (OnDataChange, OnWriteComplete) never fired because there was no active message pump during the wait. MxAccess works from MTA threads because COM marshaling handles cross-apartment calls, and events fire on their own threads.
How to apply: Do not reintroduce STA threading for MxAccess. The System.Windows.Forms reference was removed from the Host csproj.
3. TypedValue property-level _setCase tracking
Plan specified: GetValueCase() heuristic checking non-default values (e.g., if (BoolValue) return BoolValue).
Actual: Each property setter records _setCase = TypedValueCase.XxxValue, and GetValueCase() returns _setCase directly.
Why: protobuf-net code-first has no native oneof support. The heuristic approach can't distinguish "field not set" from "field set to default value" (e.g., BoolValue = false, DoubleValue = 0.0, Int32Value = 0). Since protobuf-net calls property setters during deserialization, tracking in the setter correctly identifies which field was deserialized.
How to apply: Always use GetValueCase() to determine which TypedValue field is set, never check for non-default values directly.
4. API key sent via HTTP header (DelegatingHandler)
Plan specified: API key sent in ConnectRequest.ApiKey field (request body).
Actual: API key sent as x-api-key HTTP header on every gRPC request via ApiKeyDelegatingHandler, in addition to the request body.
Why: The Host's ApiKeyInterceptor validates the x-api-key gRPC metadata header before any RPC handler executes. protobuf-net.Grpc's CreateGrpcService<T>() doesn't expose per-call metadata, so the header must be added at the HTTP transport level. A DelegatingHandler wrapping the SocketsHttpHandler adds it to all outgoing requests.
How to apply: The GrpcChannelFactory.CreateChannel() accepts an optional apiKey parameter. The LmxProxyClient passes it during channel creation in ConnectAsync.
5. v2 test deployment on port 50100
Plan specified: Port 50052 for v2 test deployment. Actual: Port 50100. Why: Ports 50049–50060 are used by MxAccess internal COM connections (established TCP pairs between the COM client and server). Port 50052 was occupied by an ephemeral MxAccess connection from the v1 service. How to apply: When deploying alongside v1, use ports above 50100 to avoid MxAccess ephemeral port range.
6. CheckApiKey validates request body key
Plan specified: Not explicitly defined — the interceptor validates the header key.
Actual: CheckApiKey RPC validates the key from the request body (request.ApiKey) against ApiKeyService, not the header key.
Why: The x-api-key header always carries the caller's valid key (for interceptor auth). The CheckApiKey RPC is designed for clients to test whether a different key is valid, so it must check the body key independently.
How to apply: ScadaGrpcService receives ApiKeyService as an optional constructor parameter.
7. Write completes synchronously (fire-and-forget)
Plan specified: Wait for OnWriteComplete COM callback to confirm write success.
Actual: Write is confirmed synchronously — if _lmxProxy.Write() returns without throwing, the write succeeded. The OnWriteComplete callback is kept wired for diagnostic logging only.
Why: MxAccess completes supervisory writes synchronously. The OnWriteComplete COM callback never fires for simple supervisory writes, causing the original implementation to timeout waiting for a callback that would never arrive. This caused WriteAndReadBack and WriteBatchAndWait integration tests to fail.
How to apply: Do not await OnWriteComplete for write confirmation. The Write() COM call succeeding (not throwing a COM exception) is the confirmation. Clean up (UnAdvise + RemoveItem) happens immediately after the write in a finally block.
8. SubscriptionManager must create MxAccess COM subscriptions
Plan specified: SubscriptionManager manages per-client channels and routes updates from MxAccess.
Actual: SubscriptionManager must also call IScadaClient.SubscribeAsync() to create the underlying COM subscriptions when a tag is first subscribed, and dispose them when the last client unsubscribes.
Why: The Phase 2 implementation tracked client-to-tag routing in internal dictionaries but never called MxAccessClient.SubscribeAsync() to create the actual MxAccess COM subscriptions (AddItem + AdviseSupervisory). Without the COM subscription, OnDataChange never fired and no updates were delivered to clients. This caused the Subscribe_ReceivesUpdates integration test to receive 0 updates over 30 seconds.
How to apply: SubscriptionManager.Subscribe() collects newly-seen tags (those without an existing TagSubscription) and calls _scadaClient.SubscribeAsync() for them, passing OnTagValueChanged as the callback. The returned IAsyncDisposable handles are tracked in _mxAccessHandles per address and disposed in UnsubscribeClient() when the last client for a tag leaves.