Background
I've already posted a question about the basics of sharing a Core Data store between processes.
I'm trying to implement the recommendations given and I'm running into problems.
My Goal
I have two processes - the Helper App and the UI. They both share a single data store. I want the UI to update it's NSManagedObjectContext when the Helper App has saved new data to the store.
Current Program Flow
The Helper App Process writes data to the Store.
In the Helper App, I listen for NSManagedObjectContextDidSaveNotification notifications.
When the context is saved, I encode the inserted, deleted and updated objects using their URI representations and NSArchiver.
I send an NSNotification to the NSDistributedNotificationCenter with this encoded dictionary as the userInfo.
The UI Process is listening for the save notification. When it receives the notification, it unarchives the userInfo using NSUnarchiver.
It looks up all the updated/inserted/deleted objects from the URIs given and replaces them with NSManagedObjects.
It constructs an NSNotification with the updated/inserted/deleted objects.
I call mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification: on the Managed Object Context of the UI Process, passing in the NSNotification I constructed in the previous step.
The Problem
Inserted objects are faulted into the UI Managed Object Context fine and they appear in the UI. The problem comes with updated objects. They just don't update.
What I've tried
The most obvious thing to try would be to pass the save Notification from the Helper App process to the UI process. Easy, right? Well, no. Distributed Notifications won't allow me to do that as the userInfo dictionary is not in the right format. That's why I'm doing all the NSArchiving stuff.
I've tried calling refreshObject:mergeChanges:YES on the NSManagedObjects to be updated, but this doesn't seem to have any effect.
I've tried performing the mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification: selector on the main thread and the current thread. Neither seems to affect the result.
I've tried using mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification: before between threads, which of course is much simpler and it worked perfectly. But I need this same functionality between processes.
Alternatives?
Am I missing something here? I'm consistently getting the feeling I'm making this much more complex than it needs to be, but after reading the documentation several times and spending a few solid days on this, I can't see any other way of refreshing the MOC of the UI.
Is there a more elegant way of doing this? Or am I just making a silly mistake somewhere in my code?
The Code
I've tried to make it as readable as possible, but it's still a mess. Sorry.
Helper App Code
-(void)workerThreadObjectContextDidSave:(NSNotification *)saveNotification {
NSMutableDictionary *savedObjectsEncodedURIs = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
NSArray *savedObjectKeys = [[saveNotification userInfo] allKeys];
for(NSString *thisSavedObjectKey in savedObjectKeys) {
// This is the set of updated/inserted/deleted NSManagedObjects.
NSSet *thisSavedObjectSet = [[saveNotification userInfo] objectForKey:thisSavedObjectKey];
NSMutableSet *thisSavedObjectSetEncoded = [NSMutableSet set];
for(id thisSavedObject in [thisSavedObjectSet allObjects]) {
// Construct a set of URIs that will be encoded as NSData
NSURL *thisSavedObjectURI = [[(NSManagedObject *)thisSavedObject objectID] URIRepresentation];
[thisSavedObjectSetEncoded addObject:thisSavedObjectURI];
}
// Archive the set of URIs.
[savedObjectsEncodedURIs setObject:[NSArchiver archivedDataWithRootObject:thisSavedObjectSetEncoded] forKey:thisSavedObjectKey];
}
if ([[savedObjectsEncodedURIs allValues] count] > 0) {
// Tell UI process there are new objects that need merging into it's MOC
[[NSDistributedNotificationCenter defaultCenter] postNotificationName:@"com.synapticmishap.lapsus.save" object:@"HelperApp" userInfo:(NSDictionary *)savedObjectsEncodedURIs];
}
}
UI Code
-(void)mergeSavesIntoMOC:(NSNotification *)notification {
NSDictionary *objectsToRefresh = [notification userInfo];
NSMutableDictionary *notificationUserInfo = [NSMutableDictionary dictionary];
NSArray *savedObjectKeys = [[notification userInfo] allKeys];
for(NSString *thisSavedObjectKey in savedObjectKeys) {
// Iterate through all the URIs in the decoded set. For each URI, get the NSManagedObject and add it to a set.
NSSet *thisSavedObjectSetDecoded = [NSUnarchiver unarchiveObjectWithData:[[notification userInfo] objectForKey:thisSavedObjectKey]];
NSMutableSet *savedManagedObjectSet = [NSMutableSet set];
for(NSURL *thisSavedObjectURI in thisSavedObjectSetDecoded) {
NSManagedObject *thisSavedManagedObject = [managedObjectContext objectWithID:[persistentStoreCoordinator managedObjectIDForURIRepresentation:thisSavedObjectURI]];
[savedManagedObjectSet addObject:thisSavedManagedObject];
// If the object is to be updated, refresh the object and merge in changes.
// This doesn't work!
if ([thisSavedObjectKey isEqualToString:NSUpdatedObjectsKey]) {
[managedObjectContext refreshObject:thisSavedManagedObject mergeChanges:YES];
[managedObjectContext save:nil];
}
}
[notificationUserInfo setObject:savedManagedObjectSet forKey:thisSavedObjectKey];
}
// Build a notification suitable for merging changes into MOC.
NSNotification *saveNotification = [NSNotification notificationWithName:@"" object:nil userInfo:(NSDictionary *)notificationUserInfo];
[managedObjectContext performSelectorOnMainThread:@selector(mergeChangesFromContextDidSaveNotification:)
withObject:saveNotification
waitUntilDone:YES];
}
Setting stalenessInterval of managed object context works. My case involves multiple threads instead of process though.
I'd go with Mike's suggestion and just watch the store file for changes.
Though it may not be the most efficient, I've had success using
- [NSManagedObjectContext reset]
from a second process when there's a change to a store. In my case case, the code is fairly linear — all I do is run a fetch request for some data after resetting. I don't know how this will work with bindings and a complicated UI, but you may be able to post a notification to manually update things if it's not handled automatically.This works, except for sandboxes apps. You can't send a notification with a user info dict. Instead consider some other IPC like XPC or DO.
On a side note, using NSDustributedNotificationCenter is not always 100% if the system is busy.
You're looking for - (void)refreshObject:(NSManagedObject *)object mergeChanges:(BOOL)flag I believe.
This will refresh the object with the info in the persistent store, merging changes if you want.
I used the method in
http://www.mlsite.net/blog/?p=518
then every object is correctly faulted but the faults are fetch in cache so still no update
I had to do [moc stalenessInterval = 0];
And it finally worked, with relationship.
I had this exact same issue with an iPhone app that I've been working on. In my case, the solution involved setting the Context's stalenessInterval to something suitably infinitesimal (e.g., 0.5 seconds).