Skip to main content

Notice: this Wiki will be going read only early in 2024 and edits will no longer be possible. Please see: https://gitlab.eclipse.org/eclipsefdn/helpdesk/-/wikis/Wiki-shutdown-plan for the plan.

Jump to: navigation, search

Difference between revisions of "ContextId"

(Definition)
(Details)
Line 8: Line 8:
  
 
== Details ==
 
== Details ==
* Two different [[ContextId]]s may refer to the same [[Context]].
 
 
* It is not required for a [[ContextId]]s to resolve to a [[Context]] instance in which case this is referred to as an abstract [[ContextId]]. However, most [[Context]]s are not abstract, and can be resolved a network (or local) data access service to discover the information necessary to access the [[Context]].
 
* It is not required for a [[ContextId]]s to resolve to a [[Context]] instance in which case this is referred to as an abstract [[ContextId]]. However, most [[Context]]s are not abstract, and can be resolved a network (or local) data access service to discover the information necessary to access the [[Context]].
  

Revision as of 00:21, 1 February 2008

Introduction

This page describes and defines a Higgins ContextId.

Definition

  • A ContextId is a kind of Attribute that uniquely identifies the instance of a Context that contains it.
  • The value of a ContextId MUST be a single instance of a ContextIdDatatype.
  • If the value of a ContextId is resolvable, its value should dereference the information necessary to discover how to access a Context. See Context Discovery.

Details

  • It is not required for a ContextIds to resolve to a Context instance in which case this is referred to as an abstract ContextId. However, most Contexts are not abstract, and can be resolved a network (or local) data access service to discover the information necessary to access the Context.

ContextIds and IdAS

  • The Identity Attribute Service (IdAS) can be used as a service to access a Context given a ContextId.
  • If two ContextId's values are equal, they refer to the same underlying Context, although not necessarily the same Context "container" instance returned by IdAS. This means that, as a requester of information, different clients of IdAS may see different subsets of the Context based on the authorization passed in during authentication.
  • A given ContextId may be used against multiple Context Providers to produce the same Context (although, as mentioned, different Context instances).

See Also

Links

Back to the top