Web Services & Javascript: Difference between revisions

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== Server Side in C ==
== Server Side in C ==


=== Queries to See What Data Is Available ===
=== Page Setup Query ===
To minimize the round trips between the web server and the jQuery client, the initial query to the server returns quite a bit of information, which can be broken into two main parts:
==== What is the user's state ====
===== Organism/assembly/position =====
===== Various UI preferences =====
==== What data is available to the user ====
===== What organisms/assemblies =====
===== What tracks =====
===== What links in the toolbar =====
==== List of displayed tracks ====


=== Queries to Fetch Data for Genomic Regions ===
=== Queries to Fetch Data for Genomic Regions ===
==== Item list ====
==== Summary/samples ====
==== "Browser" query ====
===== Image =====
===== Map box =====
List of items in non-dense tracks with just enough info to generate the map-boxes.
==== Queries to See What Data Is Available ====
===== What Organisms/Assemblies given user =====
===== What  Tracks given user =====
===== Track description =====
===== Track metadata =====


=== Queries to Fetch Data for One Item ===
=== Queries to Fetch Data for One Item ===

Revision as of 19:17, 4 March 2009

Introduction and Motivation

We're thinking of reworking the genome browser so that Javascript is responsible for the layout of the page at a high level rather than the C scripts on the server. As part of this we'll be moving the C scripts to more of a web-services oriented architecture, where they'll be returning information in JSON rather than in HTML and GIF images. For the near term at least they probably will return GIF images as well. The goal of this rearchitecting is to make it easier to be more interactive, and to take advantage of the good Javascript user-interface (UI) oriented libraries like jQuery.

As is often the case with software development, the demon is in the details. Nonetheless it is helpful to have a clear, simple high level design to start with - to keep at least the messy details in one location of the code from breeding and exponentially multiplying with messy details in other locations....

Architectural Overview

The overall architecture is based on the flow of data through server side scripts in C at genome.ucsc.edu into Javascript-controlled web pages. The major objects in the system include (some of which have expressions both in the C and the Javascript side) include "user," "dataSource," "genomeAssembly," "track," "item," and "relationship." The user object handles passwords and other security, and the user interface settings. A dataSource represents a place that the system queries for live data. It may include a file or data base on the server, a remote SQL database or file set, a web site that the C scripts know how to query via a web-services interface of some sort, or the user's custom tracks. A genomeAssembly includes a particular genome assembly and a NCBI taxon number. A track is conceptually just a table that _may_ include genome position fields that are hooked to a genome assembly. Tracks may be implemented in a variety of ways, not necessarily as SQL tables. An item is conceptually a row in a track table. A relationship links together fields in the track/table rows.


Abstract notion of a data track

Server Side in C

Page Setup Query

To minimize the round trips between the web server and the jQuery client, the initial query to the server returns quite a bit of information, which can be broken into two main parts:

What is the user's state

Organism/assembly/position
Various UI preferences

What data is available to the user

What organisms/assemblies
What tracks
What links in the toolbar

List of displayed tracks

Queries to Fetch Data for Genomic Regions

Item list

Summary/samples

"Browser" query

Image
Map box

List of items in non-dense tracks with just enough info to generate the map-boxes.


Queries to See What Data Is Available

What Organisms/Assemblies given user
What Tracks given user
Track description
Track metadata

Queries to Fetch Data for One Item

User Settings - The Cart

Client Side in Javascript

Displaying Tracks

Drag and Drop Reordering

Drag and Zoom

Drag and Scroll

Displaying the list of available tracks

Displaying details on one item