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Mastering JBoss Drools 6

You're reading from   Mastering JBoss Drools 6 Discover the power of Drools 6 and Business Rules for developing complex scenarios in your applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783288625
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Mariano De Maio Mariano De Maio
Author Profile Icon Mariano De Maio
Mariano De Maio
Esteban Aliverti Esteban Aliverti
Author Profile Icon Esteban Aliverti
Esteban Aliverti
Mauricio Salatino Mauricio Salatino
Author Profile Icon Mauricio Salatino
Mauricio Salatino
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Rules Declarative Nature 2. Writing and Executing Rules FREE CHAPTER 3. Drools Runtime 4. Improving Our Rule Syntax 5. Understanding KIE Sessions 6. Complex Event Processing 7. Human-Readable Rules 8. Rules' Testing and Troubleshooting 9. Introduction to PHREAK 10. Integrating Rules and Processes 11. Integrating Drools with our Apps Index

Adding external interactions with global variables


Interactions between our code and the business rules are mainly done by the rules that we define and the data that we feed in our running rule engine. In order to interact with data that is not in the Rule Engine context, Drools allows quite a variety of communication mechanisms to the other parts of our code and even to other systems. One of the most used tools for this are called global variables.

Global variables are defined in the DRL code in a similar way that we would define a variable in regular Java code. The syntax to follow is the global keyword, followed by the type of data, and then by the variable name:

global EShopConfigService configService;

Global variables can be a lot of things such as external services, lists of cached data, parameter values for our rule configurations, and anything that we might define in a Java code and we wish to have as a configurable component from our runtime.

In our DRL code examples (which we can...

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