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akka.pattern.Patterns.scala Maven / Gradle / Ivy
/*
* Copyright (C) 2009-2020 Lightbend Inc.
*/
package akka.pattern
import java.util.Optional
import java.util.concurrent.{ Callable, CompletionStage, TimeUnit }
import scala.compat.java8.FutureConverters._
import scala.concurrent.ExecutionContext
import akka.actor.{ ActorSelection, ClassicActorSystemProvider, Scheduler }
import akka.util.JavaDurationConverters._
/**
* Java API: for Akka patterns such as `ask`, `pipe` and others which work with [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]].
*/
object Patterns {
import scala.concurrent.Future
import scala.concurrent.duration._
import akka.actor.ActorRef
import akka.japi
import akka.pattern.{
after => scalaAfter,
ask => scalaAsk,
askWithStatus => scalaAskWithStatus,
gracefulStop => scalaGracefulStop,
pipe => scalaPipe,
retry => scalaRetry
}
import akka.util.Timeout
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The Future will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* f.onSuccess(new Procedure() {
* public void apply(Object o) {
* nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, o));
* }
* });
* }}}
*/
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeout: Timeout): Future[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(actor, message)(timeout).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.ask(worker, request, duration);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(actor, message)(timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Use for messages whose response is known to be a [[akka.pattern.StatusReply]]. When a [[akka.pattern.StatusReply#success]] response
* arrives the future is completed with the wrapped value, if a [[akka.pattern.StatusReply#error]] arrives the future is instead
* failed.
*/
def askWithStatus(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAskWithStatus(actor, message)(timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* replyTo -> new Request(replyTo),
* timeout);
* }}}
*/
def askWithReplyTo(actor: ActorRef, messageFactory: japi.Function[ActorRef, Any], timeout: Timeout): Future[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(actor, messageFactory.apply _)(timeout).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* askSender -> new Request(askSender),
* timeout);
* }}}
*
* @param actor the actor to be asked
* @param messageFactory function taking an actor ref and returning the message to be sent
* @param timeout the timeout for the response before failing the returned completion stage
*/
def askWithReplyTo(
actor: ActorRef,
messageFactory: japi.function.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(actor, messageFactory.apply _)(Timeout.create(timeout)).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The Future will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* f.onSuccess(new Procedure() {
* public void apply(Object o) {
* nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, o));
* }
* });
* }}}
*/
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeoutMillis: Long): Future[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(actor, message)(new Timeout(timeoutMillis, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* replyTo -> new Request(replyTo),
* timeout);
* }}}
*/
def askWithReplyTo(
actor: ActorRef,
messageFactory: japi.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeoutMillis: Long): Future[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(actor, messageFactory.apply _)(Timeout(timeoutMillis.millis)).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The Future will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.ask(selection, request, timeout);
* f.onSuccess(new Procedure() {
* public void apply(Object o) {
* nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, o));
* }
* });
* }}}
*/
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeout: Timeout): Future[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(selection, message)(timeout).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.ask(selection, request, duration);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(selection, message)(timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The Future will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.ask(selection, request, timeout);
* f.onSuccess(new Procedure() {
* public void apply(Object o) {
* nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, o));
* }
* });
* }}}
*/
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeoutMillis: Long): Future[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(selection, message)(new Timeout(timeoutMillis, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* selection,
* replyTo -> new Request(replyTo),
* timeout);
* }}}
*/
def askWithReplyTo(
selection: ActorSelection,
messageFactory: japi.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeoutMillis: Long): Future[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(selection, messageFactory.apply _)(Timeout(timeoutMillis.millis)).asInstanceOf[Future[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* selection,
* replyTo -> new Request(replyTo),
* timeout);
* }}}
*/
def askWithReplyTo(
selection: ActorSelection,
messageFactory: japi.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(selection, messageFactory.apply _)(timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Register an onComplete callback on this [[scala.concurrent.Future]] to send
* the result to the given [[akka.actor.ActorRef]] or [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]].
* Returns the original Future to allow method chaining.
* If the future was completed with failure it is sent as a [[akka.actor.Status.Failure]]
* to the recipient.
*
* Recommended usage example:
*
* {{{
* final Future f = Patterns.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* // apply some transformation (i.e. enrich with request info)
* final Future transformed = f.map(new akka.japi.Function() { ... });
* // send it on to the next operator
* Patterns.pipe(transformed, context).to(nextActor);
* }}}
*/
def pipe[T](future: Future[T], context: ExecutionContext): PipeableFuture[T] = scalaPipe(future)(context)
/**
* When this [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] finishes, send its result to the given
* [[akka.actor.ActorRef]] or [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]].
* Returns the original CompletionStage to allow method chaining.
* If the future was completed with failure it is sent as a [[akka.actor.Status.Failure]]
* to the recipient.
*
* Recommended usage example:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* // apply some transformation (i.e. enrich with request info)
* final CompletionStage transformed = f.thenApply(result -> { ... });
* // send it on to the next operator
* Patterns.pipe(transformed, context).to(nextActor);
* }}}
*/
def pipe[T](future: CompletionStage[T], context: ExecutionContext): PipeableCompletionStage[T] =
pipeCompletionStage(future)(context)
/**
* Returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: FiniteDuration): Future[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout).asInstanceOf[Future[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If you want to invoke specialized stopping logic on your target actor instead of PoisonPill, you can pass your
* stop command as `stopMessage` parameter
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: FiniteDuration, stopMessage: Any): Future[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout, stopMessage).asInstanceOf[Future[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If you want to invoke specialized stopping logic on your target actor instead of PoisonPill, you can pass your
* stop command as `stopMessage` parameter
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
def gracefulStop(
target: ActorRef,
timeout: java.time.Duration,
stopMessage: Any): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout.asScala, stopMessage).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
def after[T](
duration: FiniteDuration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: Callable[Future[T]]): Future[T] =
scalaAfter(duration, scheduler)(value.call())(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
def after[T](
duration: java.time.Duration,
system: ClassicActorSystemProvider,
value: Callable[CompletionStage[T]]): CompletionStage[T] =
after(duration, system.classicSystem.scheduler, system.classicSystem.dispatcher, value)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
def after[T](
duration: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: Callable[CompletionStage[T]]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration.asScala, scheduler)(value.call())(context)
/**
* Returns a [[scala.concurrent.Future]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated("Use the overload one which accepts a Callable of Future instead.", since = "2.5.22")
def after[T](duration: FiniteDuration, scheduler: Scheduler, context: ExecutionContext, value: Future[T]): Future[T] =
scalaAfter(duration, scheduler)(value)(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided value
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts a Callable of CompletionStage instead.", since = "2.5.22")
def after[T](
duration: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: CompletionStage[T]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration.asScala, scheduler)(value)(context)
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, each subsequent attempt will be made immediately
* if the previous attempt failed.
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned completion operator is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries
* and therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
def retry[T](attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]], attempts: Int, ec: ExecutionContext): CompletionStage[T] = {
require(attempt != null, "Parameter attempt should not be null.")
scalaRetry(() => attempt.call().toScala, attempts)(ec).toJava
}
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, each subsequent attempt will be made with a backoff time,
* if the previous attempt failed.
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned future is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries and
* therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*
* @param minBackoff minimum (initial) duration until the child actor will
* started again, if it is terminated
* @param maxBackoff the exponential back-off is capped to this duration
* @param randomFactor after calculation of the exponential back-off an additional
* random delay based on this factor is added, e.g. `0.2` adds up to `20%` delay.
* In order to skip this additional delay pass in `0`.
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
minBackoff: java.time.Duration,
maxBackoff: java.time.Duration,
randomFactor: Double,
system: ClassicActorSystemProvider): CompletionStage[T] =
retry(
attempt,
attempts,
minBackoff,
maxBackoff,
randomFactor,
system.classicSystem.scheduler,
system.classicSystem.dispatcher)
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, each subsequent attempt will be made with a backoff time,
* if the previous attempt failed.
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned future is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries and
* therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*
* @param minBackoff minimum (initial) duration until the child actor will
* started again, if it is terminated
* @param maxBackoff the exponential back-off is capped to this duration
* @param randomFactor after calculation of the exponential back-off an additional
* random delay based on this factor is added, e.g. `0.2` adds up to `20%` delay.
* In order to skip this additional delay pass in `0`.
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
minBackoff: java.time.Duration,
maxBackoff: java.time.Duration,
randomFactor: Double,
scheduler: Scheduler,
ec: ExecutionContext): CompletionStage[T] = {
require(attempt != null, "Parameter attempt should not be null.")
require(minBackoff != null, "Parameter minBackoff should not be null.")
require(maxBackoff != null, "Parameter minBackoff should not be null.")
scalaRetry(() => attempt.call().toScala, attempts, minBackoff.asScala, maxBackoff.asScala, randomFactor)(
ec,
scheduler).toJava
}
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[scala.concurrent.Future]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, and each subsequent attempt will be made after 'delay'.
* A scheduler (eg context.system.scheduler) must be provided to delay each retry
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned future is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries and
* therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[Future[T]],
attempts: Int,
delay: FiniteDuration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext): Future[T] = {
require(attempt != null, "Parameter attempt should not be null.")
scalaRetry(() => attempt.call, attempts, delay)(context, scheduler)
}
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, and each subsequent attempt will be made after 'delay'.
* A scheduler (eg context.system.scheduler) must be provided to delay each retry
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned completion operator is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries
* and therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
delay: java.time.Duration,
system: ClassicActorSystemProvider): CompletionStage[T] =
retry(attempt, attempts, delay, system.classicSystem.scheduler, system.classicSystem.dispatcher)
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, and each subsequent attempt will be made after 'delay'.
* A scheduler (eg context.system.scheduler) must be provided to delay each retry
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned completion operator is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries
* and therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
delay: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
ec: ExecutionContext): CompletionStage[T] = {
require(attempt != null, "Parameter attempt should not be null.")
scalaRetry(() => attempt.call().toScala, attempts, delay.asScala)(ec, scheduler).toJava
}
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]].
* The first attempt will be made immediately, each subsequent attempt will be made after
* the 'delay' return by `delayFunction`(the input next attempt count start from 1).
* Return an empty [[Optional]] instance for no delay.
* A scheduler (eg context.system.scheduler) must be provided to delay each retry.
* You could provide a function to generate the next delay duration after first attempt,
* this function should never return `null`, otherwise an [[IllegalArgumentException]] will be through.
*
* If attempts are exhausted the returned future is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries and
* therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
delayFunction: java.util.function.IntFunction[Optional[java.time.Duration]],
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext): CompletionStage[T] = {
import scala.compat.java8.OptionConverters._
require(attempt != null, "Parameter attempt should not be null.")
scalaRetry(
() => attempt.call().toScala,
attempts,
attempted => delayFunction.apply(attempted).asScala.map(_.asScala))(context, scheduler).toJava
}
}
/**
* Java 8+ API for Akka patterns such as `ask`, `pipe` and others which work with [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]].
*
* For working with Scala [[scala.concurrent.Future]] from Java you may want to use [[akka.pattern.Patterns]] instead.
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns instead.", since = "2.5.19")
object PatternsCS {
import scala.concurrent.duration._
import akka.actor.ActorRef
import akka.japi
import akka.pattern.{ ask => scalaAsk, gracefulStop => scalaGracefulStop, retry => scalaRetry }
import akka.util.Timeout
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.15")
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeout: Timeout): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(actor, message)(timeout).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(worker, request, duration);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.ask instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
ask(actor, message, Timeout.create(timeout))
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* askSender -> new Request(askSender),
* timeout);
* }}}
*
* @param actor the actor to be asked
* @param messageFactory function taking an actor ref and returning the message to be sent
* @param timeout the timeout for the response before failing the returned completion operator
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.15")
def askWithReplyTo(
actor: ActorRef,
messageFactory: japi.function.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeout: Timeout): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(actor, messageFactory.apply _)(timeout).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* askSender -> new Request(askSender),
* timeout);
* }}}
*
* @param actor the actor to be asked
* @param messageFactory function taking an actor ref and returning the message to be sent
* @param timeout the timeout for the response before failing the returned completion stage
*/
@deprecated("Use Pattens.askWithReplyTo instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def askWithReplyTo(
actor: ActorRef,
messageFactory: japi.function.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
extended.ask(actor, messageFactory.apply _)(Timeout.create(timeout)).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target actor
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Pattens.ask which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def ask(actor: ActorRef, message: Any, timeoutMillis: Long): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(actor, message)(new Timeout(timeoutMillis, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)).toJava
.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.askWithReplyTo(
* worker,
* replyTo -> new Request(replyTo),
* timeout);
* }}}
*
* @param actor the actor to be asked
* @param messageFactory function taking an actor ref to reply to and returning the message to be sent
* @param timeoutMillis the timeout for the response before failing the returned completion operator
*/
@deprecated("Use Pattens.askWithReplyTo which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def askWithReplyTo(
actor: ActorRef,
messageFactory: japi.function.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeoutMillis: Long): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
askWithReplyTo(actor, messageFactory, Timeout(timeoutMillis.millis))
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(selection, request, timeout);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.15")
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeout: Timeout): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(selection, message)(timeout).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(selection, request, duration);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.ask instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
ask(selection, message, Timeout.create(timeout))
/**
* Java API for `akka.pattern.ask`:
* Sends a message asynchronously and returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* holding the eventual reply message; this means that the target [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]]
* needs to send the result to the `sender` reference provided.
*
* The CompletionStage will be completed with an [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]] after the
* given timeout has expired; this is independent from any timeout applied
* while awaiting a result for this future (i.e. in
* `Await.result(..., timeout)`). A typical reason for `AskTimeoutException` is that the
* recipient actor didn't send a reply.
*
* Warning:
* When using future callbacks, inside actors you need to carefully avoid closing over
* the containing actor’s object, i.e. do not call methods or access mutable state
* on the enclosing actor from within the callback. This would break the actor
* encapsulation and may introduce synchronization bugs and race conditions because
* the callback will be scheduled concurrently to the enclosing actor. Unfortunately
* there is not yet a way to detect these illegal accesses at compile time.
*
* Recommended usage:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(selection, request, timeout);
* f.thenRun(result -> nextActor.tell(new EnrichedResult(request, result)));
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Pattens.ask which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def ask(selection: ActorSelection, message: Any, timeoutMillis: Long): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
scalaAsk(selection, message)(new Timeout(timeoutMillis, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS)).toJava
.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* A variation of ask which allows to implement "replyTo" pattern by including
* sender reference in message.
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = Patterns.askWithReplyTo(
* selection,
* askSender -> new Request(askSender),
* timeout);
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Pattens.askWithReplyTo which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def askWithReplyTo(
selection: ActorSelection,
messageFactory: japi.Function[ActorRef, Any],
timeoutMillis: Long): CompletionStage[AnyRef] =
extended
.ask(selection, messageFactory.apply _)(Timeout(timeoutMillis.millis))
.toJava
.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[AnyRef]]
/**
* When this [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] finishes, send its result to the given
* [[akka.actor.ActorRef]] or [[akka.actor.ActorSelection]].
* Returns the original CompletionStage to allow method chaining.
* If the future was completed with failure it is sent as a [[akka.actor.Status.Failure]]
* to the recipient.
*
* Recommended usage example:
*
* {{{
* final CompletionStage f = PatternsCS.ask(worker, request, timeout);
* // apply some transformation (i.e. enrich with request info)
* final CompletionStage transformed = f.thenApply(result -> { ... });
* // send it on to the next operator
* PatternsCS.pipe(transformed, context).to(nextActor);
* }}}
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.pipe instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def pipe[T](future: CompletionStage[T], context: ExecutionContext): PipeableCompletionStage[T] =
pipeCompletionStage(future)(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.12")
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: FiniteDuration): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.gracefulStop instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: java.time.Duration): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout.asScala).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If you want to invoke specialized stopping logic on your target actor instead of PoisonPill, you can pass your
* stop command as `stopMessage` parameter
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.12")
def gracefulStop(target: ActorRef, timeout: FiniteDuration, stopMessage: Any): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout, stopMessage).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with success (value `true`) when
* existing messages of the target actor has been processed and the actor has been
* terminated.
*
* Useful when you need to wait for termination or compose ordered termination of several actors.
*
* If you want to invoke specialized stopping logic on your target actor instead of PoisonPill, you can pass your
* stop command as `stopMessage` parameter
*
* If the target actor isn't terminated within the timeout the [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* is completed with failure [[akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException]].
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.gracefulStop instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def gracefulStop(
target: ActorRef,
timeout: java.time.Duration,
stopMessage: Any): CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean] =
scalaGracefulStop(target, timeout.asScala, stopMessage).toJava.asInstanceOf[CompletionStage[java.lang.Boolean]]
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated("Use the overloaded one which accepts java.time.Duration instead.", since = "2.5.12")
def after[T](
duration: FiniteDuration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: Callable[CompletionStage[T]]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration, scheduler)(value.call())(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided Callable
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.after instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def after[T](
duration: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: Callable[CompletionStage[T]]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration.asScala, scheduler)(value.call())(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided value
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated(
"Use Patterns.after which accepts java.time.Duration and Callable of CompletionStage instead.",
since = "2.5.22")
def after[T](
duration: FiniteDuration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: CompletionStage[T]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration, scheduler)(value)(context)
/**
* Returns a [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]] that will be completed with the success or failure of the provided value
* after the specified duration.
*/
@deprecated(
"Use Patterns.after which accepts java.time.Duration and Callable of CompletionStage instead.",
since = "2.5.22")
def after[T](
duration: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
context: ExecutionContext,
value: CompletionStage[T]): CompletionStage[T] =
afterCompletionStage(duration.asScala, scheduler)(value)(context)
/**
* Returns an internally retrying [[java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage]]
* The first attempt will be made immediately, and each subsequent attempt will be made after 'delay'.
* A scheduler (eg context.system.scheduler) must be provided to delay each retry
* If attempts are exhausted the returned completion operator is simply the result of invoking attempt.
* Note that the attempt function will be invoked on the given execution context for subsequent tries
* and therefore must be thread safe (not touch unsafe mutable state).
*/
@deprecated("Use Patterns.retry instead.", since = "2.5.19")
def retry[T](
attempt: Callable[CompletionStage[T]],
attempts: Int,
delay: java.time.Duration,
scheduler: Scheduler,
ec: ExecutionContext): CompletionStage[T] =
scalaRetry(() => attempt.call().toScala, attempts, delay.asScala)(ec, scheduler).toJava
}