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Example usages of various Curator features.
/**
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
* distributed with this work for additional information
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file
* to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the
* "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
* with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing,
* software distributed under the License is distributed on an
* "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY
* KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
* specific language governing permissions and limitations
* under the License.
*/
package async;
import org.apache.curator.framework.CuratorFramework;
import org.apache.curator.x.async.AsyncCuratorFramework;
import org.apache.curator.x.async.AsyncEventException;
import org.apache.curator.x.async.WatchMode;
import org.apache.zookeeper.WatchedEvent;
import java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage;
/**
* Examples using the asynchronous DSL
*/
public class AsyncExamples
{
public static AsyncCuratorFramework wrap(CuratorFramework client)
{
// wrap a CuratorFramework instance so that it can be used async.
// do this once and re-use the returned AsyncCuratorFramework instance
return AsyncCuratorFramework.wrap(client);
}
public static void create(CuratorFramework client, String path, byte[] payload)
{
AsyncCuratorFramework async = AsyncCuratorFramework.wrap(client); // normally you'd wrap early in your app and reuse the instance
// create a node at the given path with the given payload asynchronously
async.create().forPath(path, payload).whenComplete((name, exception) -> {
if ( exception != null )
{
// there was a problem
exception.printStackTrace();
}
else
{
System.out.println("Created node name is: " + name);
}
});
}
public static void createThenWatch(CuratorFramework client, String path)
{
AsyncCuratorFramework async = AsyncCuratorFramework.wrap(client); // normally you'd wrap early in your app and reuse the instance
// this example shows to asynchronously use watchers for both event
// triggering and connection problems. If you don't need to be notified
// of connection problems, use the simpler approach shown in createThenWatchSimple()
// create a node at the given path with the given payload asynchronously
// then watch the created node
async.create().forPath(path).whenComplete((name, exception) -> {
if ( exception != null )
{
// there was a problem creating the node
exception.printStackTrace();
}
else
{
handleWatchedStage(async.watched().checkExists().forPath(path).event());
}
});
}
public static void createThenWatchSimple(CuratorFramework client, String path)
{
AsyncCuratorFramework async = AsyncCuratorFramework.wrap(client); // normally you'd wrap early in your app and reuse the instance
// create a node at the given path with the given payload asynchronously
// then watch the created node
async.create().forPath(path).whenComplete((name, exception) -> {
if ( exception != null )
{
// there was a problem creating the node
exception.printStackTrace();
}
else
{
// because "WatchMode.successOnly" is used the watch stage is only triggered when
// the EventType is a node event
async.with(WatchMode.successOnly).watched().checkExists().forPath(path).event().thenAccept(event -> {
System.out.println(event.getType());
System.out.println(event);
});
}
});
}
private static void handleWatchedStage(CompletionStage watchedStage)
{
// async handling of Watchers is complicated because watchers can trigger multiple times
// and CompletionStage don't support this behavior
// thenAccept() handles normal watcher triggering.
watchedStage.thenAccept(event -> {
System.out.println(event.getType());
System.out.println(event);
// etc.
});
// exceptionally is called if there is a connection problem in which case
// watchers trigger to signal the connection problem. "reset()" must be called
// to reset the watched stage
watchedStage.exceptionally(exception -> {
AsyncEventException asyncEx = (AsyncEventException)exception;
asyncEx.printStackTrace(); // handle the error as needed
handleWatchedStage(asyncEx.reset());
return null;
});
}
}