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This artifact provides a single jar that contains all classes required to use remote EJB and JMS, including all dependencies. It is intended for use by those not using maven, maven users should just import the EJB and JMS BOM's instead (shaded JAR's cause lots of problems with maven, as it is very easy to inadvertently end up with different versions on classes on the class path).

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/*
 * Copyright (C) 2006 The Guava Authors
 *
 * Licensed 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 com.google.common.util.concurrent;

import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;
import static com.google.common.util.concurrent.Internal.toNanosSaturated;

import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible;
import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible;
import com.google.common.annotations.J2ktIncompatible;
import com.google.common.base.Function;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue;
import com.google.errorprone.annotations.DoNotMock;
import java.time.Duration;
import java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException;
import java.util.concurrent.Executor;
import java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit;
import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException;
import org.checkerframework.checker.nullness.qual.Nullable;

/**
 * A {@link ListenableFuture} that supports fluent chains of operations. For example:
 *
 * 
{@code
 * ListenableFuture adminIsLoggedIn =
 *     FluentFuture.from(usersDatabase.getAdminUser())
 *         .transform(User::getId, directExecutor())
 *         .transform(ActivityService::isLoggedIn, threadPool)
 *         .catching(RpcException.class, e -> false, directExecutor());
 * }
* *

Alternatives

* *

Frameworks

* *

When chaining together a graph of asynchronous operations, you will often find it easier to * use a framework. Frameworks automate the process, often adding features like monitoring, * debugging, and cancellation. Examples of frameworks include: * *

* *

{@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture} / {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletionStage} *

* *

Users of {@code CompletableFuture} will likely want to continue using {@code * CompletableFuture}. {@code FluentFuture} is targeted at people who use {@code ListenableFuture}, * who can't use Java 8, or who want an API more focused than {@code CompletableFuture}. (If you * need to adapt between {@code CompletableFuture} and {@code ListenableFuture}, consider Future Converter.) * *

Extension

* * If you want a class like {@code FluentFuture} but with extra methods, we recommend declaring your * own subclass of {@link ListenableFuture}, complete with a method like {@link #from} to adapt an * existing {@code ListenableFuture}, implemented atop a {@link ForwardingListenableFuture} that * forwards to that future and adds the desired methods. * * @since 23.0 */ @DoNotMock("Use FluentFuture.from(Futures.immediate*Future) or SettableFuture") @GwtCompatible(emulated = true) @ElementTypesAreNonnullByDefault public abstract class FluentFuture extends GwtFluentFutureCatchingSpecialization { /** * A less abstract subclass of AbstractFuture. This can be used to optimize setFuture by ensuring * that {@link #get} calls exactly the implementation of {@link AbstractFuture#get}. */ abstract static class TrustedFuture extends FluentFuture implements AbstractFuture.Trusted { @CanIgnoreReturnValue @Override @ParametricNullness public final V get() throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException { return super.get(); } @CanIgnoreReturnValue @Override @ParametricNullness public final V get(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws InterruptedException, ExecutionException, TimeoutException { return super.get(timeout, unit); } @Override public final boolean isDone() { return super.isDone(); } @Override public final boolean isCancelled() { return super.isCancelled(); } @Override public final void addListener(Runnable listener, Executor executor) { super.addListener(listener, executor); } @CanIgnoreReturnValue @Override public final boolean cancel(boolean mayInterruptIfRunning) { return super.cancel(mayInterruptIfRunning); } } FluentFuture() {} /** * Converts the given {@code ListenableFuture} to an equivalent {@code FluentFuture}. * *

If the given {@code ListenableFuture} is already a {@code FluentFuture}, it is returned * directly. If not, it is wrapped in a {@code FluentFuture} that delegates all calls to the * original {@code ListenableFuture}. */ public static FluentFuture from(ListenableFuture future) { return future instanceof FluentFuture ? (FluentFuture) future : new ForwardingFluentFuture(future); } /** * Simply returns its argument. * * @deprecated no need to use this * @since 28.0 */ @Deprecated public static FluentFuture from(FluentFuture future) { return checkNotNull(future); } /** * Returns a {@code Future} whose result is taken from this {@code Future} or, if this {@code * Future} fails with the given {@code exceptionType}, from the result provided by the {@code * fallback}. {@link Function#apply} is not invoked until the primary input has failed, so if the * primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of {@code fallback}, an * exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output {@code Future}. * *

Usage example: * *

{@code
   * // Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when processing the RPC to fetch
   * // counters.
   * ListenableFuture faultTolerantFuture =
   *     fetchCounters().catching(FetchException.class, x -> 0, directExecutor());
   * }
* *

When selecting an executor, note that {@code directExecutor} is dangerous in some cases. See * the discussion in the {@link #addListener} documentation. All its warnings about heavyweight * listeners are also applicable to heavyweight functions passed to this method. * *

This method is similar to {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#exceptionally}. It * can also serve some of the use cases of {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handle} * and {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handleAsync} when used along with {@link * #transform}. * * @param exceptionType the exception type that triggers use of {@code fallback}. The exception * type is matched against the input's exception. "The input's exception" means the cause of * the {@link ExecutionException} thrown by {@code input.get()} or, if {@code get()} throws a * different kind of exception, that exception itself. To avoid hiding bugs and other * unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding {@code * Throwable.class} in particular. * @param fallback the {@link Function} to be called if the input fails with the expected * exception type. The function's argument is the input's exception. "The input's exception" * means the cause of the {@link ExecutionException} thrown by {@code this.get()} or, if * {@code get()} throws a different kind of exception, that exception itself. * @param executor the executor that runs {@code fallback} if the input fails */ @J2ktIncompatible @Partially.GwtIncompatible("AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") public final FluentFuture catching( Class exceptionType, Function fallback, Executor executor) { return (FluentFuture) Futures.catching(this, exceptionType, fallback, executor); } /** * Returns a {@code Future} whose result is taken from this {@code Future} or, if this {@code * Future} fails with the given {@code exceptionType}, from the result provided by the {@code * fallback}. {@link AsyncFunction#apply} is not invoked until the primary input has failed, so if * the primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of {@code fallback}, * an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output {@code Future}. * *

Usage examples: * *

{@code
   * // Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when processing the RPC to fetch
   * // counters.
   * ListenableFuture faultTolerantFuture =
   *     fetchCounters().catchingAsync(
   *         FetchException.class, x -> immediateFuture(0), directExecutor());
   * }
* *

The fallback can also choose to propagate the original exception when desired: * *

{@code
   * // Falling back to a zero counter only in case the exception was a
   * // TimeoutException.
   * ListenableFuture faultTolerantFuture =
   *     fetchCounters().catchingAsync(
   *         FetchException.class,
   *         e -> {
   *           if (omitDataOnFetchFailure) {
   *             return immediateFuture(0);
   *           }
   *           throw e;
   *         },
   *         directExecutor());
   * }
* *

When selecting an executor, note that {@code directExecutor} is dangerous in some cases. See * the discussion in the {@link #addListener} documentation. All its warnings about heavyweight * listeners are also applicable to heavyweight functions passed to this method. (Specifically, * {@code directExecutor} functions should avoid heavyweight operations inside {@code * AsyncFunction.apply}. Any heavyweight operations should occur in other threads responsible for * completing the returned {@code Future}.) * *

This method is similar to {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#exceptionally}. It * can also serve some of the use cases of {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handle} * and {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handleAsync} when used along with {@link * #transform}. * * @param exceptionType the exception type that triggers use of {@code fallback}. The exception * type is matched against the input's exception. "The input's exception" means the cause of * the {@link ExecutionException} thrown by {@code this.get()} or, if {@code get()} throws a * different kind of exception, that exception itself. To avoid hiding bugs and other * unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding {@code * Throwable.class} in particular. * @param fallback the {@link AsyncFunction} to be called if the input fails with the expected * exception type. The function's argument is the input's exception. "The input's exception" * means the cause of the {@link ExecutionException} thrown by {@code input.get()} or, if * {@code get()} throws a different kind of exception, that exception itself. * @param executor the executor that runs {@code fallback} if the input fails */ @J2ktIncompatible @Partially.GwtIncompatible("AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") public final FluentFuture catchingAsync( Class exceptionType, AsyncFunction fallback, Executor executor) { return (FluentFuture) Futures.catchingAsync(this, exceptionType, fallback, executor); } /** * Returns a future that delegates to this future but will finish early (via a {@link * TimeoutException} wrapped in an {@link ExecutionException}) if the specified timeout expires. * If the timeout expires, not only will the output future finish, but also the input future * ({@code this}) will be cancelled and interrupted. * * @param timeout when to time out the future * @param scheduledExecutor The executor service to enforce the timeout. * @since 28.0 */ @J2ktIncompatible @GwtIncompatible // ScheduledExecutorService public final FluentFuture withTimeout( Duration timeout, ScheduledExecutorService scheduledExecutor) { return withTimeout(toNanosSaturated(timeout), TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS, scheduledExecutor); } /** * Returns a future that delegates to this future but will finish early (via a {@link * TimeoutException} wrapped in an {@link ExecutionException}) if the specified timeout expires. * If the timeout expires, not only will the output future finish, but also the input future * ({@code this}) will be cancelled and interrupted. * * @param timeout when to time out the future * @param unit the time unit of the time parameter * @param scheduledExecutor The executor service to enforce the timeout. */ @J2ktIncompatible @GwtIncompatible // ScheduledExecutorService @SuppressWarnings("GoodTime") // should accept a java.time.Duration public final FluentFuture withTimeout( long timeout, TimeUnit unit, ScheduledExecutorService scheduledExecutor) { return (FluentFuture) Futures.withTimeout(this, timeout, unit, scheduledExecutor); } /** * Returns a new {@code Future} whose result is asynchronously derived from the result of this * {@code Future}. If the input {@code Future} fails, the returned {@code Future} fails with the * same exception (and the function is not invoked). * *

More precisely, the returned {@code Future} takes its result from a {@code Future} produced * by applying the given {@code AsyncFunction} to the result of the original {@code Future}. * Example usage: * *

{@code
   * FluentFuture rowKeyFuture = FluentFuture.from(indexService.lookUp(query));
   * ListenableFuture queryFuture =
   *     rowKeyFuture.transformAsync(dataService::readFuture, executor);
   * }
* *

When selecting an executor, note that {@code directExecutor} is dangerous in some cases. See * the discussion in the {@link #addListener} documentation. All its warnings about heavyweight * listeners are also applicable to heavyweight functions passed to this method. (Specifically, * {@code directExecutor} functions should avoid heavyweight operations inside {@code * AsyncFunction.apply}. Any heavyweight operations should occur in other threads responsible for * completing the returned {@code Future}.) * *

The returned {@code Future} attempts to keep its cancellation state in sync with that of the * input future and that of the future returned by the chain function. That is, if the returned * {@code Future} is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel the other two, and if either of the * other two is cancelled, the returned {@code Future} will receive a callback in which it will * attempt to cancel itself. * *

This method is similar to {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenCompose} and * {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenComposeAsync}. It can also serve some of the * use cases of {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handle} and {@link * java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handleAsync} when used along with {@link #catching}. * * @param function A function to transform the result of this future to the result of the output * future * @param executor Executor to run the function in. * @return A future that holds result of the function (if the input succeeded) or the original * input's failure (if not) */ public final FluentFuture transformAsync( AsyncFunction function, Executor executor) { return (FluentFuture) Futures.transformAsync(this, function, executor); } /** * Returns a new {@code Future} whose result is derived from the result of this {@code Future}. If * this input {@code Future} fails, the returned {@code Future} fails with the same exception (and * the function is not invoked). Example usage: * *

{@code
   * ListenableFuture> rowsFuture =
   *     queryFuture.transform(QueryResult::getRows, executor);
   * }
* *

When selecting an executor, note that {@code directExecutor} is dangerous in some cases. See * the discussion in the {@link #addListener} documentation. All its warnings about heavyweight * listeners are also applicable to heavyweight functions passed to this method. * *

The returned {@code Future} attempts to keep its cancellation state in sync with that of the * input future. That is, if the returned {@code Future} is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel * the input, and if the input is cancelled, the returned {@code Future} will receive a callback * in which it will attempt to cancel itself. * *

An example use of this method is to convert a serializable object returned from an RPC into * a POJO. * *

This method is similar to {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenApply} and * {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenApplyAsync}. It can also serve some of the * use cases of {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handle} and {@link * java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#handleAsync} when used along with {@link #catching}. * * @param function A Function to transform the results of this future to the results of the * returned future. * @param executor Executor to run the function in. * @return A future that holds result of the transformation. */ public final FluentFuture transform( Function function, Executor executor) { return (FluentFuture) Futures.transform(this, function, executor); } /** * Registers separate success and failure callbacks to be run when this {@code Future}'s * computation is {@linkplain java.util.concurrent.Future#isDone() complete} or, if the * computation is already complete, immediately. * *

The callback is run on {@code executor}. There is no guaranteed ordering of execution of * callbacks, but any callback added through this method is guaranteed to be called once the * computation is complete. * *

Example: * *

{@code
   * future.addCallback(
   *     new FutureCallback() {
   *       public void onSuccess(QueryResult result) {
   *         storeInCache(result);
   *       }
   *       public void onFailure(Throwable t) {
   *         reportError(t);
   *       }
   *     }, executor);
   * }
* *

When selecting an executor, note that {@code directExecutor} is dangerous in some cases. See * the discussion in the {@link #addListener} documentation. All its warnings about heavyweight * listeners are also applicable to heavyweight callbacks passed to this method. * *

For a more general interface to attach a completion listener, see {@link #addListener}. * *

This method is similar to {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#whenComplete} and * {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#whenCompleteAsync}. It also serves the use case * of {@link java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenAccept} and {@link * java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture#thenAcceptAsync}. * * @param callback The callback to invoke when this {@code Future} is completed. * @param executor The executor to run {@code callback} when the future completes. */ public final void addCallback(FutureCallback callback, Executor executor) { Futures.addCallback(this, callback, executor); } }





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