Title: @Asynchronous Methods
The @Asynchronous annotation was introduced in EJB 3.1 as a simple way of creating asynchronous processing.
Every time a method annotated @Asynchronous
is invoked by anyone it will immediately return regardless of how long the method actually takes. Each invocation returns a Future object that essentially starts out empty and will later have its value filled in by the container when the related method call actually completes. Returning a Future
object is not required and @Asynchronous
methods can of course return void
.
Here, in JobProcessorTest
,
final Future<String> red = processor.addJob("red");
proceeds to the next statement,
final Future<String> orange = processor.addJob("orange");
without waiting for the addJob() method to complete. And later we could ask for the result using the Future<?>.get()
method like
assertEquals("blue", blue.get());
It waits for the processing to complete (if its not completed already) and gets the result. If you did not care about the result, you could simply have your asynchronous method as a void method.
Future Object from docs,
A Future represents the result of an asynchronous computation. Methods are provided to check if the computation is complete, to wait for its completion, and to retrieve the result of the computation. The result can only be retrieved using method get when the computation has completed, blocking if necessary until it is ready. Cancellation is performed by the cancel method. Additional methods are provided to determine if the task completed normally or was cancelled. Once a computation has completed, the computation cannot be cancelled. If you would like to use a Future for the sake of cancellability but not provide a usable result, you can declare types of the form Future<?> and return null as a result of the underlying task
@Singleton public class JobProcessor { @Asynchronous @Lock(READ) @AccessTimeout(-1) public Future<String> addJob(String jobName) { // Pretend this job takes a while doSomeHeavyLifting(); // Return our result return new AsyncResult<String>(jobName); } private void doSomeHeavyLifting() { try { Thread.sleep(SECONDS.toMillis(10)); } catch (InterruptedException e) { Thread.interrupted(); throw new IllegalStateException(e); } } }
public class JobProcessorTest extends TestCase { public void test() throws Exception { final Context context = EJBContainer.createEJBContainer().getContext(); final JobProcessor processor = (JobProcessor) context.lookup("java:global/async-methods/JobProcessor"); final long start = System.nanoTime(); // Queue up a bunch of work final Future<String> red = processor.addJob("red"); final Future<String> orange = processor.addJob("orange"); final Future<String> yellow = processor.addJob("yellow"); final Future<String> green = processor.addJob("green"); final Future<String> blue = processor.addJob("blue"); final Future<String> violet = processor.addJob("violet"); // Wait for the result -- 1 minute worth of work assertEquals("blue", blue.get()); assertEquals("orange", orange.get()); assertEquals("green", green.get()); assertEquals("red", red.get()); assertEquals("yellow", yellow.get()); assertEquals("violet", violet.get()); // How long did it take? final long total = TimeUnit.NANOSECONDS.toSeconds(System.nanoTime() - start); // Execution should be around 9 - 21 seconds // The execution time depends on the number of threads available for asynchronous execution. // In the best case it is 10s plus some minimal processing time. assertTrue("Expected > 9 but was: " + total, total > 9); assertTrue("Expected < 21 but was: " + total, total < 21); } }
#Running ------------------------------------------------------- T E S T S ------------------------------------------------------- Running org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest Apache OpenEJB 4.0.0-SNAPSHOT build: 20110801-04:02 http://tomee.apache.org/ INFO - openejb.home = G:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods INFO - openejb.base = G:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods INFO - Using ‘javax.ejb.embeddable.EJBContainer=true’ INFO - Configuring Service(id=Default Security Service, type=SecurityService, provider-id=Default Security Service) INFO - Configuring Service(id=Default Transaction Manager, type=TransactionManager, provider-id=Default Transaction Manager) INFO - Found EjbModule in classpath: g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods\target\classes INFO - Beginning load: g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods\target\classes INFO - Configuring enterprise application: g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods INFO - Configuring Service(id=Default Singleton Container, type=Container, provider-id=Default Singleton Container) INFO - Auto-creating a container for bean JobProcessor: Container(type=SINGLETON, id=Default Singleton Container) INFO - Configuring Service(id=Default Managed Container, type=Container, provider-id=Default Managed Container) INFO - Auto-creating a container for bean org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest: Container(type=MANAGED, id=Default Managed Container) INFO - Enterprise application “g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods” loaded. INFO - Assembling app: g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods INFO - Jndi(name=“java:global/async-methods/JobProcessor!org.superbiz.async.JobProcessor”) INFO - Jndi(name=“java:global/async-methods/JobProcessor”) INFO - Jndi(name=“java:global/EjbModule100568296/org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest!org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest”) INFO - Jndi(name=“java:global/EjbModule100568296/org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest”) INFO - Created Ejb(deployment-id=org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest, ejb-name=org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest, container=Default Managed Container) INFO - Created Ejb(deployment-id=JobProcessor, ejb-name=JobProcessor, container=Default Singleton Container) INFO - Started Ejb(deployment-id=org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest, ejb-name=org.superbiz.async.JobProcessorTest, container=Default Managed Container) INFO - Started Ejb(deployment-id=JobProcessor, ejb-name=JobProcessor, container=Default Singleton Container) INFO - Deployed Application(path=g:\Workspace\fullproject\openejb3\examples\async-methods) Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 13.305 sec
Results : Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0 [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [INFO] BUILD SUCCESS [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [INFO] Total time: 21.097s [INFO] Finished at: Wed Aug 03 22:48:26 IST 2011 [INFO] Final Memory: 13M/145M [INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the covers what makes this work is:
JobProcessor
the caller sees is not actually an instance of JobProcessor
. Rather it's a subclass or proxy that has all the methods overridden. Methods that are supposed to be asynchronous are handled differently.Runnable
being created that wraps the method and parameters you gave. This runnable is given to an Executor which is simply a work queue attached to a thread pool.Future
that is linked to the Runnable
which is now waiting on the queue.Runnable
finally executes the method on the real JobProcessor
instance, it will take the return value and set it into the Future
making it available to the caller.Important to note that the AsyncResult
object the JobProcessor
returns is not the same Future
object the caller is holding. It would have been neat if the real JobProcessor
could just return String
and the caller‘s version of JobProcessor
could return Future<String>
, but we didn’t see any way to do that without adding more complexity. So the AsyncResult
is a simple wrapper object. The container will pull the String
out, throw the AsyncResult
away, then put the String
in the real Future
that the caller is holding.
To get progress along the way, simply pass a thread-safe object like AtomicInteger to the @Asynchronous
method and have the bean code periodically update it with the percent complete.
#Related Examples
For complex asynchronous processing, JavaEE's answer is @MessageDrivenBean
. Have a look at the simple-mdb example