scala.concurrent
Type members
Classlikes
Await
is what is used to ensure proper handling of blocking for Awaitable
instances.
Await
is what is used to ensure proper handling of blocking for Awaitable
instances.
While occasionally useful, e.g. for testing, it is recommended that you avoid Await whenever possible—
instead favoring combinators and/or callbacks.
Await's result
and ready
methods will block the calling thread's execution until they return,
which will cause performance degradation, and possibly, deadlock issues.
- Source
- package.scala
An object that may eventually be completed with a result value of type T
which may be
awaited using blocking methods.
An object that may eventually be completed with a result value of type T
which may be
awaited using blocking methods.
The Await object provides methods that allow accessing the result of an Awaitable
by blocking the current thread until the Awaitable
has been completed or a timeout has
occurred.
- Source
- Awaitable.scala
Marker trait to indicate that a Runnable is Batchable by BatchingExecutors
Marker trait to indicate that a Runnable is Batchable by BatchingExecutors
- Source
- BatchingExecutor.scala
A context to be notified by scala.concurrent.blocking when a thread is about to block.
A context to be notified by scala.concurrent.blocking when
a thread is about to block. In effect this trait provides
the implementation for scala.concurrent.Await.
scala.concurrent.Await.result and scala.concurrent.Await.ready
locates an instance of BlockContext
by first looking for one
provided through BlockContext.withBlockContext and failing that,
checking whether Thread.currentThread
is an instance of BlockContext
.
So a thread pool can have its java.lang.Thread
instances implement
BlockContext
. There's a default BlockContext
used if the thread
doesn't implement BlockContext
.
Typically, you'll want to chain to the previous BlockContext
,
like this:
val oldContext = BlockContext.current
val myContext = new BlockContext {
override def blockOn[T](thunk: => T)(implicit permission: CanAwait): T = {
// you'd have code here doing whatever you need to do
// when the thread is about to block.
// Then you'd chain to the previous context:
oldContext.blockOn(thunk)
}
}
BlockContext.withBlockContext(myContext) {
// then this block runs with myContext as the handler
// for scala.concurrent.blocking
}
- Companion
- object
- Source
- BlockContext.scala
This marker trait is used by Await to ensure that Awaitable.ready and Awaitable.result are not directly called by user code.
This marker trait is used by Await to ensure that Awaitable.ready and Awaitable.result are not directly called by user code. An implicit instance of this trait is only available when user code is currently calling the methods on Await.
- Source
- package.scala
An ExecutionContext
can execute program logic asynchronously,
typically but not necessarily on a thread pool.
An ExecutionContext
can execute program logic asynchronously,
typically but not necessarily on a thread pool.
A general purpose ExecutionContext
must be asynchronous in executing
any Runnable
that is passed into its execute
-method. A special purpose
ExecutionContext
may be synchronous but must only be passed to code that
is explicitly safe to be run using a synchronously executing ExecutionContext
.
APIs such as Future.onComplete
require you to provide a callback
and an implicit ExecutionContext
. The implicit ExecutionContext
will be used to execute the callback.
While it is possible to simply import
scala.concurrent.ExecutionContext.Implicits.global
to obtain an
implicit ExecutionContext
, application developers should carefully
consider where they want to define the execution policy;
ideally, one place per application — or per logically related section of code —
will make a decision about which ExecutionContext
to use.
That is, you will mostly want to avoid hardcoding, especially via an import,
scala.concurrent.ExecutionContext.Implicits.global
.
The recommended approach is to add (implicit ec: ExecutionContext)
to methods,
or class constructor parameters, which need an ExecutionContext
.
Then locally import a specific ExecutionContext
in one place for the entire
application or module, passing it implicitly to individual methods.
Alternatively define a local implicit val with the required ExecutionContext
.
A custom ExecutionContext
may be appropriate to execute code
which blocks on IO or performs long-running computations.
ExecutionContext.fromExecutorService
and ExecutionContext.fromExecutor
are good ways to create a custom ExecutionContext
.
The intent of ExecutionContext
is to lexically scope code execution.
That is, each method, class, file, package, or application determines
how to run its own code. This avoids issues such as running
application callbacks on a thread pool belonging to a networking library.
The size of a networking library's thread pool can be safely configured,
knowing that only that library's network operations will be affected.
Application callback execution can be configured separately.
- Companion
- object
- Source
- ExecutionContext.scala
Contains factory methods for creating execution contexts.
Contains factory methods for creating execution contexts.
- Companion
- class
- Source
- ExecutionContext.scala
An ExecutionContext that is also a Java Executor.
An ExecutionContext that is also a Java Executor.
- Source
- ExecutionContext.scala
An ExecutionContext that is also a Java ExecutorService.
An ExecutionContext that is also a Java ExecutorService.
- Source
- ExecutionContext.scala
A Future
represents a value which may or may not *currently* be available,
but will be available at some point, or an exception if that value could not be made available.
A Future
represents a value which may or may not *currently* be available,
but will be available at some point, or an exception if that value could not be made available.
Asynchronous computations that yield futures are created with the Future.apply
call and are computed using a supplied ExecutionContext
,
which can be backed by a Thread pool.
import ExecutionContext.Implicits.global
val s = "Hello"
val f: Future[String] = Future {
s + " future!"
}
f foreach {
msg => println(msg)
}
- See also
- Companion
- object
- Source
- Future.scala
Promise is an object which can be completed with a value or failed with an exception.
Promise is an object which can be completed with a value or failed with an exception.
A promise should always eventually be completed, whether for success or failure, in order to avoid unintended resource retention for any associated Futures' callbacks or transformations.
- Companion
- object
- Source
- Promise.scala
Deprecated classlikes
This class provides a simple FIFO queue of data objects, which are read by one or more reader threads.
This class provides a simple FIFO queue of data objects, which are read by one or more reader threads.
- Type Params
- A
type of data exchanged
- Deprecated
[Since version 2.13.0]
- Source
- Channel.scala
A DelayedLazyVal
is a wrapper for lengthy computations which have a
valid partially computed result.
A DelayedLazyVal
is a wrapper for lengthy computations which have a
valid partially computed result.
The first argument is a function for obtaining the result at any given
point in time, and the second is the lengthy computation. Once the
computation is complete, the apply
method will stop recalculating it
and return a fixed value from that point forward.
- Value Params
- body
the computation to run to completion in another thread
- f
the function to obtain the current value at any point in time
- Deprecated
[Since version 2.13.0]
- Source
- DelayedLazyVal.scala
The JavaConversions
object provides implicit conversions supporting
interoperability between Scala and Java concurrency classes.
The JavaConversions
object provides implicit conversions supporting
interoperability between Scala and Java concurrency classes.
- Deprecated
- Source
- JavaConversions.scala
A SyncChannel
allows one to exchange data synchronously between
a reader and a writer thread.
A SyncChannel
allows one to exchange data synchronously between
a reader and a writer thread. The writer thread is blocked until the
data to be written has been read by a corresponding reader thread.
- Deprecated
[Since version 2.13.0]
- Source
- SyncChannel.scala
A class to provide safe concurrent access to a mutable cell.
A class to provide safe concurrent access to a mutable cell. All methods are synchronized.
- Type Params
- A
type of the contained value
- Deprecated
[Since version 2.13.0]
- Source
- SyncVar.scala
Types
Value members
Concrete methods
Used to designate a piece of code which potentially blocks, allowing the current BlockContext to adjust the runtime's behavior.
Used to designate a piece of code which potentially blocks, allowing the current BlockContext to adjust the runtime's behavior. Properly marking blocking code may improve performance or avoid deadlocks.
Blocking on an Awaitable should be done using Await.result instead of blocking
.
- Value Params
- body
A piece of code which contains potentially blocking or long running calls.
- Throws
- CancellationException
if the computation was cancelled
- InterruptedException
in the case that a wait within the blocking
body
was interrupted
- Source
- package.scala