2015-01-15 15:02:19 +01:00
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.. _stream-quickstart-scala:
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2014-12-20 14:11:29 +01:00
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2014-12-22 16:18:26 +01:00
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Quick Start Guide: Reactive Tweets
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==================================
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2014-12-20 14:11:29 +01:00
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A typical use case for stream processing is consuming a live stream of data that we want to extract or aggregate some
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other data from. In this example we'll consider consuming a stream of tweets and extracting information concerning Akka from them.
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2014-12-20 16:56:22 +01:00
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We will also consider the problem inherent to all non-blocking streaming
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solutions: *"What if the subscriber is too slow to consume the live stream of
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data?"*. Traditionally the solution is often to buffer the elements, but this
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can—and usually will—cause eventual buffer overflows and instability of such
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systems. Instead Akka Streams depend on internal backpressure signals that
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allow to control what should happen in such scenarios.
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2014-12-20 14:11:29 +01:00
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Here's the data model we'll be working with throughout the quickstart examples:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#model
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Transforming and consuming simple streams
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-----------------------------------------
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2015-06-23 18:28:53 +02:00
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In order to prepare our environment by creating an :class:`ActorSystem` and :class:`ActorMaterializer`,
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2014-12-20 14:11:29 +01:00
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which will be responsible for materializing and running the streams we are about to create:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#materializer-setup
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2015-06-23 18:28:53 +02:00
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The :class:`ActorMaterializer` can optionally take :class:`ActorMaterializerSettings` which can be used to define
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materialization properties, such as default buffer sizes (see also :ref:`stream-buffers-scala`), the dispatcher to
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2015-04-24 14:59:29 +02:00
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be used by the pipeline etc. These can be overridden ``withAttributes`` on :class:`Flow`, :class:`Source`, :class:`Sink` and :class:`Graph`.
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2015-02-26 11:33:29 +01:00
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Let's assume we have a stream of tweets readily available, in Akka this is expressed as a :class:`Source[Out, M]`:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#tweet-source
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2015-02-26 11:33:29 +01:00
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Streams always start flowing from a :class:`Source[Out,M1]` then can continue through :class:`Flow[In,Out,M2]` elements or
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more advanced graph elements to finally be consumed by a :class:`Sink[In,M3]` (ignore the type parameters ``M1``, ``M2``
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and ``M3`` for now, they are not relevant to the types of the elements produced/consumed by these classes). Both Sources and
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Flows provide stream operations that can be used to transform the flowing data, a :class:`Sink` however does not since
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its the "end of stream" and its behavior depends on the type of :class:`Sink` used.
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In our case let's say we want to find all twitter handles of users which tweet about ``#akka``, the operations should look
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familiar to anyone who has used the Scala Collections library, however they operate on streams and not collections of data:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#authors-filter-map
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Finally in order to :ref:`materialize <stream-materialization-scala>` and run the stream computation we need to attach
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the Flow to a :class:`Sink` that will get the flow running. The simplest way to do this is to call
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``runWith(sink)`` on a ``Source``. For convenience a number of common Sinks are predefined and collected as methods on
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the :class:`Sink` `companion object <http://doc.akka.io/api/akka-stream-and-http-experimental/@version@/#akka.stream.scaladsl.Sink$>`_.
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For now let's simply print each author:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#authors-foreachsink-println
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or by using the shorthand version (which are defined only for the most popular sinks such as :class:`FoldSink` and :class:`ForeachSink`):
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#authors-foreach-println
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2015-06-23 18:28:53 +02:00
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Materializing and running a stream always requires a :class:`Materializer` to be in implicit scope (or passed in explicitly,
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like this: ``.run(materializer)``).
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Flattening sequences in streams
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-------------------------------
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In the previous section we were working on 1:1 relationships of elements which is the most common case, but sometimes
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we might want to map from one element to a number of elements and receive a "flattened" stream, similarly like ``flatMap``
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works on Scala Collections. In order to get a flattened stream of hashtags from our stream of tweets we can use the ``mapConcat``
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combinator:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#hashtags-mapConcat
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.. note::
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The name ``flatMap`` was consciously avoided due to its proximity with for-comprehensions and monadic composition.
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It is problematic for two reasons: first, flattening by concatenation is often undesirable in bounded stream processing
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due to the risk of deadlock (with merge being the preferred strategy), and second, the monad laws would not hold for
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our implementation of flatMap (due to the liveness issues).
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2014-12-22 16:18:26 +01:00
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Please note that the mapConcat requires the supplied function to return a strict collection (``f:Out=>immutable.Seq[T]``),
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whereas ``flatMap`` would have to operate on streams all the way through.
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Broadcasting a stream
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---------------------
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Now let's say we want to persist all hashtags, as well as all author names from this one live stream.
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For example we'd like to write all author handles into one file, and all hashtags into another file on disk.
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This means we have to split the source stream into 2 streams which will handle the writing to these different files.
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Elements that can be used to form such "fan-out" (or "fan-in") structures are referred to as "junctions" in Akka Streams.
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One of these that we'll be using in this example is called :class:`Broadcast`, and it simply emits elements from its
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input port to all of its output ports.
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Akka Streams intentionally separate the linear stream structures (Flows) from the non-linear, branching ones (FlowGraphs)
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in order to offer the most convenient API for both of these cases. Graphs can express arbitrarily complex stream setups
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at the expense of not reading as familiarly as collection transformations. It is also possible to wrap complex computation
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graphs as Flows, Sinks or Sources, which will be explained in detail in :ref:`constructing-sources-sinks-flows-from-partial-graphs-scala`.
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FlowGraphs are constructed like this:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#flow-graph-broadcast
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.. note::
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The ``~>`` (read as "edge", "via" or "to") operator is only available if ``FlowGraph.Implicits._`` are imported.
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Without this import you can still construct graphs using the ``builder.addEdge(from,[through,]to)`` method.
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As you can see, inside the :class:`FlowGraph` we use an implicit graph builder to mutably construct the graph
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using the ``~>`` "edge operator" (also read as "connect" or "via" or "to"). Once we have the FlowGraph in the value ``g``
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*it is immutable, thread-safe, and freely shareable*. A graph can be ``run()`` directly - assuming all
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ports (sinks/sources) within a flow have been connected properly. It is possible to construct partial graphs
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where this is not required but this will be covered in detail in :ref:`partial-flow-graph-scala`.
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As all Akka Streams elements, :class:`Broadcast` will properly propagate back-pressure to its upstream element.
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Back-pressure in action
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-----------------------
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One of the main advantages of Akka Streams is that they *always* propagate back-pressure information from stream Sinks
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(Subscribers) to their Sources (Publishers). It is not an optional feature, and is enabled at all times. To learn more
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about the back-pressure protocol used by Akka Streams and all other Reactive Streams compatible implementations read
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:ref:`back-pressure-explained-scala`.
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A typical problem applications (not using Akka Streams) like this often face is that they are unable to process the incoming data fast enough,
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either temporarily or by design, and will start buffering incoming data until there's no more space to buffer, resulting
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in either ``OutOfMemoryError`` s or other severe degradations of service responsiveness. With Akka Streams buffering can
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and must be handled explicitly. For example, if we are only interested in the "*most recent tweets, with a buffer of 10
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elements*" this can be expressed using the ``buffer`` element:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#tweets-slow-consumption-dropHead
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The ``buffer`` element takes an explicit and required ``OverflowStrategy``, which defines how the buffer should react
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when it receives another element while it is full. Strategies provided include dropping the oldest element (``dropHead``),
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dropping the entire buffer, signalling errors etc. Be sure to pick and choose the strategy that fits your use case best.
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Materialized values
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-------------------
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So far we've been only processing data using Flows and consuming it into some kind of external Sink - be it by printing
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values or storing them in some external system. However sometimes we may be interested in some value that can be
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obtained from the materialized processing pipeline. For example, we want to know how many tweets we have processed.
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While this question is not as obvious to give an answer to in case of an infinite stream of tweets (one way to answer
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this question in a streaming setting would to create a stream of counts described as "*up until now*, we've processed N tweets"),
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but in general it is possible to deal with finite streams and come up with a nice result such as a total count of elements.
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2015-02-26 11:33:29 +01:00
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First, let's write such an element counter using :class:`FoldSink` and see how the types look like:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#tweets-fold-count
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First, we prepare the :class:`FoldSink` which will be used to sum all ``Int`` elements of the stream.
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Next we connect the ``tweets`` stream though a ``map`` step which converts each tweet into the number ``1``,
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finally we connect the flow using ``toMat`` the previously prepared Sink. Remember those mysterious type parameters on
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:class:`Source` :class:`Flow` and :class:`Sink`? They represent the type of values these processing parts return when
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materialized. When you chain these together, you can explicitly combine their materialized values: in our example we
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used the ``Keep.right`` predefined function, which tells the implementation to only care about the materialized
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type of the stage currently appended to the right. As you can notice, the materialized type of sumSink is ``Future[Int]``
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2015-06-23 18:41:55 +02:00
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and because of using ``Keep.right``, the resulting :class:`RunnableGraph` has also a type parameter of ``Future[Int]``.
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This step does *not* yet materialize the
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processing pipeline, it merely prepares the description of the Flow, which is now connected to a Sink, and therefore can
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be ``run()``, as indicated by its type: :class:`RunnableGraph[Future[Int]]`. Next we call ``run()`` which uses the implicit :class:`ActorMaterializer`
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to materialize and run the flow. The value returned by calling ``run()`` on a ``RunnableGraph[T]`` is of type ``T``.
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In our case this type is ``Future[Int]`` which, when completed, will contain the total length of our tweets stream.
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In case of the stream failing, this future would complete with a Failure.
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2015-06-23 18:41:55 +02:00
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A :class:`RunnableGraph` may be reused
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and materialized multiple times, because it is just the "blueprint" of the stream. This means that if we materialize a stream,
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for example one that consumes a live stream of tweets within a minute, the materialized values for those two materializations
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will be different, as illustrated by this example:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#tweets-runnable-flow-materialized-twice
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Many elements in Akka Streams provide materialized values which can be used for obtaining either results of computation or
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steering these elements which will be discussed in detail in :ref:`stream-materialization-scala`. Summing up this section, now we know
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what happens behind the scenes when we run this one-liner, which is equivalent to the multi line version above:
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.. includecode:: code/docs/stream/TwitterStreamQuickstartDocSpec.scala#tweets-fold-count-oneline
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.. note::
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``runWith()`` is a convenience method that automatically ignores the materialized value of any other stages except
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those appended by the ``runWith()`` itself. In the above example it translates to using ``Keep.right`` as the combiner
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for materialized values.
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