+per #3906 add Java8 support for Persistence
- Provided new interfaces for akka-persistence to be usable directly through ReceiveBuilder/PartialFunction. Added a sample java project to showcase the usage of these API's with akka-persistence. - Fixed a minor comment block in javadoc code snippet. - Renamed java event persistor and fixed a documentation typo. - Put back java event persistence methods in UntypedEventsourcedProcessor and copied them into AbstractEventsourcedProcessor for the sake of clarity in javadocs. Also corrected some doc punctuations. - Documentation for akka-persistence java 8 lambda expressions support. - Moved code examples referred from within lambda-persistence.rst to java8 compatible sample project. - Removed remaining unwanted java8 compatible source files.
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akka-docs/rst/java/persistence-lambda.rst
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.. _persistence-lambda-java:
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##########################################
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Persistence with Java 8 Lambda Expressions
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##########################################
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Akka persistence enables stateful actors to persist their internal state so that it can be recovered when an actor
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is started, restarted after a JVM crash or by a supervisor, or migrated in a cluster. The key concept behind Akka
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persistence is that only changes to an actor's internal state are persisted but never its current state directly
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(except for optional snapshots). These changes are only ever appended to storage, nothing is ever mutated, which
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allows for very high transaction rates and efficient replication. Stateful actors are recovered by replaying stored
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changes to these actors from which they can rebuild internal state. This can be either the full history of changes
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or starting from a snapshot which can dramatically reduce recovery times. Akka persistence also provides point-to-point
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communication channels with at-least-once message delivery semantics.
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.. warning::
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This module is marked as **“experimental”** as of its introduction in Akka 2.3.0. We will continue to
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improve this API based on our users’ feedback, which implies that while we try to keep incompatible
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changes to a minimum the binary compatibility guarantee for maintenance releases does not apply to the
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contents of the ``akka.persistence`` package.
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Akka persistence is inspired by the `eventsourced`_ library. It follows the same concepts and architecture of
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`eventsourced`_ but significantly differs on API and implementation level.
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.. _eventsourced: https://github.com/eligosource/eventsourced
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Dependencies
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============
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Akka persistence is a separate jar file. Make sure that you have the following dependency in your project::
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<dependency>
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<groupId>com.typesafe.akka</groupId>
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<artifactId>akka-persistence-experimental_@binVersion@</artifactId>
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<version>@version@</version>
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</dependency>
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Architecture
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============
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* *Processor*: A processor is a persistent, stateful actor. Messages sent to a processor are written to a journal
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before its ``receive`` method is called. When a processor is started or restarted, journaled messages are replayed
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to that processor, so that it can recover internal state from these messages.
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* *View*: A view is a persistent, stateful actor that receives journaled messages that have been written by another
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processor. A view itself does not journal new messages, instead, it updates internal state only from a processor's
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replicated message stream.
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* *Channel*: Channels are used by processors and views to communicate with other actors. They prevent that replayed
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messages are redundantly delivered to these actors and provide at-least-once message delivery semantics, also in
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case of sender and receiver JVM crashes.
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* *Journal*: A journal stores the sequence of messages sent to a processor. An application can control which messages
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are journaled and which are received by the processor without being journaled. The storage backend of a journal is
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pluggable. The default journal storage plugin writes to the local filesystem, replicated journals are available as
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`Community plugins`_.
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* *Snapshot store*: A snapshot store persists snapshots of a processor's or a view's internal state. Snapshots are
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used for optimizing recovery times. The storage backend of a snapshot store is pluggable. The default snapshot
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storage plugin writes to the local filesystem.
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* *Event sourcing*. Based on the building blocks described above, Akka persistence provides abstractions for the
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development of event sourced applications (see section :ref:`event-sourcing-java-lambda`)
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.. _Community plugins: https://gist.github.com/krasserm/8612920#file-akka-persistence-plugins-md
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.. _processors-lambda-java:
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Processors
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==========
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A processor can be implemented by extending ``AbstractProcessor`` class and implementing the
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``receive`` method.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#definition
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Processors only write messages of type ``Persistent`` to the journal, others are received without being persisted.
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When a processor's ``receive`` method is called with a ``Persistent`` message it can safely assume that this message
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has been successfully written to the journal. If a journal fails to write a ``Persistent`` message then the processor
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is stopped, by default. If a processor should continue running on persistence failures it must handle
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``PersistenceFailure`` messages. In this case, a processor may want to inform the sender about the failure,
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so that the sender can re-send the message, if needed.
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An ``AbstractProcessor`` itself is an ``Actor`` and can therefore be instantiated with ``actorOf``.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#usage
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Recovery
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--------
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By default, a processor is automatically recovered on start and on restart by replaying journaled messages.
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New messages sent to a processor during recovery do not interfere with replayed messages. New messages will
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only be received by a processor after recovery completes.
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Recovery customization
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Automated recovery on start can be disabled by overriding ``preStart`` with an empty implementation.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#recover-on-start-disabled
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In this case, a processor must be recovered explicitly by sending it a ``Recover`` message.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#recover-explicit
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If not overridden, ``preStart`` sends a ``Recover`` message to ``self()``. Applications may also override
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``preStart`` to define further ``Recover`` parameters such as an upper sequence number bound, for example.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#recover-on-start-custom
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Upper sequence number bounds can be used to recover a processor to past state instead of current state. Automated
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recovery on restart can be disabled by overriding ``preRestart`` with an empty implementation.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#recover-on-restart-disabled
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Recovery status
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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A processor can query its own recovery status via the methods
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#recovery-status
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.. _failure-handling-java-lambda:
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Failure handling
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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A persistent message that caused an exception will be received again by a processor after restart. To prevent
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a replay of that message during recovery it can be deleted.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#deletion
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Message deletion
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----------------
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A processor can delete a single message by calling the ``deleteMessage`` method with the sequence number of
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that message as argument. An optional ``permanent`` parameter specifies whether the message shall be permanently
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deleted from the journal or only marked as deleted. In both cases, the message won't be replayed. Later extensions
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to Akka persistence will allow to replay messages that have been marked as deleted which can be useful for debugging
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purposes, for example. To delete all messages (journaled by a single processor) up to a specified sequence number,
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processors should call the ``deleteMessages`` method.
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Identifiers
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-----------
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A processor must have an identifier that doesn't change across different actor incarnations. It defaults to the
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``String`` representation of processor's path without the address part and can be obtained via the ``processorId``
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method.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#processor-id
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Applications can customize a processor's id by specifying an actor name during processor creation as shown in
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section :ref:`processors-java`. This changes that processor's name in its actor hierarchy and hence influences only
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part of the processor id. To fully customize a processor's id, the ``processorId`` method must be overridden.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#processor-id-override
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Overriding ``processorId`` is the recommended way to generate stable identifiers.
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.. _views-java-lambda:
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Views
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=====
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Views can be implemented by extending the ``AbstractView`` abstract class and implementing the ``receive`` and the
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``processorId``
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methods.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#view
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The ``processorId`` identifies the processor from which the view receives journaled messages. It is not necessary
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the referenced processor is actually running. Views read messages from a processor's journal directly. When a
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processor is started later and begins to write new messages, the corresponding view is updated automatically, by
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default.
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Updates
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-------
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The default update interval of all views of an actor system is configurable:
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.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistenceDocSpec.scala#auto-update-interval
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``View`` implementation classes may also override the ``autoUpdateInterval`` method to return a custom update
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interval for a specific view class or view instance. Applications may also trigger additional updates at
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any time by sending a view an ``Update`` message.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#view-update
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If the ``await`` parameter is set to ``true``, messages that follow the ``Update`` request are processed when the
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incremental message replay, triggered by that update request, completed. If set to ``false`` (default), messages
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following the update request may interleave with the replayed message stream. Automated updates always run with
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``await = false``.
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Automated updates of all views of an actor system can be turned off by configuration:
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.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistenceDocSpec.scala#auto-update
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Implementation classes may override the configured default value by overriding the ``autoUpdate`` method. To
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limit the number of replayed messages per update request, applications can configure a custom
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``akka.persistence.view.auto-update-replay-max`` value or override the ``autoUpdateReplayMax`` method. The number
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of replayed messages for manual updates can be limited with the ``replayMax`` parameter of the ``Update`` message.
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Recovery
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--------
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Initial recovery of views works in the very same way as for :ref:`processors` (i.e. by sending a ``Recover`` message
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to self). The maximum number of replayed messages during initial recovery is determined by ``autoUpdateReplayMax``.
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Further possibilities to customize initial recovery are explained in section :ref:`processors-java`.
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Identifiers
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-----------
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A view must have an identifier that doesn't change across different actor incarnations. It defaults to the
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``String`` representation of the actor path without the address part and can be obtained via the ``viewId``
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method.
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Applications can customize a view's id by specifying an actor name during view creation. This changes that view's
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name in its actor hierarchy and hence influences only part of the view id. To fully customize a view's id, the
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``viewId`` method must be overridden. Overriding ``viewId`` is the recommended way to generate stable identifiers.
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The ``viewId`` must differ from the referenced ``processorId``, unless :ref:`snapshots-java` of a view and its
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processor shall be shared (which is what applications usually do not want).
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.. _channels-java-lambda:
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Channels
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========
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Channels are special actors that are used by processors or views to communicate with other actors (channel
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destinations). The following discusses channels in context of processors but this is also applicable to views.
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Channels prevent redundant delivery of replayed messages to destinations during processor recovery. A replayed
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message is retained by a channel if its delivery has been confirmed by a destination.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#channel-example
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A channel is ready to use once it has been created, no recovery or further activation is needed. A ``Deliver``
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request instructs a channel to send a ``Persistent`` message to a destination. A destination is provided as
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``ActorPath`` and messages are sent by the channel via that path's ``ActorSelection``. Sender references are
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preserved by a channel, therefore, a destination can reply to the sender of a ``Deliver`` request.
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If a processor wants to reply to a ``Persistent`` message sender it should use the ``sender()`` path as
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channel destination.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#channel-example-reply
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Persistent messages delivered by a channel are of type ``ConfirmablePersistent``. ``ConfirmablePersistent`` extends
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``Persistent`` by adding the methods ``confirm`` and ``redeliveries`` (see also :ref:`redelivery-java-lambda`). A
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channel destination confirms the delivery of a ``ConfirmablePersistent`` message by calling ``confirm()`` on that
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message. This asynchronously writes a confirmation entry to the journal. Replayed messages internally contain
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confirmation entries which allows a channel to decide if it should retain these messages or not.
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A ``Processor`` can also be used as channel destination i.e. it can persist ``ConfirmablePersistent`` messages too.
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.. _redelivery-java-lambda:
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Message re-delivery
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-------------------
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Channels re-deliver messages to destinations if they do not confirm delivery within a configurable timeout.
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This timeout can be specified as ``redeliverInterval`` when creating a channel, optionally together with the
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maximum number of re-deliveries a channel should attempt for each unconfirmed message. The number of re-delivery
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attempts can be obtained via the ``redeliveries`` method on ``ConfirmablePersistent``.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#channel-custom-settings
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A channel keeps messages in memory until their successful delivery has been confirmed or the maximum number of
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re-deliveries is reached. To be notified about messages that have reached the maximum number of re-deliveries,
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applications can register a listener at channel creation.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#channel-custom-listener
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A listener receives ``RedeliverFailure`` notifications containing all messages that could not be delivered. On
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receiving a ``RedeliverFailure`` message, an application may decide to restart the sending processor to enforce
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a re-send of these messages to the channel or confirm these messages to prevent further re-sends. The sending
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processor can also be restarted any time later to re-send unconfirmed messages.
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This combination of
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* message persistence by sending processors
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* message replays by sending processors
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* message re-deliveries by channels and
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* application-level confirmations (acknowledgements) by destinations
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enables channels to provide at-least-once message delivery semantics. Possible duplicates can be detected by
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destinations by tracking message sequence numbers. Message sequence numbers are generated per sending processor.
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Depending on how a processor routes outbound messages to destinations, they may either see a contiguous message
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sequence or a sequence with gaps.
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.. warning::
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If a processor emits more than one outbound message per inbound ``Persistent`` message it **must** use a
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separate channel for each outbound message to ensure that confirmations are uniquely identifiable, otherwise,
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at-least-once message delivery semantics do not apply. This rule has been introduced to avoid writing additional
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outbound message identifiers to the journal which would decrease the overall throughput. It is furthermore
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recommended to collapse multiple outbound messages to the same destination into a single outbound message,
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otherwise, if sent via multiple channels, their ordering is not defined.
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If an application wants to have more control how sequence numbers are assigned to messages it should use an
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application-specific sequence number generator and include the generated sequence numbers into the ``payload``
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of ``Persistent`` messages.
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Persistent channels
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-------------------
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Channels created with ``Channel.props`` do not persist messages. These channels are usually used in combination
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with a sending processor that takes care of persistence, hence, channel-specific persistence is not necessary in
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this case. They are referred to as transient channels in the following.
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Persistent channels are like transient channels but additionally persist messages before delivering them. Messages
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that have been persisted by a persistent channel are deleted when destinations confirm their delivery. A persistent
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channel can be created with ``PersistentChannel.props`` and configured with a ``PersistentChannelSettings`` object.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#persistent-channel-example
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A persistent channel is useful for delivery of messages to slow destinations or destinations that are unavailable
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for a long time. It can constrain the number of pending confirmations based on the ``pendingConfirmationsMax``
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and ``pendingConfirmationsMin`` parameters of ``PersistentChannelSettings``.
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#persistent-channel-watermarks
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It suspends delivery when the number of pending confirmations reaches ``pendingConfirmationsMax`` and resumes
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delivery again when this number falls below ``pendingConfirmationsMin``. This prevents both, flooding destinations
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with more messages than they can process and unlimited memory consumption by the channel. A persistent channel
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continues to persist new messages even when message delivery is temporarily suspended.
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Standalone usage
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----------------
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Applications may also use channels standalone. Transient channels can be used standalone if re-delivery attempts
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to destinations are required but message loss in case of a sender JVM crash is not an issue. If message loss in
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case of a sender JVM crash is an issue, persistent channels should be used. In this case, applications may want to
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receive replies from the channel whether messages have been successfully persisted or not. This can be enabled by
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creating the channel with the ``replyPersistent`` configuration parameter set to ``true``:
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#persistent-channel-reply
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With this setting, either the successfully persisted message is replied to the sender or a ``PersistenceFailure``
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message. In case the latter case, the sender should re-send the message.
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Identifiers
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-----------
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In the same way as :ref:`processors-java` and :ref:`views-java`, channels also have an identifier that defaults to a channel's
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path. A channel identifier can therefore be customized by using a custom actor name at channel creation. This changes
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that channel's name in its actor hierarchy and hence influences only part of the channel identifier. To fully customize
|
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a channel identifier, it should be provided as argument ``Channel.props(String)`` or ``PersistentChannel.props(String)``
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(recommended to generate stable identifiers).
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#channel-id-override
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Persistent messages
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===================
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Payload
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-------
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The payload of a ``Persistent`` message can be obtained via its ``payload`` method. Inside processors, new messages
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must be derived from the current persistent message before sending them via a channel, either by calling ``p.withPayload(...)``
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or ``Persistent.create(..., getCurrentPersistentMessage())`` where ``getCurrentPersistentMessage()`` is defined on
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``AbstractProcessor``.
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|
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.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#current-message
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This is necessary for delivery confirmations to work properly. Both
|
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ways are equivalent but we recommend using ``p.withPayload(...)`` for clarity. It is not allowed to send a message
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via a channel that has been created with ``Persistent.create(...)``. This would redeliver the message on every replay
|
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even though its delivery was confirmed by a destination.
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Sequence number
|
||||
---------------
|
||||
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The sequence number of a ``Persistent`` message can be obtained via its ``sequenceNr`` method. Persistent
|
||||
messages are assigned sequence numbers on a per-processor basis (or per channel basis if used
|
||||
standalone). A sequence starts at ``1L`` and doesn't contain gaps unless a processor deletes messages.
|
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|
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.. _snapshots-java-lambda:
|
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|
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Snapshots
|
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=========
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||||
|
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Snapshots can dramatically reduce recovery times of processors and views. The following discusses snapshots
|
||||
in context of processors but this is also applicable to views.
|
||||
|
||||
Processors can save snapshots of internal state by calling the ``saveSnapshot`` method. If saving of a snapshot
|
||||
succeeds, the processor receives a ``SaveSnapshotSuccess`` message, otherwise a ``SaveSnapshotFailure`` message
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#save-snapshot
|
||||
|
||||
During recovery, the processor is offered a previously saved snapshot via a ``SnapshotOffer`` message from
|
||||
which it can initialize internal state.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#snapshot-offer
|
||||
|
||||
The replayed messages that follow the ``SnapshotOffer`` message, if any, are younger than the offered snapshot.
|
||||
They finally recover the processor to its current (i.e. latest) state.
|
||||
|
||||
In general, a processor is only offered a snapshot if that processor has previously saved one or more snapshots
|
||||
and at least one of these snapshots matches the ``SnapshotSelectionCriteria`` that can be specified for recovery.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#snapshot-criteria
|
||||
|
||||
If not specified, they default to ``SnapshotSelectionCriteria.latest()`` which selects the latest (= youngest) snapshot.
|
||||
To disable snapshot-based recovery, applications should use ``SnapshotSelectionCriteria.none()``. A recovery where no
|
||||
saved snapshot matches the specified ``SnapshotSelectionCriteria`` will replay all journaled messages.
|
||||
|
||||
Snapshot deletion
|
||||
-----------------
|
||||
|
||||
A processor can delete individual snapshots by calling the ``deleteSnapshot`` method with the sequence number and the
|
||||
timestamp of a snapshot as argument. To bulk-delete snapshots matching ``SnapshotSelectionCriteria``, processors should
|
||||
use the ``deleteSnapshots`` method.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _event-sourcing-java-lambda:
|
||||
|
||||
Event sourcing
|
||||
==============
|
||||
|
||||
In all the examples so far, messages that change a processor's state have been sent as ``Persistent`` messages
|
||||
by an application, so that they can be replayed during recovery. From this point of view, the journal acts as
|
||||
a write-ahead-log for whatever ``Persistent`` messages a processor receives. This is also known as *command
|
||||
sourcing*. Commands, however, may fail and some applications cannot tolerate command failures during recovery.
|
||||
|
||||
For these applications `Event Sourcing`_ is a better choice. Applied to Akka persistence, the basic idea behind
|
||||
event sourcing is quite simple. A processor receives a (non-persistent) command which is first validated if it
|
||||
can be applied to the current state. Here, validation can mean anything, from simple inspection of a command
|
||||
message's fields up to a conversation with several external services, for example. If validation succeeds, events
|
||||
are generated from the command, representing the effect of the command. These events are then persisted and, after
|
||||
successful persistence, used to change a processor's state. When the processor needs to be recovered, only the
|
||||
persisted events are replayed of which we know that they can be successfully applied. In other words, events
|
||||
cannot fail when being replayed to a processor, in contrast to commands. Eventsourced processors may of course
|
||||
also process commands that do not change application state, such as query commands, for example.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _Event Sourcing: http://martinfowler.com/eaaDev/EventSourcing.html
|
||||
|
||||
Akka persistence supports event sourcing with the ``AbstractEventsourcedProcessor`` abstract class (which implements
|
||||
event sourcing as a pattern on top of command sourcing). A processor that extends this abstract class does not handle
|
||||
``Persistent`` messages directly but uses the ``persist`` method to persist and handle events. The behavior of an
|
||||
``AbstractEventsourcedProcessor`` is defined by implementing ``receiveRecover`` and ``receiveCommand``. This is
|
||||
demonstrated in the following example.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/sample/persistence/EventsourcedExample.java#eventsourced-example
|
||||
|
||||
The example defines two data types, ``Cmd`` and ``Evt`` to represent commands and events, respectively. The
|
||||
``state`` of the ``ExampleProcessor`` is a list of persisted event data contained in ``ExampleState``.
|
||||
|
||||
The processor's ``receiveRecover`` method defines how ``state`` is updated during recovery by handling ``Evt``
|
||||
and ``SnapshotOffer`` messages. The processor's ``receiveCommand`` method is a command handler. In this example,
|
||||
a command is handled by generating two events which are then persisted and handled. Events are persisted by calling
|
||||
``persist`` with an event (or a sequence of events) as first argument and an event handler as second argument.
|
||||
|
||||
The ``persist`` method persists events asynchronously and the event handler is executed for successfully persisted
|
||||
events. Successfully persisted events are internally sent back to the processor as individual messages that trigger
|
||||
event handler executions. An event handler may close over processor state and mutate it. The sender of a persisted
|
||||
event is the sender of the corresponding command. This allows event handlers to reply to the sender of a command
|
||||
(not shown).
|
||||
|
||||
The main responsibility of an event handler is changing processor state using event data and notifying others
|
||||
about successful state changes by publishing events.
|
||||
|
||||
When persisting events with ``persist`` it is guaranteed that the processor will not receive further commands between
|
||||
the ``persist`` call and the execution(s) of the associated event handler. This also holds for multiple ``persist``
|
||||
calls in context of a single command. The example also shows how to switch between command different command handlers
|
||||
with ``context().become()`` and ``context().unbecome()``.
|
||||
|
||||
The easiest way to run this example yourself is to download `Typesafe Activator <http://typesafe.com/platform/getstarted>`_
|
||||
and open the tutorial named `Akka Persistence Samples with Java <http://typesafe.com/activator/template/akka-sample-persistence-java8>`_.
|
||||
It contains instructions on how to run the ``EventsourcedExample``.
|
||||
|
||||
Reliable event delivery
|
||||
-----------------------
|
||||
|
||||
Sending events from an event handler to another actor has at-most-once delivery semantics. For at-least-once delivery,
|
||||
:ref:`channels-java-lambda` must be used. In this case, also replayed events (received by ``receiveRecover``) must be
|
||||
sent to a channel, as shown in the following example:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#reliable-event-delivery
|
||||
|
||||
In larger integration scenarios, channel destinations may be actors that submit received events to an external
|
||||
message broker, for example. After having successfully submitted an event, they should call ``confirm()`` on the
|
||||
received ``ConfirmablePersistent`` message.
|
||||
|
||||
Batch writes
|
||||
============
|
||||
|
||||
To optimize throughput, an ``AbstractProcessor`` internally batches received ``Persistent`` messages under high load
|
||||
before
|
||||
writing them to the journal (as a single batch). The batch size dynamically grows from 1 under low and moderate loads
|
||||
to a configurable maximum size (default is ``200``) under high load.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#max-message-batch-size
|
||||
|
||||
A new batch write is triggered by a processor as soon as a batch reaches the maximum size or if the journal completed
|
||||
writing the previous batch. Batch writes are never timer-based which keeps latencies at a minimum.
|
||||
|
||||
Applications that want to have more explicit control over batch writes and batch sizes can send processors
|
||||
``PersistentBatch`` messages.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistenceDocTest.java#batch-write
|
||||
|
||||
``Persistent`` messages contained in a ``PersistentBatch`` are always written atomically, even if the batch
|
||||
size is greater than ``max-message-batch-size``. Also, a ``PersistentBatch`` is written isolated from other batches.
|
||||
``Persistent`` messages contained in a ``PersistentBatch`` are received individually by a processor.
|
||||
|
||||
``PersistentBatch`` messages, for example, are used internally by an ``AbstractEventsourcedProcessor`` to ensure atomic
|
||||
writes of events. All events that are persisted in context of a single command are written as a single batch to the
|
||||
journal (even if ``persist`` is called multiple times per command). The recovery of an ``AbstractEventsourcedProcessor``
|
||||
will therefore never be done partially (with only a subset of events persisted by a single command).
|
||||
|
||||
Confirmation and deletion operations performed by :ref:`channels-java-lambda` are also batched. The maximum
|
||||
confirmation and deletion batch sizes are configurable with ``akka.persistence.journal.max-confirmation-batch-size``
|
||||
and ``akka.persistence.journal.max-deletion-batch-size``, respectively.
|
||||
|
||||
Storage plugins
|
||||
===============
|
||||
|
||||
Storage backends for journals and snapshot stores are pluggable in Akka persistence. The default journal plugin
|
||||
writes messages to LevelDB (see :ref:`local-leveldb-journal-java-lambda`). The default snapshot store plugin writes
|
||||
snapshots as individual files to the local filesystem (see :ref:`local-snapshot-store-java-lambda`). Applications can
|
||||
provide their own plugins by implementing a plugin API and activate them by configuration. Plugin development
|
||||
requires the following imports:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistencePluginDocTest.java#plugin-imports
|
||||
|
||||
Journal plugin API
|
||||
------------------
|
||||
|
||||
A journal plugin either extends ``SyncWriteJournal`` or ``AsyncWriteJournal``. ``SyncWriteJournal`` is an
|
||||
actor that should be extended when the storage backend API only supports synchronous, blocking writes. In this
|
||||
case, the methods to be implemented are:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-persistence/src/main/java/akka/persistence/journal/japi/SyncWritePlugin.java#sync-write-plugin-api
|
||||
|
||||
``AsyncWriteJournal`` is an actor that should be extended if the storage backend API supports asynchronous,
|
||||
non-blocking writes. In this case, the methods to be implemented are:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-persistence/src/main/java/akka/persistence/journal/japi/AsyncWritePlugin.java#async-write-plugin-api
|
||||
|
||||
Message replays and sequence number recovery are always asynchronous, therefore, any journal plugin must implement:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-persistence/src/main/java/akka/persistence/journal/japi/AsyncRecoveryPlugin.java#async-replay-plugin-api
|
||||
|
||||
A journal plugin can be activated with the following minimal configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#journal-plugin-config
|
||||
|
||||
The specified plugin ``class`` must have a no-arg constructor. The ``plugin-dispatcher`` is the dispatcher
|
||||
used for the plugin actor. If not specified, it defaults to ``akka.persistence.dispatchers.default-plugin-dispatcher``
|
||||
for ``SyncWriteJournal`` plugins and ``akka.actor.default-dispatcher`` for ``AsyncWriteJournal`` plugins.
|
||||
|
||||
Snapshot store plugin API
|
||||
-------------------------
|
||||
|
||||
A snapshot store plugin must extend the ``SnapshotStore`` actor and implement the following methods:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-persistence/src/main/java/akka/persistence/snapshot/japi/SnapshotStorePlugin.java#snapshot-store-plugin-api
|
||||
|
||||
A snapshot store plugin can be activated with the following minimal configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#snapshot-store-plugin-config
|
||||
|
||||
The specified plugin ``class`` must have a no-arg constructor. The ``plugin-dispatcher`` is the dispatcher
|
||||
used for the plugin actor. If not specified, it defaults to ``akka.persistence.dispatchers.default-plugin-dispatcher``.
|
||||
|
||||
Pre-packaged plugins
|
||||
====================
|
||||
|
||||
.. _local-leveldb-journal-java-lambda:
|
||||
|
||||
Local LevelDB journal
|
||||
---------------------
|
||||
|
||||
The default journal plugin is ``akka.persistence.journal.leveldb`` which writes messages to a local LevelDB
|
||||
instance. The default location of the LevelDB files is a directory named ``journal`` in the current working
|
||||
directory. This location can be changed by configuration where the specified path can be relative or absolute:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#journal-config
|
||||
|
||||
With this plugin, each actor system runs its own private LevelDB instance.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _shared-leveldb-journal-java-lambda:
|
||||
|
||||
Shared LevelDB journal
|
||||
----------------------
|
||||
|
||||
A LevelDB instance can also be shared by multiple actor systems (on the same or on different nodes). This, for
|
||||
example, allows processors to failover to a backup node and continue using the shared journal instance from the
|
||||
backup node.
|
||||
|
||||
.. warning::
|
||||
|
||||
A shared LevelDB instance is a single point of failure and should therefore only be used for testing
|
||||
purposes. Highly-available, replicated journal are available as `Community plugins`_.
|
||||
|
||||
A shared LevelDB instance is started by instantiating the ``SharedLeveldbStore`` actor.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocTest.java#shared-store-creation
|
||||
|
||||
By default, the shared instance writes journaled messages to a local directory named ``journal`` in the current
|
||||
working directory. The storage location can be changed by configuration:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#shared-store-config
|
||||
|
||||
Actor systems that use a shared LevelDB store must activate the ``akka.persistence.journal.leveldb-shared``
|
||||
plugin.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#shared-journal-config
|
||||
|
||||
This plugin must be initialized by injecting the (remote) ``SharedLeveldbStore`` actor reference. Injection is
|
||||
done by calling the ``SharedLeveldbJournal.setStore`` method with the actor reference as argument.
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../../../akka-samples/akka-sample-persistence-java8/src/main/java/doc/LambdaPersistencePluginDocTest.java#shared-store-usage
|
||||
|
||||
Internal journal commands (sent by processors) are buffered until injection completes. Injection is idempotent
|
||||
i.e. only the first injection is used.
|
||||
|
||||
.. _local-snapshot-store-java-lambda:
|
||||
|
||||
Local snapshot store
|
||||
--------------------
|
||||
|
||||
The default snapshot store plugin is ``akka.persistence.snapshot-store.local``. It writes snapshot files to
|
||||
the local filesystem. The default storage location is a directory named ``snapshots`` in the current working
|
||||
directory. This can be changed by configuration where the specified path can be relative or absolute:
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#snapshot-config
|
||||
|
||||
Custom serialization
|
||||
====================
|
||||
|
||||
Serialization of snapshots and payloads of ``Persistent`` messages is configurable with Akka's
|
||||
:ref:`serialization-java` infrastructure. For example, if an application wants to serialize
|
||||
|
||||
* payloads of type ``MyPayload`` with a custom ``MyPayloadSerializer`` and
|
||||
* snapshots of type ``MySnapshot`` with a custom ``MySnapshotSerializer``
|
||||
|
||||
it must add
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistenceSerializerDocSpec.scala#custom-serializer-config
|
||||
|
||||
to the application configuration. If not specified, a default serializer is used.
|
||||
|
||||
Testing
|
||||
=======
|
||||
|
||||
When running tests with LevelDB default settings in ``sbt``, make sure to set ``fork := true`` in your sbt project
|
||||
otherwise, you'll see an ``UnsatisfiedLinkError``. Alternatively, you can switch to a LevelDB Java port by setting
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#native-config
|
||||
|
||||
or
|
||||
|
||||
.. includecode:: ../scala/code/docs/persistence/PersistencePluginDocSpec.scala#shared-store-native-config
|
||||
|
||||
in your Akka configuration. The LevelDB Java port is for testing purposes only.
|
||||
|
|
@ -4,6 +4,10 @@
|
|||
Persistence
|
||||
###########
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Java 8 lambda expressions are also supported now. (See section :ref:`persistence-lambda-java`)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Akka persistence enables stateful actors to persist their internal state so that it can be recovered when an actor
|
||||
is started, restarted after a JVM crash or by a supervisor, or migrated in a cluster. The key concept behind Akka
|
||||
persistence is that only changes to an actor's internal state are persisted but never its current state directly
|
||||
|
|
@ -13,6 +17,10 @@ changes to these actors from which they can rebuild internal state. This can be
|
|||
or starting from a snapshot which can dramatically reduce recovery times. Akka persistence also provides point-to-point
|
||||
communication channels with at-least-once message delivery semantics.
|
||||
|
||||
.. Lambda warning::
|
||||
|
||||
Java 8 lambda expressions are also supported now. (See section :ref:`persistence-lambda-java`)
|
||||
|
||||
.. warning::
|
||||
|
||||
This module is marked as **“experimental”** as of its introduction in Akka 2.3.0. We will continue to
|
||||
|
|
|
|||
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