* Use apidoc directive in general/addressing.md (#22904) * fix link
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2 changed files with 10 additions and 9 deletions
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@ -335,6 +335,7 @@ final class AskableActorRef(val actorRef: ActorRef) extends AnyVal {
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protected def ask(message: Any, timeout: Timeout): Future[Any] =
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protected def ask(message: Any, timeout: Timeout): Future[Any] =
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internalAsk(message, timeout, ActorRef.noSender)
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internalAsk(message, timeout, ActorRef.noSender)
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//todo add scaladoc
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def ask(message: Any)(implicit timeout: Timeout, sender: ActorRef = Actor.noSender): Future[Any] =
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def ask(message: Any)(implicit timeout: Timeout, sender: ActorRef = Actor.noSender): Future[Any] =
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internalAsk(message, timeout, sender)
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internalAsk(message, timeout, sender)
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@ -13,9 +13,9 @@ within an actor system, please read on for the details.
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## What is an Actor Reference
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## What is an Actor Reference
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An actor reference is a subtype of `ActorRef`, whose foremost purpose is
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An actor reference is a subtype of @apidoc[ActorRef](typed.ActorRef), whose foremost purpose is
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to support sending messages to the actor it represents. Each actor has access
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to support sending messages to the actor it represents. Each actor has access
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to its canonical (local) reference through the `ActorContext.self` field; this
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to its canonical (local) reference through the @apidoc[ActorContext.self](typed.*.ActorContext) {scala="#self:akka.actor.typed.ActorRef[T]" java="#getSelf()"} field; this
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reference can be included in messages to other actors to get replies back.
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reference can be included in messages to other actors to get replies back.
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There are several different types of actor references that are supported
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There are several different types of actor references that are supported
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@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ communication, i.e. sending messages to them will serialize the messages
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transparently and send them to the remote JVM.
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transparently and send them to the remote JVM.
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* There are several special types of actor references which behave like local
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* There are several special types of actor references which behave like local
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actor references for all practical purposes:
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actor references for all practical purposes:
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* `PromiseActorRef` is the special representation of a `Promise`
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* `PromiseActorRef` is the special representation of a @scaladoc[Promise](scala.concurrent.Promise)
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for the purpose of being completed by the response from an actor.
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for the purpose of being completed by the response from an actor.
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`akka.pattern.ask` creates this actor reference.
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`akka.pattern.ask` creates this actor reference.
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* `DeadLetterActorRef` is the default implementation of the dead
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* `DeadLetterActorRef` is the default implementation of the dead
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@ -52,7 +52,7 @@ as a pseudo-supervisor for the root guardian, we call it “the one who walks
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the bubbles of space-time”.
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the bubbles of space-time”.
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* The first logging service started before actually firing up actor creation
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* The first logging service started before actually firing up actor creation
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facilities is a fake actor reference which accepts log events and prints
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facilities is a fake actor reference which accepts log events and prints
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them directly to standard output; it is `Logging.StandardOutLogger`.
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them directly to standard output; it is @apidoc[Logging.StandardOutLogger](Logging.StandardOutLogger).
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## What is an Actor Path?
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## What is an Actor Path?
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@ -117,16 +117,16 @@ There are two general categories to how actor references may be obtained: by
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## Actor Reference and Path Equality
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## Actor Reference and Path Equality
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Equality of `ActorRef` match the intention that an `ActorRef` corresponds to
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Equality of @apidoc[ActorRef](typed.ActorRef) match the intention that an @apidoc[ActorRef](typed.ActorRef) corresponds to
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the target actor incarnation. Two actor references are compared equal when they have
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the target actor incarnation. Two actor references are compared equal when they have
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the same path and point to the same actor incarnation. A reference pointing to a
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the same path and point to the same actor incarnation. A reference pointing to a
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terminated actor does not compare equal to a reference pointing to another (re-created)
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terminated actor does not compare equal to a reference pointing to another (re-created)
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actor with the same path. Note that a restart of an actor caused by a failure still
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actor with the same path. Note that a restart of an actor caused by a failure still
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means that it is the same actor incarnation, i.e. a restart is not visible for the
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means that it is the same actor incarnation, i.e. a restart is not visible for the
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consumer of the `ActorRef`.
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consumer of the @apidoc[ActorRef](typed.ActorRef).
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If you need to keep track of actor references in a collection and do not care about
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If you need to keep track of actor references in a collection and do not care about
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the exact actor incarnation you can use the `ActorPath` as key, because the identifier
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the exact actor incarnation you can use the @apidoc[ActorPath](ActorPath) as key, because the identifier
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of the target actor is not taken into account when comparing actor paths.
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of the target actor is not taken into account when comparing actor paths.
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## Reusing Actor Paths
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## Reusing Actor Paths
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@ -154,7 +154,7 @@ other actors are found; its name is `"/"`. The next level consists of the
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following:
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following:
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* `"/user"` is the guardian actor for all user-created top-level actors;
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* `"/user"` is the guardian actor for all user-created top-level actors;
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actors created using `ActorSystem.actorOf` are found below this one.
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actors created using @apidoc[ActorSystem.actorOf](ActorRefFactory) {scala="#actorOf(props:akka.actor.Props):akka.actor.ActorRef" java="#actorOf(akka.actor.Props)"} are found below this one.
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* `"/system"` is the guardian actor for all system-created top-level actors,
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* `"/system"` is the guardian actor for all system-created top-level actors,
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e.g. logging listeners or actors automatically deployed by configuration at
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e.g. logging listeners or actors automatically deployed by configuration at
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the start of the actor system.
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the start of the actor system.
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@ -162,7 +162,7 @@ the start of the actor system.
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stopped or non-existing actors are re-routed (on a best-effort basis: messages
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stopped or non-existing actors are re-routed (on a best-effort basis: messages
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may be lost even within the local JVM).
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may be lost even within the local JVM).
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* `"/temp"` is the guardian for all short-lived system-created actors, e.g.
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* `"/temp"` is the guardian for all short-lived system-created actors, e.g.
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those which are used in the implementation of `ActorRef.ask`.
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those which are used in the implementation of @scala[@scaladoc[ActorRef.ask](akka.pattern.AskableActorRef#ask(message:Any)(implicittimeout:akka.util.Timeout,implicitsender:akka.actor.ActorRef):scala.concurrent.Future[Any])]@java[@javadoc[Patterns.ask](akka.pattern.Patterns#ask(akka.actor.ActorRef,java.lang.Object,java.time.Duration))].
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* `"/remote"` is an artificial path below which all actors reside whose
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* `"/remote"` is an artificial path below which all actors reside whose
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supervisors are remote actor references
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supervisors are remote actor references
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