See: Description
| Interface | Description | 
|---|---|
| SubscriberExceptionHandler | Handler for exceptions thrown by event subscribers. | 
| Class | Description | 
|---|---|
| AsyncEventBus | An  EventBusthat takes the Executor of your choice and uses it to
 dispatch events, allowing dispatch to occur asynchronously. | 
| DeadEvent | Wraps an event that was posted, but which had no subscribers and thus could
 not be delivered. | 
| EventBus | Dispatches events to listeners, and provides ways for listeners to register
 themselves. | 
| SubscriberExceptionContext | Context for an exception thrown by a subscriber. | 
| Annotation Type | Description | 
|---|---|
| AllowConcurrentEvents | Marks an event subscriber method as being thread-safe. | 
| Subscribe | Marks a method as an event subscriber. | 
See the Guava User Guide article on 
 EventBus.
 
Converting an existing EventListener-based system to use the EventBus is easy.
To listen for a specific flavor of event (say, a CustomerChangeEvent)...
Subscribe annotation.To register your listener methods with the event producers...
registerCustomerChangeEventListener method.  These
     methods are rarely defined in common interfaces, so in addition to
     knowing every possible producer, you must also know its type.EventBus.register(Object) method on an
     EventBus.  You'll need to
     make sure that your object shares an EventBus instance with the event
     producers.To listen for a common event supertype (such as EventObject or Object)...
To listen for and detect events that were dispatched without listeners...
DeadEvent.  The
     EventBus will notify you of any events that were posted but not
     delivered.  (Handy for debugging.)To keep track of listeners to your events...
To dispatch an event to listeners...
EventBus.post(Object) method.The EventBus system and code use the following terms to discuss event distribution:
Subscribe annotation.The Event Bus doesn't specify how you use it; there's nothing stopping your application from having separate EventBus instances for each component, or using separate instances to separate events by context or topic. This also makes it trivial to set up and tear down EventBus objects in your tests.
Of course, if you'd like to have a process-wide EventBus singleton, there's nothing stopping you from doing it that way. Simply have your container (such as Guice) create the EventBus as a singleton at global scope (or stash it in a static field, if you're into that sort of thing).
In short, the EventBus is not a singleton because we'd rather not make that decision for you. Use it how you like.
We feel that the Event Bus's @Subscribe annotation conveys your
 intentions just as explicitly as implementing an interface (or perhaps more
 so), while leaving you free to place event subscriber methods wherever you wish
 and give them intention-revealing names.
 
Traditional Java Events use a listener interface which typically sports only a handful of methods -- typically one. This has a number of disadvantages:
handleChangeEvent), rather than its purpose (e.g. recordChangeInJournal).
   The difficulties in implementing this cleanly has given rise to a pattern, particularly common in Swing apps, of using tiny anonymous classes to implement event listener interfaces.
Compare these two cases:
   class ChangeRecorder {
     void setCustomer(Customer cust) {
       cust.addChangeListener(new ChangeListener() {
         void customerChanged(ChangeEvent e) {
           recordChange(e.getChange());
         }
       };
     }
   }
   // Class is typically registered by the container.
   class EventBusChangeRecorder {
     @Subscribe void recordCustomerChange(ChangeEvent e) {
       recordChange(e.getChange());
     }
   }
 The intent is actually clearer in the second case: there's less noise code, and the event subscriber has a clear and meaningful name.
Subscriber<T> interface?Some have proposed a generic Subscriber<T> interface for EventBus
 listeners.  This runs into issues with Java's use of type erasure, not to
 mention problems in usability.
 
Let's say the interface looked something like the following:
   interface Subscriber<T> {
     void handleEvent(T event);
   }
 Due to erasure, no single class can implement a generic interface more than
 once with different type parameters.  This is a giant step backwards from
 traditional Java Events, where even if actionPerformed and keyPressed aren't very meaningful names, at least you can implement both
 methods!
 
Some have freaked out about EventBus's register(Object) and post(Object) methods' use of the Object type.
 
Object is used here for a good reason: the Event Bus library
 places no restrictions on the types of either your event listeners (as in
 register(Object)) or the events themselves (in post(Object)).
 
Event subscriber methods, on the other hand, must explicitly declare their argument type -- the type of event desired (or one of its supertypes). Thus, searching for references to an event class will instantly find all subscriber methods for that event, and renaming the type will affect all subscriber methods within view of your IDE (and any code that creates the event).
It's true that you can rename your @Subscribed event subscriber
 methods at will; Event Bus will not stop this or do anything to propagate the
 rename because, to Event Bus, the names of your subscriber methods are
 irrelevant.  Test code that calls the methods directly, of course, will be
 affected by your renaming -- but that's what your refactoring tools are for.
 
register a listener without any subscriber
 methods?Nothing at all.
The Event Bus was designed to integrate with containers and module
 systems, with Guice as the prototypical example.  In these cases, it's
 convenient to have the container/factory/environment pass every
 created object to an EventBus's register(Object) method.
 
This way, any object created by the container/factory/environment can hook into the system's event model simply by exposing subscriber methods.
Any problem that can be unambiguously detected by Java's type system. For example, defining a subscriber method for a nonexistent event type.
Immediately upon invoking register(Object) , the listener being
 registered is checked for the well-formedness of its subscriber methods.
 Specifically, any methods marked with @Subscribe must take only a
 single argument.
 
Any violations of this rule will cause an IllegalArgumentException
 to be thrown.
 
(This check could be moved to compile-time using APT, a solution we're researching.)
If a component posts events with no registered listeners, it may
 indicate an error (typically an indication that you missed a
 @Subscribe annotation, or that the listening component is not loaded).
 
(Note that this is not necessarily indicative of a problem. There are many cases where an application will deliberately ignore a posted event, particularly if the event is coming from code you don't control.)
To handle such events, register a subscriber method for the DeadEvent
 class.  Whenever EventBus receives an event with no registered subscribers, it
 will turn it into a DeadEvent and pass it your way -- allowing you to
 log it or otherwise recover.
 
Because subscriber methods on your listener classes are normal methods, you can simply call them from your test code to simulate the EventBus.
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