@Beta @GwtCompatible(emulated=true) public final class Futures extends Object
Future
interface.
Many of these methods use the ListenableFuture
API; consult the
Guava User Guide article on
ListenableFuture
.
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static <V> void |
addCallback(ListenableFuture<V> future,
FutureCallback<? super V> callback)
Registers separate success and failure callbacks to be run when the
Future 's computation is complete or, if the computation is already complete, immediately. |
static <V> void |
addCallback(ListenableFuture<V> future,
FutureCallback<? super V> callback,
Executor executor)
Registers separate success and failure callbacks to be run when the
Future 's computation is complete or, if the computation is already complete, immediately. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> |
allAsList(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> futures)
Creates a new
ListenableFuture whose value is a list containing the
values of all its input futures, if all succeed. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> |
allAsList(ListenableFuture<? extends V>... futures)
Creates a new
ListenableFuture whose value is a list containing the
values of all its input futures, if all succeed. |
static <V,X extends Throwable> |
catching(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
Class<X> exceptionType,
Function<? super X,? extends V> fallback)
Returns a
Future whose result is taken from the given primary input or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType , from the result provided by the
fallback . |
static <V,X extends Throwable> |
catching(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
Class<X> exceptionType,
Function<? super X,? extends V> fallback,
Executor executor)
Returns a
Future whose result is taken from the given primary input or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType , from the result provided by the
fallback . |
static <V,X extends Throwable> |
catchingAsync(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
Class<X> exceptionType,
AsyncFunction<? super X,? extends V> fallback)
Returns a
Future whose result is taken from the given primary input or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType , from the result provided by the
fallback . |
static <V,X extends Throwable> |
catchingAsync(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
Class<X> exceptionType,
AsyncFunction<? super X,? extends V> fallback,
Executor executor)
Returns a
Future whose result is taken from the given primary input or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType , from the result provided by the
fallback . |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
dereference(ListenableFuture<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> nested)
Returns a new
ListenableFuture whose result is the product of
calling get() on the Future nested within the given Future , effectively chaining the futures one after the other. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
get(Future<V> future,
Class<X> exceptionClass)
Deprecated.
Use
getChecked(Future, Class) . This method will be
removed in Guava release 20.0. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
get(Future<V> future,
long timeout,
TimeUnit unit,
Class<X> exceptionClass)
Deprecated.
Use
getChecked(Future, Class, long, TimeUnit) , noting
the change in parameter order. This method will be removed in Guava
release 20.0. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
getChecked(Future<V> future,
Class<X> exceptionClass)
Returns the result of
Future.get() , converting most exceptions to a
new instance of the given checked exception type. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
getChecked(Future<V> future,
Class<X> exceptionClass,
long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
Returns the result of
Future.get(long, TimeUnit) , converting most
exceptions to a new instance of the given checked exception type. |
static <V> V |
getUnchecked(Future<V> future)
Returns the result of calling
Future.get() uninterruptibly on a
task known not to throw a checked exception. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
immediateCancelledFuture()
Creates a
ListenableFuture which is cancelled immediately upon
construction, so that isCancelled() always returns true . |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
immediateCheckedFuture(V value)
Returns a
CheckedFuture which has its value set immediately upon
construction. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
immediateFailedCheckedFuture(X exception)
Returns a
CheckedFuture which has an exception set immediately upon
construction. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
immediateFailedFuture(Throwable throwable)
Returns a
ListenableFuture which has an exception set immediately
upon construction. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
immediateFuture(V value)
Creates a
ListenableFuture which has its value set immediately upon
construction. |
static <T> ImmutableList<ListenableFuture<T>> |
inCompletionOrder(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends T>> futures)
Returns a list of delegate futures that correspond to the futures received in the order
that they complete.
|
static <I,O> Future<O> |
lazyTransform(Future<I> input,
Function<? super I,? extends O> function)
Like
transform(ListenableFuture, Function) except that the
transformation function is invoked on each call to
get() on the returned future. |
static <V,X extends Exception> |
makeChecked(ListenableFuture<V> future,
Function<? super Exception,X> mapper)
Creates a
CheckedFuture out of a normal ListenableFuture and a Function
that maps from Exception instances into the appropriate checked type. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
nonCancellationPropagating(ListenableFuture<V> future)
Creates a new
ListenableFuture whose result is set from the
supplied future when it completes. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> |
successfulAsList(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> futures)
Creates a new
ListenableFuture whose value is a list containing the
values of all its successful input futures. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> |
successfulAsList(ListenableFuture<? extends V>... futures)
Creates a new
ListenableFuture whose value is a list containing the
values of all its successful input futures. |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transform(ListenableFuture<I> input,
AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function)
Deprecated.
These
AsyncFunction overloads of transform are
being renamed to transformAsync . (The Function
overloads are keeping the "transform" name.) This method will be removed in Guava release
20.0. |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transform(ListenableFuture<I> input,
AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function,
Executor executor)
Deprecated.
These
AsyncFunction overloads of transform are
being renamed to transformAsync . (The Function
overloads are keeping the "transform" name.) This method will be removed in Guava release
20.0. |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transform(ListenableFuture<I> input,
Function<? super I,? extends O> function)
Returns a new
ListenableFuture whose result is the product of
applying the given Function to the result of the given Future . |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transform(ListenableFuture<I> input,
Function<? super I,? extends O> function,
Executor executor)
Returns a new
ListenableFuture whose result is the product of
applying the given Function to the result of the given Future . |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transformAsync(ListenableFuture<I> input,
AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function)
Returns a new
ListenableFuture whose result is asynchronously derived from the result
of the given Future . |
static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> |
transformAsync(ListenableFuture<I> input,
AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function,
Executor executor)
Returns a new
ListenableFuture whose result is asynchronously derived from the result
of the given Future . |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
withFallback(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
FutureFallback<? extends V> fallback)
Deprecated.
Use
catchingAsync(input, Throwable.class,
fallbackImplementedAsAnAsyncFunction) , usually replacing Throwable.class with the specific type you want to handle. This method
will be removed in Guava release 20.0. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
withFallback(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input,
FutureFallback<? extends V> fallback,
Executor executor)
Deprecated.
Use
catchingAsync(input, Throwable.class,
fallbackImplementedAsAnAsyncFunction, executor) , usually replacing
Throwable.class with the specific type you want to handle. This method
will be removed in Guava release 20.0. |
static <V> ListenableFuture<V> |
withTimeout(ListenableFuture<V> delegate,
long time,
TimeUnit unit,
ScheduledExecutorService scheduledExecutor)
Returns a future that delegates to another but will finish early (via a
TimeoutException wrapped in an ExecutionException ) if the
specified duration expires. |
@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <V,X extends Exception> CheckedFuture<V,X> makeChecked(ListenableFuture<V> future, Function<? super Exception,X> mapper)
CheckedFuture
out of a normal ListenableFuture
and a Function
that maps from Exception
instances into the appropriate checked type.
Warning: We recommend against using CheckedFuture
in new projects. CheckedFuture
is difficult to build libraries atop. CheckedFuture
ports of methods
like transformAsync(com.google.common.util.concurrent.ListenableFuture<I>, com.google.common.util.concurrent.AsyncFunction<? super I, ? extends O>)
have historically had bugs, and some of these bugs are
necessary, unavoidable consequences of the CheckedFuture
API. Additionally, CheckedFuture
encourages users to take exceptions from one thread and rethrow them in another,
producing confusing stack traces.
The given mapping function will be applied to an
InterruptedException
, a CancellationException
, or an
ExecutionException
.
See Future.get()
for details on the exceptions thrown.
@CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> immediateFuture(@Nullable V value)
ListenableFuture
which has its value set immediately upon
construction. The getters just return the value. This Future
can't
be canceled or timed out and its isDone()
method always returns
true
.@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <V,X extends Exception> CheckedFuture<V,X> immediateCheckedFuture(@Nullable V value)
CheckedFuture
which has its value set immediately upon
construction.
The returned Future
can't be cancelled, and its isDone()
method always returns true
. Calling get()
or checkedGet()
will immediately return the provided value.
@CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> immediateFailedFuture(Throwable throwable)
ListenableFuture
which has an exception set immediately
upon construction.
The returned Future
can't be cancelled, and its isDone()
method always returns true
. Calling get()
will immediately
throw the provided Throwable
wrapped in an ExecutionException
.
@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> immediateCancelledFuture()
ListenableFuture
which is cancelled immediately upon
construction, so that isCancelled()
always returns true
.@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <V,X extends Exception> CheckedFuture<V,X> immediateFailedCheckedFuture(X exception)
CheckedFuture
which has an exception set immediately upon
construction.
The returned Future
can't be cancelled, and its isDone()
method always returns true
. Calling get()
will immediately
throw the provided Exception
wrapped in an ExecutionException
, and calling checkedGet()
will throw the
provided exception itself.
@Deprecated @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> withFallback(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, FutureFallback<? extends V> fallback)
catchingAsync(input, Throwable.class,
fallbackImplementedAsAnAsyncFunction)
, usually replacing Throwable.class
with the specific type you want to handle. This method
will be removed in Guava release 20.0.Future
whose result is taken from the given primary
input
or, if the primary input fails, from the Future
provided by the fallback
. FutureFallback.create(java.lang.Throwable)
is not
invoked until the primary input has failed, so if the primary input
succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of
the output Future
.
Below is an example of a fallback that returns a default value if an exception occurs:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.withFallback(
fetchCounterFuture, new FutureFallback<Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> create(Throwable t) {
// Returning "0" as the default for the counter when the
// exception happens.
return immediateFuture(0);
}
});
The fallback can also choose to propagate the original exception when desired:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter only in case the exception was a
// TimeoutException.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.withFallback(
fetchCounterFuture, new FutureFallback<Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> create(Throwable t) {
if (t instanceof TimeoutException) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
return immediateFailedFuture(t);
}
});
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous choice in some cases. See the discussion in
the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners"
refer here to the work done during FutureFallback.create
, not to
any work done to complete the returned Future
.
input
- the primary input Future
fallback
- the FutureFallback
implementation to be called if
input
fails@Deprecated @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> withFallback(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, FutureFallback<? extends V> fallback, Executor executor)
catchingAsync(input, Throwable.class,
fallbackImplementedAsAnAsyncFunction, executor)
, usually replacing
Throwable.class
with the specific type you want to handle. This method
will be removed in Guava release 20.0.Future
whose result is taken from the given primary
input
or, if the primary input fails, from the Future
provided by the fallback
. FutureFallback.create(java.lang.Throwable)
is not
invoked until the primary input has failed, so if the primary input
succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of
the output Future
.
Below is an example of a fallback that returns a default value if an exception occurs:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.withFallback(
fetchCounterFuture, new FutureFallback<Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> create(Throwable t) {
// Returning "0" as the default for the counter when the
// exception happens.
return immediateFuture(0);
}
}, directExecutor());
The fallback can also choose to propagate the original exception when desired:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter only in case the exception was a
// TimeoutException.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.withFallback(
fetchCounterFuture, new FutureFallback<Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> create(Throwable t) {
if (t instanceof TimeoutException) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
return immediateFailedFuture(t);
}
}, directExecutor());
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is
dangerous in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation.
The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to
the work done during FutureFallback.create
, not to any work done to
complete the returned Future
.
input
- the primary input Future
fallback
- the FutureFallback
implementation to be called if
input
failsexecutor
- the executor that runs fallback
if input
fails@GwtIncompatible(value="AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") @CheckReturnValue public static <V,X extends Throwable> ListenableFuture<V> catching(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, Class<X> exceptionType, Function<? super X,? extends V> fallback)
Future
whose result is taken from the given primary input
or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType
, from the result provided by the
fallback
. Function.apply(F)
is not invoked until the primary input has failed, so
if the primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output Future
.
Usage example:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catching(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new Function<FetchException, Integer>() {
public Integer apply(FetchException e) {
return 0;
}
});
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous
choice in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight
listeners" refer here to the work done during Function.apply
.
input
- the primary input Future
exceptionType
- the exception type that triggers use of fallback
. To avoid hiding
bugs and other unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding
Throwable.class
in particular.fallback
- the Function
implementation to be called if input
fails with
the expected exception type@GwtIncompatible(value="AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") @CheckReturnValue public static <V,X extends Throwable> ListenableFuture<V> catching(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, Class<X> exceptionType, Function<? super X,? extends V> fallback, Executor executor)
Future
whose result is taken from the given primary input
or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType
, from the result provided by the
fallback
. Function.apply(F)
is not invoked until the primary input has failed, so
if the primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output Future
.
Usage example:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catching(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new Function<FetchException, Integer>() {
public Integer apply(FetchException e) {
return 0;
}
}, directExecutor());
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is dangerous in some cases. See
the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to the
work done during Function.apply
.
input
- the primary input Future
exceptionType
- the exception type that triggers use of fallback
. To avoid hiding
bugs and other unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding
Throwable.class
in particular.fallback
- the Function
implementation to be called if input
fails with
the expected exception typeexecutor
- the executor that runs fallback
if input
fails@GwtIncompatible(value="AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") public static <V,X extends Throwable> ListenableFuture<V> catchingAsync(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, Class<X> exceptionType, AsyncFunction<? super X,? extends V> fallback)
Future
whose result is taken from the given primary input
or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType
, from the result provided by the
fallback
. AsyncFunction.apply(I)
is not invoked until the primary input has
failed, so if the primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of
fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output
Future
.
Usage examples:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catchingAsync(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new AsyncFunction<FetchException, Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> apply(FetchException e) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
});
The fallback can also choose to propagate the original exception when desired:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter only in case the exception was a
// TimeoutException.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catchingAsync(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new AsyncFunction<FetchException, Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> apply(FetchException e)
throws FetchException {
if (omitDataOnFetchFailure) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
throw e;
}
});
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous
choice in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight
listeners" refer here to the work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any work done
to complete the returned Future
.
input
- the primary input Future
exceptionType
- the exception type that triggers use of fallback
. To avoid hiding
bugs and other unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding
Throwable.class
in particular.fallback
- the AsyncFunction
implementation to be called if input
fails
with the expected exception typewithFallback
)@GwtIncompatible(value="AVAILABLE but requires exceptionType to be Throwable.class") public static <V,X extends Throwable> ListenableFuture<V> catchingAsync(ListenableFuture<? extends V> input, Class<X> exceptionType, AsyncFunction<? super X,? extends V> fallback, Executor executor)
Future
whose result is taken from the given primary input
or, if the
primary input fails with the given exceptionType
, from the result provided by the
fallback
. AsyncFunction.apply(I)
is not invoked until the primary input has
failed, so if the primary input succeeds, it is never invoked. If, during the invocation of
fallback
, an exception is thrown, this exception is used as the result of the output
Future
.
Usage examples:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter in case an exception happens when
// processing the RPC to fetch counters.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catchingAsync(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new AsyncFunction<FetchException, Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> apply(FetchException e) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
}, directExecutor());
The fallback can also choose to propagate the original exception when desired:
ListenableFuture<Integer> fetchCounterFuture = ...;
// Falling back to a zero counter only in case the exception was a
// TimeoutException.
ListenableFuture<Integer> faultTolerantFuture = Futures.catchingAsync(
fetchCounterFuture, FetchException.class,
new AsyncFunction<FetchException, Integer>() {
public ListenableFuture<Integer> apply(FetchException e)
throws FetchException {
if (omitDataOnFetchFailure) {
return immediateFuture(0);
}
throw e;
}
}, directExecutor());
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is dangerous in some cases. See
the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to the
work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any work done to complete the returned
Future
.
input
- the primary input Future
exceptionType
- the exception type that triggers use of fallback
. To avoid hiding
bugs and other unrecoverable errors, callers should prefer more specific types, avoiding
Throwable.class
in particular.fallback
- the AsyncFunction
implementation to be called if input
fails
with the expected exception typeexecutor
- the executor that runs fallback
if input
failswithFallback
)@GwtIncompatible(value="java.util.concurrent.ScheduledExecutorService") @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> withTimeout(ListenableFuture<V> delegate, long time, TimeUnit unit, ScheduledExecutorService scheduledExecutor)
TimeoutException
wrapped in an ExecutionException
) if the
specified duration expires.
The delegate future is interrupted and cancelled if it times out.
delegate
- The future to delegate to.time
- when to timeout the futureunit
- the time unit of the time parameterscheduledExecutor
- The executor service to enforce the timeout.@Deprecated public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transform(ListenableFuture<I> input, AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function)
AsyncFunction
overloads of transform
are
being renamed to transformAsync
. (The Function
overloads are keeping the "transform" name.) This method will be removed in Guava release
20.0.ListenableFuture
whose result is asynchronously
derived from the result of the given Future
. More precisely, the
returned Future
takes its result from a Future
produced by
applying the given AsyncFunction
to the result of the original
Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<RowKey> rowKeyFuture = indexService.lookUp(query);
AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult> queryFunction =
new AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult>() {
public ListenableFuture<QueryResult> apply(RowKey rowKey) {
return dataService.read(rowKey);
}
};
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture =
transform(rowKeyFuture, queryFunction);
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous choice in some cases. See the discussion in
the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners"
refer here to the work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any
work done to complete the returned Future
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in
sync with that of the input future and that of the future returned by the
function. That is, if the returned Future
is cancelled, it will
attempt to cancel the other two, and if either of the other two is
cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it
will attempt to cancel itself.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A function to transform the result of the input future
to the result of the output future@Deprecated public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transform(ListenableFuture<I> input, AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function, Executor executor)
AsyncFunction
overloads of transform
are
being renamed to transformAsync
. (The Function
overloads are keeping the "transform" name.) This method will be removed in Guava release
20.0.ListenableFuture
whose result is asynchronously
derived from the result of the given Future
. More precisely, the
returned Future
takes its result from a Future
produced by
applying the given AsyncFunction
to the result of the original
Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<RowKey> rowKeyFuture = indexService.lookUp(query);
AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult> queryFunction =
new AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult>() {
public ListenableFuture<QueryResult> apply(RowKey rowKey) {
return dataService.read(rowKey);
}
};
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture =
transform(rowKeyFuture, queryFunction, executor);
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is
dangerous in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation.
The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to
the work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any work done to
complete the returned Future
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in
sync with that of the input future and that of the future returned by the
chain function. That is, if the returned Future
is cancelled, it
will attempt to cancel the other two, and if either of the other two is
cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it
will attempt to cancel itself.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A function to transform the result of the input future
to the result of the output futureexecutor
- Executor to run the function in.public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transformAsync(ListenableFuture<I> input, AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function)
ListenableFuture
whose result is asynchronously derived from the result
of the given Future
. More precisely, the returned Future
takes its result from
a Future
produced by applying the given AsyncFunction
to the result of the
original Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<RowKey> rowKeyFuture = indexService.lookUp(query);
AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult> queryFunction =
new AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult>() {
public ListenableFuture<QueryResult> apply(RowKey rowKey) {
return dataService.read(rowKey);
}
};
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture =
transformAsync(rowKeyFuture, queryFunction);
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous
choice in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight
listeners" refer here to the work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any work done
to complete the returned Future
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in sync with that of the
input future and that of the future returned by the function. That is, if the returned Future
is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel the other two, and if either of the other two
is cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it will attempt to
cancel itself.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A function to transform the result of the input future to the result of the
output futuretransform
)public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transformAsync(ListenableFuture<I> input, AsyncFunction<? super I,? extends O> function, Executor executor)
ListenableFuture
whose result is asynchronously derived from the result
of the given Future
. More precisely, the returned Future
takes its result from
a Future
produced by applying the given AsyncFunction
to the result of the
original Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<RowKey> rowKeyFuture = indexService.lookUp(query);
AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult> queryFunction =
new AsyncFunction<RowKey, QueryResult>() {
public ListenableFuture<QueryResult> apply(RowKey rowKey) {
return dataService.read(rowKey);
}
};
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture =
transformAsync(rowKeyFuture, queryFunction, executor);
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is dangerous in some cases. See
the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to the
work done during AsyncFunction.apply
, not to any work done to complete the returned
Future
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in sync with that of the
input future and that of the future returned by the chain function. That is, if the returned
Future
is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel the other two, and if either of the
other two is cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it will
attempt to cancel itself.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A function to transform the result of the input future to the result of the
output futureexecutor
- Executor to run the function in.transform
)public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transform(ListenableFuture<I> input, Function<? super I,? extends O> function)
ListenableFuture
whose result is the product of
applying the given Function
to the result of the given Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture = ...;
Function<QueryResult, List<Row>> rowsFunction =
new Function<QueryResult, List<Row>>() {
public List<Row> apply(QueryResult queryResult) {
return queryResult.getRows();
}
};
ListenableFuture<List<Row>> rowsFuture =
transform(queryFuture, rowsFunction);
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous choice in some cases. See the discussion in
the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation. The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners"
refer here to the work done during Function.apply
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in
sync with that of the input future. That is, if the returned Future
is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel the input, and if the input is
cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it
will attempt to cancel itself.
An example use of this method is to convert a serializable object returned from an RPC into a POJO.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A Function to transform the results of the provided future
to the results of the returned future. This will be run in the thread
that notifies input it is complete.compose
)public static <I,O> ListenableFuture<O> transform(ListenableFuture<I> input, Function<? super I,? extends O> function, Executor executor)
ListenableFuture
whose result is the product of
applying the given Function
to the result of the given Future
. Example:
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> queryFuture = ...;
Function<QueryResult, List<Row>> rowsFunction =
new Function<QueryResult, List<Row>>() {
public List<Row> apply(QueryResult queryResult) {
return queryResult.getRows();
}
};
ListenableFuture<List<Row>> rowsFuture =
transform(queryFuture, rowsFunction, executor);
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is
dangerous in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation.
The documentation's warnings about "lightweight listeners" refer here to
the work done during Function.apply
.
The returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in
sync with that of the input future. That is, if the returned Future
is cancelled, it will attempt to cancel the input, and if the input is
cancelled, the returned Future
will receive a callback in which it
will attempt to cancel itself.
An example use of this method is to convert a serializable object returned from an RPC into a POJO.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A Function to transform the results of the provided future
to the results of the returned future.executor
- Executor to run the function in.compose
)@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <I,O> Future<O> lazyTransform(Future<I> input, Function<? super I,? extends O> function)
transform(ListenableFuture, Function)
except that the
transformation function
is invoked on each call to
get()
on the returned future.
The returned Future
reflects the input's cancellation
state directly, and any attempt to cancel the returned Future is likewise
passed through to the input Future.
Note that calls to timed get
only apply the timeout to the execution of the underlying Future
,
not to the execution of the transformation function.
The primary audience of this method is callers of transform
who don't have a ListenableFuture
available and
do not mind repeated, lazy function evaluation.
input
- The future to transformfunction
- A Function to transform the results of the provided future
to the results of the returned future.@CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> dereference(ListenableFuture<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> nested)
ListenableFuture
whose result is the product of
calling get()
on the Future
nested within the given Future
, effectively chaining the futures one after the other. Example:
SettableFuture<ListenableFuture<String>> nested = SettableFuture.create();
ListenableFuture<String> dereferenced = dereference(nested);
This call has the same cancellation and execution semantics as transform(ListenableFuture, AsyncFunction)
, in that the returned Future
attempts to keep its cancellation state in sync with both the
input Future
and the nested Future
. The transformation
is very lightweight and therefore takes place in the same thread (either
the thread that called dereference
, or the thread in which the
dereferenced future completes).
nested
- The nested future to transform.@Beta @SafeVarargs @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> allAsList(ListenableFuture<? extends V>... futures)
ListenableFuture
whose value is a list containing the
values of all its input futures, if all succeed. If any input fails, the
returned future fails immediately.
The list of results is in the same order as the input list.
Canceling this future will attempt to cancel all the component futures, and if any of the provided futures fails or is canceled, this one is, too.
futures
- futures to combine@Beta @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> allAsList(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> futures)
ListenableFuture
whose value is a list containing the
values of all its input futures, if all succeed. If any input fails, the
returned future fails immediately.
The list of results is in the same order as the input list.
Canceling this future will attempt to cancel all the component futures, and if any of the provided futures fails or is canceled, this one is, too.
futures
- futures to combine@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<V> nonCancellationPropagating(ListenableFuture<V> future)
ListenableFuture
whose result is set from the
supplied future when it completes. Cancelling the supplied future
will also cancel the returned future, but cancelling the returned
future will have no effect on the supplied future.@Beta @SafeVarargs @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> successfulAsList(ListenableFuture<? extends V>... futures)
ListenableFuture
whose value is a list containing the
values of all its successful input futures. The list of results is in the
same order as the input list, and if any of the provided futures fails or
is canceled, its corresponding position will contain null
(which is
indistinguishable from the future having a successful value of
null
).
Canceling this future will attempt to cancel all the component futures.
futures
- futures to combine@Beta @CheckReturnValue public static <V> ListenableFuture<List<V>> successfulAsList(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends V>> futures)
ListenableFuture
whose value is a list containing the
values of all its successful input futures. The list of results is in the
same order as the input list, and if any of the provided futures fails or
is canceled, its corresponding position will contain null
(which is
indistinguishable from the future having a successful value of
null
).
Canceling this future will attempt to cancel all the component futures.
futures
- futures to combine@Beta @GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") @CheckReturnValue public static <T> ImmutableList<ListenableFuture<T>> inCompletionOrder(Iterable<? extends ListenableFuture<? extends T>> futures)
Cancelling a delegate future has no effect on any input future, since the delegate future does not correspond to a specific input future until the appropriate number of input futures have completed. At that point, it is too late to cancel the input future. The input future's result, which cannot be stored into the cancelled delegate future, is ignored.
public static <V> void addCallback(ListenableFuture<V> future, FutureCallback<? super V> callback)
Future
's computation is complete or, if the computation is already complete, immediately.
There is no guaranteed ordering of execution of callbacks, but any callback added through this method is guaranteed to be called once the computation is complete. Example:
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> future = ...;
addCallback(future,
new FutureCallback<QueryResult> {
public void onSuccess(QueryResult result) {
storeInCache(result);
}
public void onFailure(Throwable t) {
reportError(t);
}
});
This overload, which does not accept an executor, uses directExecutor
, a dangerous choice in some cases. See the discussion in
the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation.
For a more general interface to attach a completion listener to a
Future
, see addListener
.
future
- The future attach the callback to.callback
- The callback to invoke when future
is completed.public static <V> void addCallback(ListenableFuture<V> future, FutureCallback<? super V> callback, Executor executor)
Future
's computation is complete or, if the computation is already complete, immediately.
The callback is run in executor
.
There is no guaranteed ordering of execution of callbacks, but any
callback added through this method is guaranteed to be called once the
computation is complete.
Example:
ListenableFuture<QueryResult> future = ...;
Executor e = ...
addCallback(future,
new FutureCallback<QueryResult> {
public void onSuccess(QueryResult result) {
storeInCache(result);
}
public void onFailure(Throwable t) {
reportError(t);
}
}, e);
When selecting an executor, note that directExecutor
is
dangerous in some cases. See the discussion in the ListenableFuture.addListener
documentation.
For a more general interface to attach a completion listener to a
Future
, see addListener
.
future
- The future attach the callback to.callback
- The callback to invoke when future
is completed.executor
- The executor to run callback
when the future
completes.@Deprecated @GwtIncompatible(value="reflection") public static <V,X extends Exception> V get(Future<V> future, Class<X> exceptionClass) throws X extends Exception
getChecked(Future, Class)
. This method will be
removed in Guava release 20.0.Future.get()
, converting most exceptions to a
new instance of the given checked exception type. This reduces boilerplate
for a common use of Future
in which it is unnecessary to
programmatically distinguish between exception types or to extract other
information from the exception instance.
Exceptions from Future.get
are treated as follows:
ExecutionException
has its cause wrapped in an
X
if the cause is a checked exception, an UncheckedExecutionException
if the cause is a RuntimeException
, or an ExecutionError
if the cause is an
Error
.
InterruptedException
is wrapped in an X
(after
restoring the interrupt).
CancellationException
is propagated untouched, as is any
other RuntimeException
(though get
implementations are
discouraged from throwing such exceptions).
The overall principle is to continue to treat every checked exception as a
checked exception, every unchecked exception as an unchecked exception, and
every error as an error. In addition, the cause of any ExecutionException
is wrapped in order to ensure that the new stack trace
matches that of the current thread.
Instances of exceptionClass
are created by choosing an arbitrary
public constructor that accepts zero or more arguments, all of type String
or Throwable
(preferring constructors with at least one
String
) and calling the constructor via reflection. If the
exception did not already have a cause, one is set by calling Throwable.initCause(Throwable)
on it. If no such constructor exists, an
IllegalArgumentException
is thrown.
X
- if get
throws any checked exception except for an ExecutionException
whose cause is not itself a checked exceptionUncheckedExecutionException
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with a RuntimeException
as its causeExecutionError
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Error
as its causeCancellationException
- if get
throws a CancellationException
IllegalArgumentException
- if exceptionClass
extends RuntimeException
or does not have a suitable constructorX extends Exception
@Deprecated @GwtIncompatible(value="reflection") public static <V,X extends Exception> V get(Future<V> future, long timeout, TimeUnit unit, Class<X> exceptionClass) throws X extends Exception
getChecked(Future, Class, long, TimeUnit)
, noting
the change in parameter order. This method will be removed in Guava
release 20.0.Future.get(long, TimeUnit)
, converting most
exceptions to a new instance of the given checked exception type. This
reduces boilerplate for a common use of Future
in which it is
unnecessary to programmatically distinguish between exception types or to
extract other information from the exception instance.
Exceptions from Future.get
are treated as follows:
ExecutionException
has its cause wrapped in an
X
if the cause is a checked exception, an UncheckedExecutionException
if the cause is a RuntimeException
, or an ExecutionError
if the cause is an
Error
.
InterruptedException
is wrapped in an X
(after
restoring the interrupt).
TimeoutException
is wrapped in an X
.
CancellationException
is propagated untouched, as is any
other RuntimeException
(though get
implementations are
discouraged from throwing such exceptions).
The overall principle is to continue to treat every checked exception as a
checked exception, every unchecked exception as an unchecked exception, and
every error as an error. In addition, the cause of any ExecutionException
is wrapped in order to ensure that the new stack trace
matches that of the current thread.
Instances of exceptionClass
are created by choosing an arbitrary
public constructor that accepts zero or more arguments, all of type String
or Throwable
(preferring constructors with at least one
String
) and calling the constructor via reflection. If the
exception did not already have a cause, one is set by calling Throwable.initCause(Throwable)
on it. If no such constructor exists, an
IllegalArgumentException
is thrown.
X
- if get
throws any checked exception except for an ExecutionException
whose cause is not itself a checked exceptionUncheckedExecutionException
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with a RuntimeException
as its causeExecutionError
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Error
as its causeCancellationException
- if get
throws a CancellationException
IllegalArgumentException
- if exceptionClass
extends RuntimeException
or does not have a suitable constructorX extends Exception
@GwtIncompatible(value="reflection") public static <V,X extends Exception> V getChecked(Future<V> future, Class<X> exceptionClass) throws X extends Exception
Future.get()
, converting most exceptions to a
new instance of the given checked exception type. This reduces boilerplate
for a common use of Future
in which it is unnecessary to
programmatically distinguish between exception types or to extract other
information from the exception instance.
Exceptions from Future.get
are treated as follows:
ExecutionException
has its cause wrapped in an
X
if the cause is a checked exception, an UncheckedExecutionException
if the cause is a RuntimeException
, or an ExecutionError
if the cause is an
Error
.
InterruptedException
is wrapped in an X
(after
restoring the interrupt).
CancellationException
is propagated untouched, as is any
other RuntimeException
(though get
implementations are
discouraged from throwing such exceptions).
The overall principle is to continue to treat every checked exception as a
checked exception, every unchecked exception as an unchecked exception, and
every error as an error. In addition, the cause of any ExecutionException
is wrapped in order to ensure that the new stack trace
matches that of the current thread.
Instances of exceptionClass
are created by choosing an arbitrary
public constructor that accepts zero or more arguments, all of type String
or Throwable
(preferring constructors with at least one
String
) and calling the constructor via reflection. If the
exception did not already have a cause, one is set by calling Throwable.initCause(Throwable)
on it. If no such constructor exists, an
IllegalArgumentException
is thrown.
X
- if get
throws any checked exception except for an ExecutionException
whose cause is not itself a checked exceptionUncheckedExecutionException
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with a RuntimeException
as its causeExecutionError
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Error
as its causeCancellationException
- if get
throws a CancellationException
IllegalArgumentException
- if exceptionClass
extends RuntimeException
or does not have a suitable constructorX extends Exception
get
)@GwtIncompatible(value="reflection") public static <V,X extends Exception> V getChecked(Future<V> future, Class<X> exceptionClass, long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws X extends Exception
Future.get(long, TimeUnit)
, converting most
exceptions to a new instance of the given checked exception type. This
reduces boilerplate for a common use of Future
in which it is
unnecessary to programmatically distinguish between exception types or to
extract other information from the exception instance.
Exceptions from Future.get
are treated as follows:
ExecutionException
has its cause wrapped in an
X
if the cause is a checked exception, an UncheckedExecutionException
if the cause is a RuntimeException
, or an ExecutionError
if the cause is an
Error
.
InterruptedException
is wrapped in an X
(after
restoring the interrupt).
TimeoutException
is wrapped in an X
.
CancellationException
is propagated untouched, as is any
other RuntimeException
(though get
implementations are
discouraged from throwing such exceptions).
The overall principle is to continue to treat every checked exception as a
checked exception, every unchecked exception as an unchecked exception, and
every error as an error. In addition, the cause of any ExecutionException
is wrapped in order to ensure that the new stack trace
matches that of the current thread.
Instances of exceptionClass
are created by choosing an arbitrary
public constructor that accepts zero or more arguments, all of type String
or Throwable
(preferring constructors with at least one
String
) and calling the constructor via reflection. If the
exception did not already have a cause, one is set by calling Throwable.initCause(Throwable)
on it. If no such constructor exists, an
IllegalArgumentException
is thrown.
X
- if get
throws any checked exception except for an ExecutionException
whose cause is not itself a checked exceptionUncheckedExecutionException
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with a RuntimeException
as its causeExecutionError
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Error
as its causeCancellationException
- if get
throws a CancellationException
IllegalArgumentException
- if exceptionClass
extends RuntimeException
or does not have a suitable constructorX extends Exception
get
and with different parameter order)@GwtIncompatible(value="TODO") public static <V> V getUnchecked(Future<V> future)
Future.get()
uninterruptibly on a
task known not to throw a checked exception. This makes Future
more
suitable for lightweight, fast-running tasks that, barring bugs in the
code, will not fail. This gives it exception-handling behavior similar to
that of ForkJoinTask.join
.
Exceptions from Future.get
are treated as follows:
ExecutionException
has its cause wrapped in an
UncheckedExecutionException
(if the cause is an Exception
) or ExecutionError
(if the cause is an Error
).
InterruptedException
causes a retry of the get
call. The interrupt is restored before getUnchecked
returns.
CancellationException
is propagated untouched. So is any
other RuntimeException
(get
implementations are
discouraged from throwing such exceptions).
The overall principle is to eliminate all checked exceptions: to loop to
avoid InterruptedException
, to pass through CancellationException
, and to wrap any exception from the underlying
computation in an UncheckedExecutionException
or ExecutionError
.
For an uninterruptible get
that preserves other exceptions, see
Uninterruptibles.getUninterruptibly(Future)
.
UncheckedExecutionException
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Exception
as its causeExecutionError
- if get
throws an ExecutionException
with an Error
as its causeCancellationException
- if get
throws a CancellationException
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