GithubHelp home page GithubHelp logo

hhy5277 / reactor-core Goto Github PK

View Code? Open in Web Editor NEW

This project forked from reactor/reactor-core

0.0 1.0 0.0 50.96 MB

Non-Blocking Reactive Foundation for the JVM

Home Page: http://projectreactor.io

License: Apache License 2.0

Java 99.38% Kotlin 0.59% Shell 0.03%

reactor-core's Introduction

Reactor Core

Join the chat at https://gitter.im/reactor/reactor Reactor Core Latest

Download

Travis CI Codecov Code Quality: Java Total Alerts

Non-Blocking Reactive Streams Foundation for the JVM both implementing a Reactive Extensions inspired API and efficient event streaming support.

The master branch is now dedicated to development of the 3.3.x line.

Getting it

Reactor 3 requires Java 8 or + to run.

With Gradle from repo.spring.io or Maven Central repositories (stable releases only):

    repositories {
//      maven { url 'https://repo.spring.io/snapshot' }
      maven { url 'https://repo.spring.io/milestone' }
      mavenCentral()
    }

    dependencies {
      //compile "io.projectreactor:reactor-core:3.3.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT"
      //testCompile("io.projectreactor:reactor-test:3.3.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT")
      compile "io.projectreactor:reactor-core:3.2.8.RELEASE"
      testCompile("io.projectreactor:reactor-test:3.2.8.RELEASE")
    }

See the reference documentation for more information on getting it (eg. using Maven, or on how to get milestones and snapshots).

Note about Android support: Reactor 3 doesn't officially support nor target Android. However it should work fine with Android SDK 26 (Android O) and above. See the complete note in the reference guide.

Getting Started

New to Reactive Programming or bored of reading already ? Try the Introduction to Reactor Core hands-on !

If you are familiar with RxJava or if you want to check more detailed introduction, be sure to check https://www.infoq.com/articles/reactor-by-example !

Flux

A Reactive Streams Publisher with basic flow operators.

  • Static factories on Flux allow for source generation from arbitrary callbacks types.
  • Instance methods allows operational building, materialized on each Flux#subscribe(), Flux#subscribe() or multicasting operations such as Flux#publish and Flux#publishNext.

Flux in action :

Flux.fromIterable(getSomeLongList())
    .mergeWith(Flux.interval(100))
    .doOnNext(serviceA::someObserver)
    .map(d -> d * 2)
    .take(3)
    .onErrorResume(errorHandler::fallback)
    .doAfterTerminate(serviceM::incrementTerminate)
    .subscribe(System.out::println);

Mono

A Reactive Streams Publisher constrained to ZERO or ONE element with appropriate operators.

  • Static factories on Mono allow for deterministic zero or one sequence generation from arbitrary callbacks types.
  • Instance methods allows operational building, materialized on each Mono#subscribe() or Mono#get() eventually called.

Mono in action :

Mono.fromCallable(System::currentTimeMillis)
    .flatMap(time -> Mono.first(serviceA.findRecent(time), serviceB.findRecent(time)))
    .timeout(Duration.ofSeconds(3), errorHandler::fallback)
    .doOnSuccess(r -> serviceM.incrementSuccess())
    .subscribe(System.out::println);

Blocking Mono result :

Tuple2<Long, Long> nowAndLater = 
        Mono.zip(
                Mono.just(System.currentTimeMillis()),
                Flux.just(1).delay(1).map(i -> System.currentTimeMillis()))
            .block();

Schedulers

Reactor uses a Scheduler as a contract for arbitrary task execution. It provides some guarantees required by Reactive Streams flows like FIFO execution.

You can use or create efficient schedulers to jump thread on the producing flows (subscribeOn) or receiving flows (publishOn):

Mono.fromCallable( () -> System.currentTimeMillis() )
	.repeat()
    .publishOn(Schedulers.single())
    .log("foo.bar")
    .flatMap(time ->
        Mono.fromCallable(() -> { Thread.sleep(1000); return time; })
            .subscribeOn(Schedulers.parallel())
    , 8) //maxConcurrency 8
    .subscribe();

ParallelFlux

ParallelFlux can starve your CPU's from any sequence whose work can be subdivided in concurrent tasks. Turn back into a Flux with ParallelFlux#sequential(), an unordered join or use arbitrary merge strategies via 'groups()'.

Mono.fromCallable( () -> System.currentTimeMillis() )
	.repeat()
    .parallel(8) //parallelism
    .runOn(Schedulers.parallel())
    .doOnNext( d -> System.out.println("I'm on thread "+Thread.currentThread()) )
    .subscribe()

Custom sources : Flux.create and FluxSink, Mono.create and MonoSink

To bridge a Subscriber or Processor into an outside context that is taking care of producing non concurrently, use Flux#create, Mono#create.

Flux.create(sink -> {
         ActionListener al = e -> {
            sink.next(textField.getText());
         };

         // without cancellation support:
         button.addActionListener(al);

         // with cancellation support:
         sink.onCancel(() -> {
         	button.removeListener(al);
         });
    },
    // Overflow (backpressure) handling, default is BUFFER
    FluxSink.OverflowStrategy.LATEST)
    .timeout(3)
    .doOnComplete(() -> System.out.println("completed!"))
    .subscribe(System.out::println)

The Backpressure Thing

Most of this cool stuff uses bounded ring buffer implementation under the hood to mitigate signal processing difference between producers and consumers. Now, the operators and processors or any standard reactive stream component working on the sequence will be instructed to flow in when these buffers have free room AND only then. This means that we make sure we both have a deterministic capacity model (bounded buffer) and we never block (request more data on write capacity). Yup, it's not rocket science after all, the boring part is already being worked by us in collaboration with Reactive Streams Commons on going research effort.

What's more in it ?

"Operator Fusion" (flow optimizers), health state observers, helpers to build custom reactive components, bounded queue generator, hash-wheel timer, converters from/to Java 9 Flow, Publisher and Java 8 CompletableFuture. The repository contains a reactor-test project with test features like the StepVerifier.


Reference Guide

https://projectreactor.io/docs/core/release/reference/docs/index.html

Javadoc

https://projectreactor.io/docs/core/release/api/

Getting started with Flux and Mono

https://github.com/reactor/lite-rx-api-hands-on

Reactor By Example

https://www.infoq.com/articles/reactor-by-example

Head-First Spring & Reactor

https://github.com/reactor/head-first-reactive-with-spring-and-reactor/

Beyond Reactor Core

  • Everything to jump outside the JVM with the non-blocking drivers from Reactor Netty.
  • Reactor Addons provide for adapters and extra operators for Reactor 3.

Powered by Reactive Streams Commons

Licensed under Apache Software License 2.0

Sponsored by Pivotal

reactor-core's People

Contributors

0xflotus avatar akarnokd avatar baptistemesta avatar bclozel avatar bsideup avatar buzzardo avatar dfeist avatar dmitriusan avatar kadyana avatar kamilszymanski avatar lebannen avatar madgnome avatar markusjais avatar nebhale avatar not-for-me avatar nurkiewicz avatar olegdokuka avatar osi avatar praseodym avatar quaff avatar rajinisivaram avatar runninglvlan avatar sdeleuze avatar simonbasle avatar smaldini avatar smiklos avatar spring-builds avatar szpak avatar theevangelista avatar violetagg avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.