This commit adds a note in the reference documentation stating that
`ErrorHandler` infrastructure is not involved when reactive methods send
an error signal: the exception is sent as a message in the pipeline and
is not thrown from the task `Runnable`.
See gh-23533
This commit adds support for `@Scheduled` annotation on reactive
methods and Kotlin suspending functions.
Reactive methods are methods that return a `Publisher` or a subclass
of `Publisher`. The `ReactiveAdapterRegistry` is used to support many
implementations, such as `Flux`, `Mono`, `Flow`, `Single`, etc.
Methods should not take any argument and published values will be
ignored, as they are already with synchronous support.
This is implemented in `ScheduledAnnotationReactiveSupport`, which
"converts" Publishers to `Runnable`. This strategy keeps track of
active Subscriptions in the `ScheduledAnnotationBeanPostProcessor`,
in order to cancel them all in case of shutdown.
The existing scheduling support for tasks is reused, aligning the
triggering behavior with the existing support: cron, fixedDelay and
fixedRate are all supported strategies.
If the `Publisher` errors, the exception is logged at warn level and
otherwise ignored. As a result new `Runnable` instances will be
created for each execution and scheduling will continue.
The only difference with synchronous support is that error signals
will not be thrown by those `Runnable` tasks and will not be made
available to the `org.springframework.util.ErrorHandler` contract.
This is due to the asynchronous and lazy nature of Publishers.
Closes gh-23533
Closes gh-28515
Instead of having antora run always, which happens regardless of
whether anything has changed, we'll have it invoked as part of the CI
build, and we'll have to run it locally ourselves when necessary.
See gh-30481
Prior to this commit, the Observation instrumentation for Reactive
server applications was implemented with a `WebFilter`. This allowed to
record observations and set up a tracing context for the controller
handlers.
The limitation of this approach is that all processing happening at a
lower level is not aware of any observation. Here, the
`HttpWebHandlerAdapter` handles several interesting aspects:
* logging of HTTP requests and responses at the TRACE level
* logging of client disconnect errors
* handling of unresolved errors
With the current instrumentation, these logging statements will miss the
tracing context information. As a result, this commit deprecates the
`ServerHttpObservationFilter` in favor of a more direct instrumentation
of the `HttpWebHandlerAdapter`. This enables a more precise
instrumentattion and allows to set up the current observation earlier in
the reactor context: log statements will now contain the relevant
information.
Fixes gh-30013
This commit improves how the build deals with javadoc invalid references
in two ways.
Link/see references that are temporarily invalid during javadoc
generation of individual modules are better masked by using the option
`Xdoclint:syntax` instead of `Xdoclint:none` (warnings were still
visible in some cases, e.g. when individually building the javadoc for
a specific module).
Global javadoc-building task `api` now combines `syntax` and `reference`
`Xdoclint` groups, allowing to raise truly invalid references even when
all the modules have been aggregated.
This commit also fixes the 20+ errors which appeared following the later
change in doclet configuration.
Closes gh-30428
This commit augment the AOT section with best practices we have
experienced while working on the AOT engine. In particular, it describes
how a FactoryBean with an unresolved generic should be handled.
Closes gh-30434