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4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris Beams ed0576c181 Support executor qualification with @Async#value
Prior to this change, Spring's @Async annotation support was tied to a
single AsyncTaskExecutor bean, meaning that all methods marked with
@Async were forced to use the same executor. This is an undesirable
limitation, given that certain methods may have different priorities,
etc. This leads to the need to (optionally) qualify which executor
should handle each method.

This is similar to the way that Spring's @Transactional annotation was
originally tied to a single PlatformTransactionManager, but in Spring
3.0 was enhanced to allow for a qualifier via the #value attribute, e.g.

  @Transactional("ptm1")
  public void m() { ... }

where "ptm1" is either the name of a PlatformTransactionManager bean or
a qualifier value associated with a PlatformTransactionManager bean,
e.g. via the <qualifier> element in XML or the @Qualifier annotation.

This commit introduces the same approach to @Async and its relationship
to underlying executor beans. As always, the following syntax remains
supported

  @Async
  public void m() { ... }

indicating that calls to #m will be delegated to the "default" executor,
i.e. the executor provided to

  <task:annotation-driven executor="..."/>

or the executor specified when authoring a @Configuration class that
implements AsyncConfigurer and its #getAsyncExecutor method.

However, it now also possible to qualify which executor should be used
on a method-by-method basis, e.g.

  @Async("e1")
  public void m() { ... }

indicating that calls to #m will be delegated to the executor bean
named or otherwise qualified as "e1". Unlike the default executor
which is specified up front at configuration time as described above,
the "e1" executor bean is looked up within the container on the first
execution of #m and then cached in association with that method for the
lifetime of the container.

Class-level use of Async#value behaves as expected, indicating that all
methods within the annotated class should be executed with the named
executor. In the case of both method- and class-level annotations, any
method-level #value overrides any class level #value.

This commit introduces the following major changes:

 - Add @Async#value attribute for executor qualification

 - Introduce AsyncExecutionAspectSupport as a common base class for
   both MethodInterceptor- and AspectJ-based async aspects. This base
   class provides common structure for specifying the default executor
   (#setExecutor) as well as logic for determining (and caching) which
   executor should execute a given method (#determineAsyncExecutor) and
   an abstract method to allow subclasses to provide specific strategies
   for executor qualification (#getExecutorQualifier).

 - Introduce AnnotationAsyncExecutionInterceptor as a specialization of
   the existing AsyncExecutionInterceptor to allow for introspection of
   the @Async annotation and its #value attribute for a given method.
   Note that this new subclass was necessary for packaging reasons -
   the original AsyncExecutionInterceptor lives in
   org.springframework.aop and therefore does not have visibility to
   the @Async annotation in org.springframework.scheduling.annotation.
   This new subclass replaces usage of AsyncExecutionInterceptor
   throughout the framework, though the latter remains usable and
   undeprecated for compatibility with any existing third-party
   extensions.

 - Add documentation to spring-task-3.2.xsd and reference manual
   explaining @Async executor qualification

 - Add tests covering all new functionality

Note that the public API of all affected components remains backward-
compatible.

Issue: SPR-6847
2012-05-20 15:18:10 +03:00
Chris Beams 3fb11870d9 Polish async method execution infrastructure
In anticipation of substantive changes required to implement @Async
executor qualification, the following updates have been made to the
components and infrastructure supporting @Async functionality:

 - Fix trailing whitespace and indentation errors
 - Fix generics warnings
 - Add Javadoc where missing, update to use {@code} tags, etc.
 - Avoid NPE in AopUtils#canApply
 - Organize imports to follow conventions
 - Remove System.out.println statements from tests
 - Correct various punctuation and grammar problems
2012-05-20 15:17:28 +03:00
Stevo Slavic effb762558 Fix javadoc warnings
Before this change there were numerous javadoc warnings being reported
while building Spring framework API.

This commit resolves most of the javadoc warnings, reducing the total
number from 265 to 103.

Issue: SPR-9113
2012-04-30 11:31:02 +03:00
Chris Beams 02a4473c62 Rename modules {org.springframework.*=>spring-*}
This renaming more intuitively expresses the relationship between
subprojects and the JAR artifacts they produce.

Tracking history across these renames is possible, but it requires
use of the --follow flag to `git log`, for example

    $ git log spring-aop/src/main/java/org/springframework/aop/Advisor.java

will show history up until the renaming event, where

    $ git log --follow spring-aop/src/main/java/org/springframework/aop/Advisor.java

will show history for all changes to the file, before and after the
renaming.

See http://chrisbeams.com/git-diff-across-renamed-directories
2012-01-31 14:37:10 +01:00