1

I am trying to implement a generic class that executes a callable asynchronously, but I am not sure about the semantics.

@Component
public class MyCallerImpl implements MyCaller {

    @Async
    @Override
    public <T> Future<T> runAsync(Callable<T> callable) throws Exception {

        return new AsyncResult<T>(callable.call());
    }
}

Basically, this component executes arbitrary actions from any callable asynchronously using the @Async annotation.

I am unsure about the Exception in the throws clause of the method signature.

A Junit test:

@ContextConfiguration("classpath:test-config.xml")
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
public class RunnerTest{

    @Resource(name="myCallerImpl")
    private MyCaller myCaller;

    @Test
    public void testException(){

        final Callable<String> callable = new Callable<String>(){
            @Override
            public String call() throws Exception{
                throw new MyException("foobar");
            }
        };

        try
        {
            final Future<String> future = myCaller.runAsync(callable); // this can throw Exception due to Callable.call()
            future.get(); // this can throw InterruptedException and ExecutionException 
        }
        catch (final InterruptedException ie)
        {
            // do someting
        }
        catch (final ExecutionException ee)
        {
            // we want to check the cause
            final Throwable cause = ee.getCause();
            assertTrue(cause instanceof MyException);
        }
        catch (final Exception e)
        {
            // Not sure what to do here. 
            // Must be caught as it is declared to 
            // be thrown from the MyCaller.runAsync() method
            // but nothing will really ever get here 
            // since the method is @Async and any exception will be
            // wrapped by an ExecutionException and thrown during Future.get()

            fail("this is unexpected);
        }

My question is what to do about the Exception declared in the throws clause of MyCallerImpl.runAsync()?

The only reason I have declared it is because of the way I am calling the callable. Originally I had the following in the async method:

FutureTask<T> futureTask = new FutureTask<T>(callable);
futureTask.run();
return futureTask;

But when an exception is thrown from the callable in that instance, it gets wrapped twice in an ExecutionException, the first time when FutureTask.run() is called eventually FutureTask.Sync.innerRun() catches the exception and calls innnerSetException() and a second time when the AsyncExecutionIntercepter gets the result from the Future via Future.get(), which eventually again checks if there is an exception and throws a new ExecutionException wrapping the ExecutionException caught in innerRun()

I also tried to do the following in the method:

FutureTask<T> futureTask = new FutureTask<T>(callable);
return futureTask;

I had figured that since the AsyncExecutionInterceptor calls Future.get(), that the callable would be called immediately, but that was not the case. It just hangs on FutureTask.acquireSharedInterruptibly() and never returns.

Maybe I'm in over my head here. It works how I have it set-up with the callable now, but I rather not have the method signature declare a throws Exception.

Any advice? Should I forget about this generic way of doing async calls with a callable?

1 Answer 1

0

There are 2 layers of exception here.

one: the exception leading to the calling of the Callable

if (string.equals("X")){ callable.call();}

two: the exception caused when calling the callable.call() method (your "throw new MyException("foobar");")

since you do not have any other code prior to "callable.call();", it would be safe to remove the checked exception.

Change

public <T> Future<T> runAsync(Callable<T> callable) throws Exception

to

public <T> Future<T> runAsync(Callable<T> callable) 

additionally, you can code it this way

            final Future<String> future = myCaller.runAsync(callable);
  try
        {
            future.get(); // this can throw InterruptedException and ExecutionException 
        }
        catch (final InterruptedException ie)
        {
            // do someting
        }
        catch (final ExecutionException ee)
        {
            // we want to check the cause
            final Throwable cause = ee.getCause();
            assertTrue(cause instanceof MyException);
        }

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.