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In a processor that checks if a record is created before 90 days ago, I want to terminate the step, not the job, if the reader has read an outdated record.

I tried stepExecution.setStatus(), stepExecution.setEndTime(new Date()), and so on.

Can anyone suggest a direct and explicit way to terminate step? Thanks.

2 Answers 2

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As far as I know a 'direct' way to stop a step doesn't exists.
To terminate a step you have to return null from ItemReader.read() so when you process an old object you can set a flag into step-execution context and use it to:

  1. prevent other items of current chunk to be processed
  2. prevent chunk processed item writing
  3. return null from reader to stop step execution

If someone known a better way let us know! :)

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  • Yes. I did it this way. When reader meets the first item that shouldn't be deleted, it returns null, which means it's the time to quit this step. Thanks a lot. This helped me assure my solution might be the good one ;)
    – choiapril
    Sep 21, 2015 at 1:53
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This may not be ideal for you scenario but it is a possible option. In section 5.3.3 of the spring batch doc it describes adding the stop element to a step. You can set a stop condition. So in your example you could fail the job by throwing an exception. Also in that stop element definition you can define a restart step which could be the next step in your processing.

I know not the perfect solution because of the start -> stop -> start but if nothing else works it might be manageable via external scripts/apps that are handling your batch start.

I found an alternative to what I described up here as well that might work. I have been testing it out a bit on something I am working on and it seems to be a means to fail a step and allow it to continue on to something else.

<step id="firststep" parent="fs" next="failDecision" />
<decision id="failDecision" decider="decider">
    <next on="FAILED" to="secondstep" />
    <next on="COMPLETED" to="thirdstep" />
</decision>
<step id="secondstep" parent="fs"/>
<step id="thirdstep" parent="fs"/>

In this case I am failing on the first step when I meet the criteria for that and it is going to the secondstep. When it finish successfully it is going to the thirdstep although I imagine you could forgo the thirdstep if you needed to.

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