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I'm struggling with the following problem. I have a single Spring Batch Job which is executed every 10 minutes via a @Scheduled method. If a job execution fails, I need to terminate the schedule. I know how to do this either by
a) calling ScheduledAnnotationBeanPostProcessor::postProcessBeforeDestruction() or
b) making a custom ThreadPoolTaskScheduler, storing ScheduledFutures and then cancel()ing them,

but in both cases the problem is the same : tons of Spring Batch TransactionSystemExceptions because it can no longer commit metadata. And despite not having any more @Scheduled tasks to run, the application doesn't terminate...

Any ideas?

Cheers!

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    Is you JVM running only the batch job in a scheduled way? Is stopping the Spring Application context and gracefully shutting down the JVM after the job failure an option for you? Jan 17, 2019 at 9:12
  • @MahmoudBenHassine That sounds perfect but how can I achieve this ? Jan 17, 2019 at 10:13
  • @MahmoudBenHassine For instance, if I do an SpringApplication.exit() from within a JobListener, I still get a number of Exceptions. An InterruptedException from the datasource as well as a few CannotCreateTransactionExceptions presumably due to SpringBatch trying to write metadata to the db... same deal if using ConfigurableApplicationContext.close() Jan 17, 2019 at 10:47
  • Best I've managed so far is to call softEvictConnections() on HikariPoolMXBean until there are no more active connections and then to perform StringApplication.exit() ... seems hacky though... Jan 17, 2019 at 12:19
  • ok thanks for the details. See my answer on how to do it. Hope it helps. Jan 17, 2019 at 13:45

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If guess (from the tags) you are using Spring Boot. So in that case, please note that boot emits an ApplicationEvent of type JobExecutionEvent with the JobExecution as payload. So you can create a bean that implements ApplicationListener<JobExecutionEvent> and gracefully shutdown the application context if the job fails.

Hope this helps.

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