I have a requirement to run a batch job at a fixed interval and have the ability to change the time of this batch job at runtime. For this I came across @Scheduled
annotation provided under Spring framework. But I'm not sure how I'd change the value of fixedDelay at runtime. I did some googling around but didn't find anything useful.
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I see you accepted the best answer, but I still see there were some unsolved issues. Was the NPE issue resolved? Is it possible for you to post the whole solution for this? Cheers– despotNov 22, 2013 at 9:57
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Possible duplicate of Scheduling a job with Spring programmatically (with fixedRate set dynamically)– Steve ChambersOct 5, 2015 at 9:54
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@jsf you can see my answer here: stackoverflow.com/a/51333059/2590960– grepJul 13, 2018 at 23:36
6 Answers
In spring boot, you can use an application property directly!
For example:
@Scheduled(fixedDelayString = "${my.property.fixed.delay.seconds}000")
private void process() {
// your impl here
}
Note that you can also have a default value in case the property isn't defined, eg to have a default of "60" (seconds):
@Scheduled(fixedDelayString = "${my.property.fixed.delay.seconds:60}000")
Other things I discovered:
- the method must be void
- the method must have no parameters
- the method may be
private
I found being able to use private
visibility handy and used it in this way:
@Service
public class MyService {
public void process() {
// do something
}
@Scheduled(fixedDelayString = "${my.poll.fixed.delay.seconds}000")
private void autoProcess() {
process();
}
}
Being private
, the scheduled method can be local to your service and not become part of your Service's API.
Also, this approach allows the process()
method to return a value, which a @Scheduled
method may not. For example, your process()
method can look like:
public ProcessResult process() {
// do something and collect information about what was done
return processResult;
}
to provide some information about what happened during processing.
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8@Bohemain Thanks for the solution, but how is the fixedDelay updated at runtime? Sep 27, 2016 at 2:53
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@KuraiBankusu it's set at start up time by using an environment specific configuration/properties file. You can't change it after start up, but there's rarely a use case for that. If you really need to change it after startup, change the config and restart!– Bohemian ♦Sep 27, 2016 at 2:56
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57This is not a useful answer. The OP asked for
at runtime
, and your solution requires a restart?– dnangNov 2, 2017 at 8:41
You can use a Trigger
to dynamically set the next execution time.
See my answer to Scheduling a job with Spring programmatically for details.
create interface , something like that:
public abstract class DynamicSchedule{
/**
* Delays scheduler
* @param milliseconds - the time to delay scheduler.
*/
abstract void delay(Long milliseconds);
/**
* Decreases delay period
* @param milliseconds - the time to decrease delay period.
*/
abstract void decreaseDelayInterval(Long milliseconds);
/**
* Increases delay period
* @param milliseconds - the time to increase dela period
*/
abstract void increaseDelayInterval(Long milliseconds);
}
Next, lets implement Trigger interface that is located at org.springframework.scheduling in the spring-context project.
import org.springframework.scheduling.TaskScheduler;
import org.springframework.scheduling.Trigger;
import org.springframework.scheduling.TriggerContext;
import java.util.Date;
import java.util.concurrent.ScheduledFuture;
public class CustomDynamicSchedule extends DynamicSchedule implements Trigger {
private TaskScheduler taskScheduler;
private ScheduledFuture<?> schedulerFuture;
/**
* milliseconds
*/
private long delayInterval;
public CustomDynamicSchedule(TaskScheduler taskScheduler) {
this.taskScheduler = taskScheduler;
}
@Override
public void increaseDelayInterval(Long delay) {
if (schedulerFuture != null) {
schedulerFuture.cancel(true);
}
this.delayInterval += delay;
schedulerFuture = taskScheduler.schedule(() -> { }, this);
}
@Override
public void decreaseDelayInterval(Long delay) {
if (schedulerFuture != null) {
schedulerFuture.cancel(true);
}
this.delayInterval -= delay;
schedulerFuture = taskScheduler.schedule(() -> { }, this);
}
@Override
public void delay(Long delay) {
if (schedulerFuture != null) {
schedulerFuture.cancel(true);
}
this.delayInterval = delay;
schedulerFuture = taskScheduler.schedule(() -> { }, this);
}
@Override
public Date nextExecutionTime(TriggerContext triggerContext) {
Date lastTime = triggerContext.lastActualExecutionTime();
return (lastTime == null) ? new Date() : new Date(lastTime.getTime() + delayInterval);
}
}
now configuration:
@Configuration
public class DynamicSchedulerConfig {
@Bean
public CustomDynamicSchedule getDynamicScheduler() {
ThreadPoolTaskScheduler threadPoolTaskScheduler = new ThreadPoolTaskScheduler();
threadPoolTaskScheduler.initialize();
return new CustomDynamicSchedule(threadPoolTaskScheduler);
}
}
and usage:
@EnableScheduling
@Component
public class TestSchedulerComponent {
@Autowired
private CustomDynamicSchedule dynamicSchedule;
@Scheduled(fixedDelay = 5000)
public void testMethod() {
dynamicSchedule.delay(1000l);
dynamicSchedule.increaseDelayInterval(9000l);
dynamicSchedule.decreaseDelayInterval(5000l);
}
}
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The answer to my comment is in this other question: stackoverflow.com/questions/52292953/meaning-of-lambda-in-java– AliukSep 12, 2018 at 10:47
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you can pass runnable class. For example you can pass the class that will log when when time will be changed.– grepSep 12, 2018 at 10:55
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@grep: I used your answer, but it's not working for me. I printed : System.out.println(last time);, getting null. May 22, 2019 at 7:40
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@grep: Your code is not working for me, could you please help me? May 26, 2019 at 6:33
You can also use Spring Expression Language (SpEL) for this.
@Scheduled(fixedDelayString = "#{@applicationPropertyService.getApplicationProperty()}")
public void getSchedule(){
System.out.println("in scheduled job");
}
@Service
public class ApplicationPropertyService {
public String getApplicationProperty(){
//get your value here
return "5000";
}
}
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My question is, if we override the AppProp.Service class and give two different delay timing, the scheduler will run two times? Oct 6, 2020 at 8:29
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1
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Yes, this won't work if you need to change at runtime, For your use-case, you might want to use Triggers Aug 10 at 6:21
AFAIK the Spring API won't let you access the internals you need to change the trigger. But you could instead configure manually the beans:
<bean id="simpleTrigger" class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.SimpleTriggerBean">
<property name="jobDetail" ref="jobDetail" />
<property name="startDelay" value="10000" />
<property name="repeatInterval" value="50000" />
</bean>
<bean class="org.springframework.scheduling.quartz.SchedulerFactoryBean">
<property name="triggers">
<list>
<ref bean="simpleTrigger" />
</list>
</property>
</bean>
Then as documented in SchedulerFactoryBean:
For dynamic registration of jobs at runtime, use a bean reference to this SchedulerFactoryBean to get direct access to the Quartz Scheduler (
org.quartz.Scheduler
). This allows you to create new jobs and triggers, and also to control and monitor the entire Scheduler.
I've dealt with the same problem. We had the requirement to change the cron expression at runtime and reschedule the service. So there should be:
- no recompilation
- no redeployment
- no restart
of the application. I've inspected all the popular solutions but only 2 of them fulfill all the requirements.
- Implement SchedulingConfigurer as ach suggested
- Use a custom solution as described here
The disadvantage of the SchedulingConfigurer approach is that it is pull-based, i.e. the scheduling configuration is pulled every time the service's business logic is executed. This is not a bad thing in general but if the config is changed rarely and the execution interval is short then there will be a lot of unnecessary requests.
The disadvantage of the custom solution is that it requires a bit more coding but it is push-based and reacts to configuration changes so no unnecessary requests/calls are performed.