The akka documentation states:
(...) you can just write your actor code without worrying about concurrency at all.
Behind the scenes Akka will run sets of actors on sets of real threads, where typically many actors share one thread, and subsequent invocations of one actor may end up being processed on different threads. Akka ensures that this implementation detail does not affect the single-threadedness of handling the actor’s state.
But let's say i'm building a Future, and pipe it to a callback, in the event-handling thread. For example, using the ask pattern:
ask(someActor, new SomeRequest(), timeout)
.onSuccess(new OnSuccess<Object>() {
@Override
public void onSuccess(Object answer) throws Throwable {
// Modify actor state
}
}, getContext().system().dispatcher());
Does this means the callback will never be executed concurrently with the event-handling thread ? And thus, can safely modify the actor state without worrying about synchronization?