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48.6. Asynchronous Processing on the Client
Overview
JAX-RS 2.0 supports asynchronous processing of invocations on the client side. Two different styles of asynchronous processing are supported: either using a
java.util.concurrent.Future<V>
return value; or by registering an invocation callback.
Asynchronous invocation with Future<V> return value
Using the
Future<V>
approach to asynchronous processing, you can invoke a client request asynchronously, as follows:
// Java import javax.ws.rs.client.ClientBuilder; import javax.ws.rs.client.Client; import java.util.concurrent.Future; import javax.ws.rs.core.Response; ... Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); Future<Response> futureResp = client.target("http://example.org/bookstore/books/123") .request("application/xml") .async() .get(); ... // At a later time, check (and wait) for the response: Response resp = futureResp.get();
You can use a similar approach for typed responses. For example, to get a response of type,
BookInfo
:
Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); Future<BookInfo> futureResp = client.target("http://example.org/bookstore/books/123") .request("application/xml") .async() .get(BookInfo.class); ... // At a later time, check (and wait) for the response: BookInfo resp = futureResp.get();
Asynchronous invocation with invocation callback
Instead of accessing the return value using a Future<V> object, you can define an invocation callback (using
javax.ws.rs.client.InvocationCallback<RESPONSE>
), as follows:
// Java import javax.ws.rs.client.ClientBuilder; import javax.ws.rs.client.Client; import java.util.concurrent.Future; import javax.ws.rs.core.Response; import javax.ws.rs.client.InvocationCallback; ... Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); Future<Response> futureResp = client.target("http://example.org/bookstore/books/123") .request("application/xml") .async() .get( new InvocationCallback<Response>() { @Override public void completed(final Response resp) { // Do something when invocation is complete ... } @Override public void failed(final Throwable throwable) { throwable.printStackTrace(); } }); ...
You can use a similar approach for typed responses:
// Java import javax.ws.rs.client.ClientBuilder; import javax.ws.rs.client.Client; import java.util.concurrent.Future; import javax.ws.rs.core.Response; import javax.ws.rs.client.InvocationCallback; ... Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient(); Future<BookInfo> futureResp = client.target("http://example.org/bookstore/books/123") .request("application/xml") .async() .get( new InvocationCallback<BookInfo>() { @Override public void completed(final BookInfo resp) { // Do something when invocation is complete ... } @Override public void failed(final Throwable throwable) { throwable.printStackTrace(); } }); ...