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Scheduling Module: A portable extension for scheduling tasks using managed beans

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Seam Cron

Quick Start

To use Seam Cron in your Maven project, include the following dependencies in your pom:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.jboss.seam.cron</groupId>
        <artifactId>seam-cron-api</artifactId>
        <version>3.0.0.Alpha1</version>
        <scope>compile</scope>
    </dependency>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.jboss.seam.cron</groupId>
        <artifactId>seam-cron-scheduling-quartz</artifactId>
        <version>3.0.0.Alpha1</version>
        <scope>runtime</scope>
    </dependency>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.jboss.seam.cron</groupId>
        <artifactId>seam-cron-asynchronous-quartz</artifactId>
        <version>3.0.0.Alpha1</version>
        <scope>runtime</scope>
    </dependency>

What is Seam Cron?

Seam Cron is a CDI portable extension which allows you to elegantly execute scheduled and asynchronous methods from your CDI project. Here's a glimpse of what's possible:

public void howlAtTheMoon(@Observes @AtMidnight CronEvent event) {
    wolf.howl();
}

@AtMidnight is a CDI-style custom qualifier which might look a little like this:

@Scheduled("00:00")
@Qualifier
@Retention( RUNTIME )
@Target( { PARAMETER })
public @interface AtMidnight
{
}

Instead of "00:00" you could use full cron-style syntax (eg: @Scheduled("0 0 0 ? * *")) or you could use an arbitrary name (eg: @Scheduled("at.midnight")), which would then be resolved into a time using the cron.properties file at the root of your classpath:

# cron.properties
at.midnight=00:00

Alternatively you could just put the schedule definition directly into the @Scheduled annotation on the method to be scheduled, but that would be a rather masochistic thing to do.

If your requirements are fairly simple, for example running a task repeatedly at a specific interval, then you can use the @Every qualifier like so:

public void clockChimes(@Observes @Every(HOUR) Trigger t) { 
    int chimes = t.getValue() % 12;
    if (chimes == 0) { chimes = 12; }
    for (int i=0; i<chimes; i++) {
        bellTower.getRope().pull();
    }
}

MEH. What else you got?

You're kidding right?

OK well, there's also this:

@Inject @HumanSeeking Missile missile;

public String destroyAllHumans() {
    initiateRatherDrawnOutMissileLaunchSequence();
    return "Those humans be good as dead";
}

@Asynchronous
public MissileDeployment initiateRatherDrawnOutMissileLaunchSequence() {
    return missile.launchViaSOAPWebServicesDeployedOnAPentiumIIRunningWindowsNTAndNortonAntiVirus();
}

OK, so that asynchronous method returns an instance of MissileDeployment. So how do you get your hands on it? Easy!

public void verifyDeployment(@Observes MissileDeployment deployment) {
    if ("EPIC FAIL".equals(deployment.getStatus())) {
        henchmen.head().fire();
    } else {
        champagne.pop();
    }
}

The rules concerning return types of @Asynchronous methods are as follows:

  • If method return type is void, no event will be fired
  • If the method invocation returns a value of null, no event will be fired. Be careful of this!

You would typically want one dedicated return type per asynchronous method invocation for a one-to-one mapping between methods and their observers, but there may be use cases for having multiple asynchronous methods all reporting their results to a single observer, and Cron would be totally cool with that. Alternatively you might wish to introduce some additional CDI-style qualifiers like so:

@Asynchronous @Credit
public Balance addCredit(int dollars) {
    ...
    return new Ballance();
}

@Asynchronous @Debit
public Balance addDebit(int dollars) {
    ...
    return new Ballance();
}

public void reportNewBalance(@Observes Balance balance) {
    log.report(balance.amount());
}

public void trackSpending(@Observes @Debit Balance balance) {
    db.saveSomething();
}

Finally, if you prefer a more traditional, EJB-esque approach then you can specify a return type of Future and use the AsyncResult helper to return the result of your method call. Seam Cron will automatically wrap this in a legit Future which the calling code can use as expected immediately.

@Asynchronous
public Future<Box> doSomeHeavyLiftingInTheBackground() {
    ...
    return new AsyncResult(new Box());
}

And the calling code:

@Inject LiftingBean liftingBean;

public void someMethod() {
    Future<Box> future = liftingBean.doSomeHeavyLiftingInTheBackground();
    // blocks until asynch method returns or gives up
    Box result = future.get(10, SECONDS);
}

This is awesome but not awesome enough yet.

I know, it's true. But you can help. If you know exactly what you need and have the skillpower to get it done, then please fork this project and submit a pull request. Alternatively submit a feature request or bug report over at JIRA: https://issues.jboss.org/browse/SEAMCRON

Building From Source:

Prerequisites:

  • JDK 5 or above
  • Maven 3 build tool
  • Git version control system

Method:

git clone git://github.com/seam/cron.git
cd cron
mvn clean install

or mvn clean install -s settings.xml

The above commands will build and install Cron into your local Maven repository. If you want to run a nifty little example swing app use the following mvn command:

mvn install -Drun -Dswing-example

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