Interface EventStreamWriter<Type>

  • Type Parameters:
    Type - The type of events that go in this stream
    All Superinterfaces:
    java.lang.AutoCloseable

    public interface EventStreamWriter<Type>
    extends java.lang.AutoCloseable
    A writer can write events to a stream. This class is safe to use across threads, but doing so will not increase performance.
    • Method Summary

      All Methods Instance Methods Abstract Methods 
      Modifier and Type Method Description
      void close()
      Calls flush and then closes the writer.
      void flush()
      Block until all events that have been passed to writeEvent's corresponding futures have completed.
      EventWriterConfig getConfig()
      Returns the configuration that this writer was create with.
      void noteTime​(long timestamp)
      Notes a time that can be seen by readers which read from this stream by EventStreamReader.getCurrentTimeWindow(Stream).
      java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvent​(java.lang.String routingKey, Type event)
      Write an event to the stream.
      java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvent​(Type event)
      Send an event to the stream.
      java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvents​(java.lang.String routingKey, java.util.List<Type> events)
      Write an ordered list of events to the stream atomically for a given routing key.
    • Method Detail

      • writeEvent

        java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvent​(Type event)
        Send an event to the stream. Events that are written should appear in the stream exactly once. The maximum size of the serialized event supported is defined at Serializer.MAX_EVENT_SIZE. Note that the implementation provides retry logic to handle connection failures and service host failures. Internal retries will not violate the exactly once semantic so it is better to rely on them than to wrap this with custom retry logic.
        Parameters:
        event - The event to be written to the stream (Null is disallowed)
        Returns:
        A completableFuture that will complete when the event has been durably stored on the configured number of replicas, and is available for readers to see. This future may complete exceptionally if this cannot happen, however these exceptions are not transient failures. Failures that occur as a result of connection drops or host death are handled internally with multiple retires and exponential backoff. So there is no need to attempt to retry in the event of an exception.
      • writeEvent

        java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvent​(java.lang.String routingKey,
                                                                          Type event)
        Write an event to the stream. Similar to writeEvent(Object) but provides a routingKey which is used to specify ordering. Events written with the same routing key will be read by readers in exactly the same order they were written. The maximum size of the serialized event supported is defined at Serializer.MAX_EVENT_SIZE. Note that the implementation provides retry logic to handle connection failures and service host failures. Internal retries will not violate the exactly once semantic so it is better to rely on this than to wrap this method with custom retry logic.
        Parameters:
        routingKey - A free form string that is used to route messages to readers. Two events written with the same routingKey are guaranteed to be read in order. Two events with different routing keys may be read in parallel.
        event - The event to be written to the stream (Null is disallowed)
        Returns:
        A completableFuture that will complete when the event has been durably stored on the configured number of replicas, and is available for readers to see. This future may complete exceptionally if this cannot happen, however these exceptions are not transient failures. Failures that occur as a result of connection drops or host death are handled internally with multiple retires and exponential backoff. So there is no need to attempt to retry in the event of an exception.
      • writeEvents

        java.util.concurrent.CompletableFuture<java.lang.Void> writeEvents​(java.lang.String routingKey,
                                                                           java.util.List<Type> events)
        Write an ordered list of events to the stream atomically for a given routing key. Events written with the same routing key will be read by readers in exactly the same order they were written. The maximum size of the serialized event individually should be Serializer.MAX_EVENT_SIZE and the collective batch should be less than twice the Serializer.MAX_EVENT_SIZE. Note that the implementation provides retry logic to handle connection failures and service host failures. Internal retries will not violate the exactly once semantic so it is better to rely on this than to wrap this method with custom retry logic.
        Parameters:
        routingKey - A free form string that is used to route messages to readers. Two events written with the same routingKey are guaranteed to be read in order. Two events with different routing keys may be read in parallel.
        events - The batch of events to be written to the stream (Null is disallowed)
        Returns:
        A completableFuture that will complete when the event has been durably stored on the configured number of replicas, and is available for readers to see. This future may complete exceptionally if this cannot happen, however these exceptions are not transient failures. Failures that occur as a result of connection drops or host death are handled internally with multiple retires and exponential backoff. So there is no need to attempt to retry in the event of an exception.
      • getConfig

        EventWriterConfig getConfig()
        Returns the configuration that this writer was create with.
        Returns:
        Writer configuration
      • flush

        void flush()
        Block until all events that have been passed to writeEvent's corresponding futures have completed.
      • close

        void close()
        Calls flush and then closes the writer. (No further methods may be called)
        Specified by:
        close in interface java.lang.AutoCloseable