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1. Spring Batch Introduction

Many applications within the enterprise domain require bulk processing to perform business operations in mission-critical environments. These business operations include:

  • Automated, complex processing of large volumes of information that is most efficiently processed without user interaction. These operations typically include time-based events (such as month-end calculations, notices, or correspondence).

  • Periodic application of complex business rules processed repetitively across very large data sets (for example, insurance benefit determination or rate adjustments).

  • Integration of information that is received from internal and external systems that typically requires formatting, validation, and processing in a transactional manner into the system of record. Batch processing is used to process billions of transactions every day for enterprises.

Spring Batch is a lightweight, comprehensive batch framework designed to enable the development of robust batch applications that are vital for the daily operations of enterprise systems. Spring Batch builds upon the characteristics of the Spring Framework that people have come to expect (productivity, POJO-based development approach, and general ease of use), while making it easy for developers to access and use more advanced enterprise services when necessary. Spring Batch is not a scheduling framework. There are many good enterprise schedulers (such as Quartz, Tivoli, Control-M, and others) available in both the commercial and open source spaces. Spring Batch is intended to work in conjunction with a scheduler rather than replace a scheduler.

Spring Batch provides reusable functions that are essential in processing large volumes of records, including logging and tracing, transaction management, job processing statistics, job restart, skip, and resource management. It also provides more advanced technical services and features that enable extremely high-volume and high performance batch jobs through optimization and partitioning techniques. You can use Spring Batch in both simple use cases (such as reading a file into a database or running a stored procedure) and complex, high volume use cases (such as moving high volumes of data between databases, transforming it, and so on). High-volume batch jobs can use the framework in a highly scalable manner to process significant volumes of information.

1.1. Background

While open source software projects and associated communities have focused greater attention on web-based and microservices-based architecture frameworks, there has been a notable lack of focus on reusable architecture frameworks to accommodate Java-based batch processing needs, despite continued needs to handle such processing within enterprise IT environments. The lack of a standard, reusable batch architecture has resulted in the proliferation of many one-off, in-house solutions developed within client enterprise IT functions.

SpringSource (now VMware) and Accenture collaborated to change this. Accenture’s hands-on industry and technical experience in implementing batch architectures, SpringSource’s depth of technical experience, and Spring’s proven programming model together made a natural and powerful partnership to create high-quality, market-relevant software aimed at filling an important gap in enterprise Java. Both companies worked with a number of clients who were solving similar problems by developing Spring-based batch architecture solutions. This input provided some useful additional detail and real-life constraints that helped to ensure the solution can be applied to the real-world problems posed by clients.

Accenture contributed previously proprietary batch processing architecture frameworks to the Spring Batch project, along with committer resources to drive support, enhancements, and the existing feature set. Accenture’s contribution was based upon decades of experience in building batch architectures with the last several generations of platforms: COBOL on mainframes, C++ on Unix, and, now, Java anywhere.

The collaborative effort between Accenture and SpringSource aimed to promote the standardization of software processing approaches, frameworks, and tools enterprise users can consistently use when creating batch applications. Companies and government agencies desiring to deliver standard, proven solutions to their enterprise IT environments can benefit from Spring Batch.

1.2. Usage Scenarios

A typical batch program generally:

  • Reads a large number of records from a database, file, or queue.

  • Processes the data in some fashion.

  • Writes back data in a modified form.

Spring Batch automates this basic batch iteration, providing the capability to process similar transactions as a set, typically in an offline environment without any user interaction. Batch jobs are part of most IT projects, and Spring Batch is the only open source framework that provides a robust, enterprise-scale solution.

1.2.1. Business Scenarios

Spring Batch supports the following business scenarios:

  • Commit batch process periodically.

  • Concurrent batch processing: parallel processing of a job.

  • Staged, enterprise message-driven processing.

  • Massively parallel batch processing.

  • Manual or scheduled restart after failure.

  • Sequential processing of dependent steps (with extensions to workflow-driven batches).

  • Partial processing: skip records (for example, on rollback).

  • Whole-batch transaction, for cases with a small batch size or existing stored procedures or scripts.

1.2.2. Technical Objectives

Spring Batch has the following technical objectives:

  • Let batch developers use the Spring programming model: Concentrate on business logic and let the framework take care of the infrastructure.

  • Provide clear separation of concerns between the infrastructure, the batch execution environment, and the batch application.

  • Provide common, core execution services as interfaces that all projects can implement.

  • Provide simple and default implementations of the core execution interfaces that can be used “out of the box”.

  • Make it easy to configure, customize, and extend services, by using the Spring framework in all layers.

  • All existing core services should be easy to replace or extend, without any impact to the infrastructure layer.

  • Provide a simple deployment model, with the architecture JARs completely separate from the application, built by using Maven.

1.3. Spring Batch Architecture

Spring Batch is designed with extensibility and a diverse group of end users in mind. The following image shows the layered architecture that supports the extensibility and ease of use for end-user developers.

Figure 1.1: Spring Batch Layered Architecture
Figure 1. Spring Batch Layered Architecture

This layered architecture highlights three major high-level components: Application, Core, and Infrastructure. The application contains all batch jobs and custom code written by developers using Spring Batch. The Batch Core contains the core runtime classes necessary to launch and control a batch job. It includes implementations for JobLauncher, Job, and Step. Both Application and Core are built on top of a common infrastructure. This infrastructure contains common readers and writers and services (such as the RetryTemplate), which are used both by application developers(readers and writers, such as ItemReader and ItemWriter), and the core framework itself (retry, which is its own library).

1.3.1. General Batch Principles and Guidelines

The following key principles, guidelines, and general considerations should be considered when building a batch solution.

  • Remember that a batch architecture typically affects on-line architecture and vice versa. Design with both architectures and environments in mind by using common building blocks when possible.

  • Simplify as much as possible and avoid building complex logical structures in single batch applications.

  • Keep the processing and storage of data physically close together (in other words, keep your data where your processing occurs).

  • Minimize system resource use, especially I/O. Perform as many operations as possible in internal memory.

  • Review application I/O (analyze SQL statements) to ensure that unnecessary physical I/O is avoided. In particular, the following four common flaws need to be looked for:

    • Reading data for every transaction when the data could be read once and cached or kept in the working storage.

    • Rereading data for a transaction where the data was read earlier in the same transaction.

    • Causing unnecessary table or index scans.

    • Not specifying key values in the WHERE clause of an SQL statement.

  • Do not do things twice in a batch run. For instance, if you need data summarization for reporting purposes, you should (if possible) increment stored totals when data is being initially processed, so your reporting application does not have to reprocess the same data.

  • Allocate enough memory at the beginning of a batch application to avoid time-consuming reallocation during the process.

  • Always assume the worst with regard to data integrity. Insert adequate checks and record validation to maintain data integrity.

  • Implement checksums for internal validation where possible. For example, flat files should have a trailer record telling the total of records in the file and an aggregate of the key fields.

  • Plan and execute stress tests as early as possible in a production-like environment with realistic data volumes.

  • In large batch systems, backups can be challenging, especially if the system is running concurrent with online applications on a 24-7 basis. Database backups are typically well taken care of in online design, but file backups should be considered to be just as important. If the system depends on flat files, file backup procedures should not only be in place and documented but be regularly tested as well.

1.3.2. Batch Processing Strategies

To help design and implement batch systems, basic batch application building blocks and patterns should be provided to the designers and programmers in the form of sample structure charts and code shells. When starting to design a batch job, the business logic should be decomposed into a series of steps that can be implemented by using the following standard building blocks:

  • Conversion Applications: For each type of file supplied by or generated for an external system, a conversion application must be created to convert the transaction records supplied into a standard format required for processing. This type of batch application can partly or entirely consist of translation utility modules (see Basic Batch Services).

  • Validation Applications: A validation application ensures that all input and output records are correct and consistent. Validation is typically based on file headers and trailers, checksums and validation algorithms, and record-level cross-checks.

  • Extract Applications: An extract application reads a set of records from a database or input file, selects records based on predefined rules, and writes the records to an output file.

  • Extract/Update Applications: An extract/update applications reads records from a database or an input file and makes changes to a database or an output file, driven by the data found in each input record.

  • Processing and Updating Applications: A processing and updating application performs processing on input transactions from an extract or a validation application. The processing usually involves reading a database to obtain data required for processing, potentially updating the database and creating records for output processing.

  • Output/Format Applications: An output/format applications reads an input file, restructures data from this record according to a standard format, and produces an output file for printing or transmission to another program or system.

Additionally, a basic application shell should be provided for business logic that cannot be built by using the previously mentioned building blocks.

In addition to the main building blocks, each application may use one or more standard utility steps, such as:

  • Sort: A program that reads an input file and produces an output file where records have been re-sequenced according to a sort key field in the records. Sorts are usually performed by standard system utilities.

  • Split: A program that reads a single input file and writes each record to one of several output files based on a field value. Splits can be tailored or performed by parameter-driven standard system utilities.

  • Merge: A program that reads records from multiple input files and produces one output file with combined data from the input files. Merges can be tailored or performed by parameter-driven standard system utilities.

Batch applications can additionally be categorized by their input source:

  • Database-driven applications are driven by rows or values retrieved from the database.

  • File-driven applications are driven by records or values retrieved from a file.

  • Message-driven applications are driven by messages retrieved from a message queue.

The foundation of any batch system is the processing strategy. Factors affecting the selection of the strategy include: estimated batch system volume, concurrency with online systems or with other batch systems, available batch windows. (Note that, with more enterprises wanting to be up and running 24x7, clear batch windows are disappearing).

Typical processing options for batch are (in increasing order of implementation complexity):

  • Normal processing during a batch window in offline mode.

  • Concurrent batch or online processing.

  • Parallel processing of many different batch runs or jobs at the same time.

  • Partitioning (processing of many instances of the same job at the same time).

  • A combination of the preceding options.

Some or all of these options may be supported by a commercial scheduler.

The remainder of this section discusses these processing options in more detail. Note that, as a rule of thumb, the commit and locking strategy adopted by batch processes depends on the type of processing performed and that the online locking strategy should also use the same principles. Therefore, the batch architecture cannot be simply an afterthought when designing an overall architecture.

The locking strategy can be to use only normal database locks or to implement an additional custom locking service in the architecture. The locking service would track database locking (for example, by storing the necessary information in a dedicated database table) and give or deny permissions to the application programs requesting a database operation. Retry logic could also be implemented by this architecture to avoid aborting a batch job in case of a lock situation.

1. Normal processing in a batch window For simple batch processes running in a separate batch window where the data being updated is not required by online users or other batch processes, concurrency is not an issue and a single commit can be done at the end of the batch run.

In most cases, a more robust approach is more appropriate. Keep in mind that batch systems have a tendency to grow as time goes by, both in terms of complexity and the data volumes they handle. If no locking strategy is in place and the system still relies on a single commit point, modifying the batch programs can be painful. Therefore, even with the simplest batch systems, consider the need for commit logic for restart-recovery options as well as the information concerning the more complex cases described later in this section.

2. Concurrent batch or on-line processing Batch applications processing data that can be simultaneously updated by online users should not lock any data (either in the database or in files) that could be required by on-line users for more than a few seconds. Also, updates should be committed to the database at the end of every few transactions. Doing so minimizes the portion of data that is unavailable to other processes and the elapsed time the data is unavailable.

Another option to minimize physical locking is to have logical row-level locking implemented with either an optimistic locking pattern or a pessimistic locking pattern.

  • Optimistic locking assumes a low likelihood of record contention. It typically means inserting a timestamp column in each database table that is used concurrently by both batch and online processing. When an application fetches a row for processing, it also fetches the timestamp. As the application then tries to update the processed row, the update uses the original timestamp in the WHERE clause. If the timestamp matches, the data and the timestamp are updated. If the timestamp does not match, this indicates that another application has updated the same row between the fetch and the update attempt. Therefore, the update cannot be performed.

  • Pessimistic locking is any locking strategy that assumes there is a high likelihood of record contention and, therefore, either a physical or a logical lock needs to be obtained at retrieval time. One type of pessimistic logical locking uses a dedicated lock-column in the database table. When an application retrieves the row for update, it sets a flag in the lock column. With the flag in place, other applications attempting to retrieve the same row logically fail. When the application that sets the flag updates the row, it also clears the flag, enabling the row to be retrieved by other applications. Note that the integrity of data must be maintained also between the initial fetch and the setting of the flag — for example, by using database locks (such as SELECT FOR UPDATE). Note also that this method suffers from the same downside as physical locking except that it is somewhat easier to manage building a time-out mechanism that gets the lock released if the user goes to lunch while the record is locked.

These patterns are not necessarily suitable for batch processing, but they might be used for concurrent batch and online processing (such as in cases where the database does not support row-level locking). As a general rule, optimistic locking is more suitable for online applications, while pessimistic locking is more suitable for batch applications. Whenever logical locking is used, the same scheme must be used for all applications that access the data entities protected by logical locks.

Note that both of these solutions only address locking a single record. Often, we may need to lock a logically related group of records. With physical locks, you have to manage these very carefully to avoid potential deadlocks. With logical locks, it is usually best to build a logical lock manager that understands the logical record groups you want to protect and that can ensure that locks are coherent and non-deadlocking. This logical lock manager usually uses its own tables for lock management, contention reporting, time-out mechanism, and other concerns.

3. Parallel Processing Parallel processing lets multiple batch runs or jobs run in parallel to minimize the total elapsed batch processing time. This is not a problem as long as the jobs are not sharing the same files, database tables, or index spaces. If they do, this service should be implemented by using partitioned data. Another option is to build an architecture module for maintaining interdependencies by using a control table. A control table should contain a row for each shared resource and whether it is in use by an application or not. The batch architecture or the application in a parallel job would then retrieve information from that table to determine whether it can get access to the resource it needs.

If the data access is not a problem, parallel processing can be implemented through the use of additional threads to process in parallel. In a mainframe environment, parallel job classes have traditionally been used, to ensure adequate CPU time for all the processes. Regardless, the solution has to be robust enough to ensure time slices for all the running processes.

Other key issues in parallel processing include load balancing and the availability of general system resources, such as files, database buffer pools, and so on. Also, note that the control table itself can easily become a critical resource.

4. Partitioning Using partitioning lets multiple versions of large batch applications run concurrently. The purpose of this is to reduce the elapsed time required to process long batch jobs. Processes that can be successfully partitioned are those where the input file can be split or the main database tables partitioned to let the application run against different sets of data.

In addition, processes that are partitioned must be designed to process only their assigned data set. A partitioning architecture has to be closely tied to the database design and the database partitioning strategy. Note that database partitioning does not necessarily mean physical partitioning of the database (although, in most cases, this is advisable). The following image illustrates the partitioning approach:

Figure 1.2: Partitioned Process
Figure 2. Partitioned Process

The architecture should be flexible enough to allow dynamic configuration of the number of partitions. You shoul consider both automatic and user controlled configuration. Automatic configuration may be based on such parameters as the input file size and the number of input records.

4.1 Partitioning Approaches Selecting a partitioning approach has to be done on a case-by-case basis. The following list describes some of the possible partitioning approaches:

1. Fixed and Even Break-Up of Record Set

This involves breaking the input record set into an even number of portions (for example, 10, where each portion has exactly 1/10th of the entire record set). Each portion is then processed by one instance of the batch/extract application.

To use this approach, preprocessing is required to split the record set up. The result of this split is a lower and upper bound placement number that you can use as input to the batch/extract application to restrict its processing to only its portion.

Preprocessing could be a large overhead, as it has to calculate and determine the bounds of each portion of the record set.

2. Break up by a Key Column

This involves breaking up the input record set by a key column, such as a location code, and assigning data from each key to a batch instance. To achieve this, column values can be either:

  • Assigned to a batch instance by a partitioning table (described later in this section).

  • Assigned to a batch instance by a portion of the value (such as 0000-0999, 1000 - 1999, and so on).

Under option 1, adding new values means a manual reconfiguration of the batch or extract to ensure that the new value is added to a particular instance.

Under option 2, this ensures that all values are covered by an instance of the batch job. However, the number of values processed by one instance is dependent on the distribution of column values (there may be a large number of locations in the 0000-0999 range and few in the 1000-1999 range). Under this option, the data range should be designed with partitioning in mind.

Under both options, the optimal even distribution of records to batch instances cannot be realized. There is no dynamic configuration of the number of batch instances used.

3. Breakup by Views

This approach is basically breakup by a key column but on the database level. It involves breaking up the record set into views. These views are used by each instance of the batch application during its processing. The breakup is done by grouping the data.

With this option, each instance of a batch application has to be configured to hit a particular view (instead of the main table). Also, with the addition of new data values, this new group of data has to be included into a view. There is no dynamic configuration capability, as a change in the number of instances results in a change to the views.

4. Addition of a Processing Indicator

This involves the addition of a new column to the input table, which acts as an indicator. As a preprocessing step, all indicators are marked as being non-processed. During the record fetch stage of the batch application, records are read on the condition that an individual record is marked as being non-processed, and, once it is read (with lock), it is marked as being in processing. When that record is completed, the indicator is updated to either complete or error. You can start many instances of a batch application without a change, as the additional column ensures that a record is only processed once.

With this option, I/O on the table increases dynamically. In the case of an updating batch application, this impact is reduced, as a write must occur anyway.

5. Extract Table to a Flat File

This approach involves the extraction of the table into a flat file. This file can then be split into multiple segments and used as input to the batch instances.

With this option, the additional overhead of extracting the table into a file and splitting it may cancel out the effect of multi-partitioning. Dynamic configuration can be achieved by changing the file splitting script.

6. Use of a Hashing Column

This scheme involves the addition of a hash column (key or index) to the database tables used to retrieve the driver record. This hash column has an indicator to determine which instance of the batch application processes this particular row. For example, if there are three batch instances to be started, an indicator of 'A' marks a row for processing by instance 1, an indicator of 'B' marks a row for processing by instance 2, and an indicator of 'C' marks a row for processing by instance 3.

The procedure used to retrieve the records would then have an additional WHERE clause to select all rows marked by a particular indicator. The inserts in this table would involve the addition of the marker field, which would be defaulted to one of the instances (such as 'A').

A simple batch application would be used to update the indicators, such as to redistribute the load between the different instances. When a sufficiently large number of new rows have been added, this batch can be run (anytime, except in the batch window) to redistribute the new rows to other instances.

Additional instances of the batch application require only the running of the batch application (as described in the preceding paragraphs) to redistribute the indicators to work with a new number of instances.

4.2 Database and Application Design Principles

An architecture that supports multi-partitioned applications that run against partitioned database tables and use the key column approach should include a central partition repository for storing partition parameters. This provides flexibility and ensures maintainability. The repository generally consists of a single table, known as the partition table.

Information stored in the partition table is static and, in general, should be maintained by the DBA. The table should consist of one row of information for each partition of a multi-partitioned application. The table should have columns for Program ID Code, Partition Number (the logical ID of the partition), Low Value of the database key column for this partition, and High Value of the database key column for this partition.

On program start-up, the program id and partition number should be passed to the application from the architecture (specifically, from the control processing tasklet). If a key column approach is used, these variables are used to read the partition table to determine what range of data the application is to process. In addition, the partition number must be used throughout the processing to:

  • Add to the output files or database updates, for the merge process to work properly.

  • Report normal processing to the batch log and any errors to the architecture error handler.

4.3 Minimizing Deadlocks

When applications run in parallel or are partitioned, contention for database resources and deadlocks may occur. It is critical that the database design team eliminate potential contention situations as much as possible, as part of the database design.

Also, the developers must ensure that the database index tables are designed with deadlock prevention and performance in mind.

Deadlocks or hot spots often occur in administration or architecture tables, such as log tables, control tables, and lock tables. The implications of these should be taken into account as well. Realistic stress tests are crucial for identifying the possible bottlenecks in the architecture.

To minimize the impact of conflicts on data, the architecture should provide services (such as wait-and-retry intervals) when attaching to a database or when encountering a deadlock. This means a built-in mechanism to react to certain database return codes and, instead of issuing an immediate error, waiting a predetermined amount of time and retrying the database operation.

4.4 Parameter Passing and Validation

The partition architecture should be relatively transparent to application developers. The architecture should perform all tasks associated with running the application in a partitioned mode, including:

  • Retrieving partition parameters before application start-up.

  • Validating partition parameters before application start-up.

  • Passing parameters to the application at start-up.

The validation should include checks to ensure that:

  • The application has sufficient partitions to cover the whole data range.

  • There are no gaps between partitions.

If the database is partitioned, some additional validation may be necessary to ensure that a single partition does not span database partitions.

Also, the architecture should take into consideration the consolidation of partitions. Key questions include:

  • Must all the partitions be finished before going into the next job step?

  • What happens if one of the partitions aborts?

This section shows the major highlights of Spring Batch 5. For more details, please refer to the migration guide.

2. What’s New in Spring Batch 5.0

Spring Batch 5.0 has the following major themes:

  • Java 17 Requirement

  • Major dependencies upgrade

  • Batch infrastructure configuration updates

  • Batch testing configuration updates

  • Job parameters handling updates

  • Execution context serialization updates

  • SystemCommandTasklet updates

  • New features

  • Pruning

2.1. Java 17 Requirement

Spring Batch follows Spring Framework’s baselines for both Java version and third party dependencies. With Spring Batch 5, the Spring Framework version is being upgraded to Spring Framework 6, which requires Java 17. As a result, the Java version requirement for Spring Batch is also increasing to Java 17.

2.2. Major dependencies upgrade

To continue the integration with supported versions of the third party libraries that Spring Batch uses, Spring Batch 5 is updating the dependencies across the board to the following versions:

  • Spring Framework 6

  • Spring Integration 6

  • Spring Data 3

  • Spring AMQP 3

  • Spring for Apache Kafka 3

  • Micrometer 1.10

This release also marks the migration to:

  • Jakarta EE 9

  • Hibernate 6

2.3. Batch Infrastructure Configuration Updates

Spring Batch 5 includes the following infrastructure configuration updates:

2.3.1. Data Source and Transaction manager Requirement Updates

Historically, Spring Batch provided a map-based job repository and job explorer implementations to work with an in-memory job repository. These implementations were deprecated in version 4 and completely removed in version 5. The recommended replacement is to use the JDBC-based implementations with an embedded database, such as H2, HSQL, and others.

In this release, the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation configures a JDBC-based JobRepository, which requires a DataSource and PlatformTransactionManager beans to be defined in the application context. The DataSource bean could refer to an embedded database to work with an in-memory job repository.

2.3.2. Transaction Manager Bean Exposure

Until version 4.3, the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation exposed a transaction manager bean in the application context. While this was convenient in many cases, the unconditional exposure of a transaction manager could interfere with a user-defined transaction manager. In this release, @EnableBatchProcessing no longer exposes a transaction manager bean in the application context.

2.3.3. New annotation attributes in EnableBatchProcessing

In this release, the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation provides new attributes to specify which components and parameters should be used to configure the Batch infrastructure beans. For example, it is now possible to specify which data source and transaction manager Spring Batch should configure in the job repository as follows:

@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing(dataSourceRef = "batchDataSource", transactionManagerRef = "batchTransactionManager")
public class MyJobConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("myJob", jobRepository)
				//define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

}

In this example, batchDataSource and batchTransactionManager refer to beans in the application context, and which will be used to configure the job repository and job explorer. There is no need to define a custom BatchConfigurer anymore, which was removed in this release.

2.3.4. New configuration class for infrastructure beans

In this release, a new configuration class named DefaultBatchConfiguration can be used as an alternative to using @EnableBatchProcessing for the configuration of infrastructure beans. This class provides infrastructure beans with default configuration which can be customized as needed. The following snippet shows a typical usage of this class:

@Configuration
class MyJobConfiguration extends DefaultBatchConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("myJob", jobRepository)
				//define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

}

In this example, the JobRepository bean injected in the Job bean definition is defined in the DefaultBatchConfiguration class. Custom parameters can be specified by overriding the corresponding getter. For example, the following example shows how to override the default character encoding used in the job repository and job explorer:

@Configuration
class MyJobConfiguration extends DefaultBatchConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				// define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

	@Override
	protected Charset getCharset() {
		return StandardCharsets.ISO_8859_1;
	}
}

2.4. Job parameters handling updates

2.4.1. Support for any type as a job parameter

This version adds support to use any type as a job parameter, and not only the 4 pre-defined types (long, double, string, date) as in v4. This change has an impact on how job parameters are persisted in the database (There are no more 4 distinct columns for each predefined type). Please check Column change in BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS for DDL changes. The fully qualified name of the type of the parameter is now persisted as a String, as well as the parameter value. String literals are converted to the parameter type with the standard Spring conversion service. The standard conversion service can be enriched with any required converter to convert user specific types to and from String literals.

2.4.2. Default job parameter conversion

The default notation of job parameters in v4 was specified as follows:

[+|-]parameterName(parameterType)=value

where parameterType is one of [string,long,double,date]. This notation is limited, constraining, does not play well with environment variables and is not friendly with Spring Boot.

In v5, there are two way to specify job parameters:

Default notation

The default notation is now specified as follows:

parameterName=parameterValue,parameterType,identificationFlag

where parameterType is the fully qualified name of the type of the parameter. Spring Batch provides the DefaultJobParametersConverter to support this notation.

Extended notation

While the default notation is well suited for the majority of use cases, it might not be convenient when the value contains a comma for example. In this case, the extended notation can be used, which is inspired by Spring Boot’s Json Application Properties and is specified as follows:

parameterName='{"value": "parameterValue", "type":"parameterType", "identifying": "booleanValue"}'

where parameterType is the fully qualified name of the type of the parameter. Spring Batch provides the JsonJobParametersConverter to support this notation.

2.5. Execution context serialization updates

Starting from v5, the DefaultExecutionContextSerializer was updated to serialize/deserialize the context to/from Base64.

Moreover, the default ExecutionContextSerializer configured by @EnableBatchProcessing or DefaultBatchConfiguration was changed from JacksonExecutionContextStringSerializer to DefaultExecutionContextSerializer. The dependency to Jackson was made optional. In order to use the JacksonExecutionContextStringSerializer, jackson-core should be added to the classpath.

2.6. SystemCommandTasklet updates

The SystemCommandTasklet has been revisited in this release and was changed as follows:

  • A new strategy interface named CommandRunner was introduced in order to decouple the command execution from the tasklet execution. The default implementation is the JvmCommandRunner which uses the java.lang.Runtime#exec API to run system commands. This interface can be implemented to use any other API to run system commands.

  • The method that runs the command now accepts an array of `String`s representing the command and its arguments. There is no need anymore to tokenize the command or do any pre-processing. This change makes the API more intuitive, and less prone to errors.

2.7. Batch Testing Configuration Updates

Spring Batch 5 includes the following testing configuration updates:

2.7.1. Removal of autowiring from test utilities

Up to version 4.3, the JobLauncherTestUtils and JobRepositoryTestUtils used to autowire the job under test as well as the test datasource to facilitate the testing infrastructure setup. While this was convenient for most use cases, it turned out to cause several issues for test contexts where multiple jobs or multiple data sources are defined.

In this release, we introduced a few changes to remove the autowiring of such dependencies in order to avoid any issues while importing those utilities either manually or through the @SpringBatchTest annotation.

2.7.2. Migration to JUnit Jupiter

In this release, the entire test suite of Spring Batch has been migrated to JUnit 5. While this does not impact end users directly, it helps the Batch team as well as community contributors to use the next generation of JUnit to write better tests.

2.8. New features

2.9. Transaction support in JobExplorer and JobOperator

This release introduces transaction support in the JobExplorer created through the JobExplorerFactoryBean. It is now possible to specify which transaction manager to use to drive the ready-only transactions when querying the Batch meta-data as well as customizing the transaction attributes.

The same transaction support was added to the JobOperator through a new factory bean named JobOperatorFactoryBean.

2.9.1. Automatic registration of a JobOperator with EnableBatchProcessing

As of version 4, the EnableBatchProcessing annotation provided all the basic infrastructure beans that are required to launch Spring Batch jobs. However, it did not register a job operator bean, which is the main entry point to stop, restart and abandon job executions.

While these utilities are not used as often as launching jobs, adding a job operator automatically in the application context can be useful to avoid a manual configuration of such a bean by end users.

2.9.2. Improved Java records support

The support for Java records as items in a chunk-oriented step has initially been introduced in v4.3, but that support was limited due to the fact that v4 has Java 8 as a baseline. The initial support was based on reflection tricks to create Java records and populate them with data, without having access to the java.lang.Record API that was finalised in Java 16.

Now that v5 has Java 17 as a baseline, we have improved records support in Spring Batch by leveraging the Record API in different parts of the framework. For example, the FlatFileItemReaderBuilder is now able to detect if the item type is a record or a regular class and configure the corresponding FieldSetMapper implementation accordingly (ie RecordFieldSetMapper for records and BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper for regular classes). The goal here is to make the configuration of the required FieldSetMapper type transparent to the user.

2.9.3. Batch tracing with Micrometer

With the upgrade to Micrometer 1.10, you can now get Batch tracing in addition to Batch metrics. Spring Batch will create a span for each job and a span for each step within a job. This tracing meta-data can be collected and viewed on a dashboard like Zipkin for example.

Moreover, this release introduces new metrics like the currently active step, as well as the job launch count through the provided JobLauncher.

2.9.4. Java 8 features updates

We took the opportunity of this major release to improve the code base with features from Java 8+, for example:

  • Use default methods in interfaces and deprecate "support" classes (see issue 3924)

  • Add @FunctionalInterface where appropriate in public APIs (see issue 4107)

  • Add support to use types from the Date and Time APIs as job parameters. (see issue 1035$$)

2.9.5. Support for SAP HANA a job repository

This release introduces the support of SAP HANA as an additional supported database for the job repository.

2.9.6. Full support for MariaDB as a separate product

Up until v4.3, Spring Batch provided support for MariaDB by considering it as MySQL. In this release, MariaDB is treated as an independent product with its own DDL script and DataFieldMaxValueIncrementer.

2.9.7. New Maven Bill Of Materials for Spring Batch modules

This feature has been requested several times and is finally shipped in v5. It is now possible to use the newly added Maven BOM to import Spring Batch modules with a consistent version number.

2.9.8. UTF-8 by default

Several issues related to characters encoding have been reported over the years in different areas of the framework, like inconsistent default encoding between file-based item readers and writers, serialization/deserialization issues when dealing with multi-byte characters in the execution context, etc.

In the same spirit as JEP 400 and following the UTF-8 manifesto, this release updates the default encoding to UTF-8 in all areas of the framework and ensures this default is configurable as needed.

2.9.9. Full GraalVM native support

The effort towards providing support to compile Spring Batch applications as native executables using the GraalVM native-image compiler has started in v4.2 and was shipped as experimental in v4.3.

In this release, the native support has been improved significantly by providing the necessary runtime hints to natively compile Spring Batch applications with GraalVM and is now considered out of beta.

2.9.10. Execution context Meta-data improvement

In addition to what Spring Batch already persists in the execution context with regard to runtime information (like the step type, restart flag, etc), this release adds an important detail in the execution context which is the Spring Batch version that was used to serialize the context.

While this seems a detail, it has a huge added value when debugging upgrade issue with regard to execution context serialization and deserialization.

2.9.11. Improved documentation

In this release, the documentation was updated to use the Spring Asciidoctor Backend. This backend ensures that all projects from the portfolio follow the same documentation style. For consistency with other projects, the reference documentation of Spring Batch was updated to use this backend in this release.

2.10. Pruning

Spring Batch 5 removes a number of items that are no longer needed, including:

2.10.1. API deprecation and removal

In this major release, all APIs that were deprecated in previous versions have been removed. Moreover, some APIs have been deprecated in v5.0 and are scheduled for removal in v5.2. Finally, some APIs have been moved or removed without deprecation for practical reasons.

Please refer to the migration guide for more details about these changes.

2.10.2. SQLFire Support Removal

SqlFire has been announced to be EOL as of November 1st, 2014. The support of SQLFire as a job repository was deprecated in version v4.3 and removed in version v5.0.

2.10.3. GemFire support removal

Based on the [decision to discontinue](https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-data-geode#notice ) the support of Spring Data for Apache Geode, the support for Geode in Spring Batch was removed. The code was moved to the [spring-batch-extensions](https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-batch-extensions) repository as a community-driven effort.

2.10.4. JSR-352 Implementation Removal

Due to a lack of adoption, the implementation of JSR-352 has been discontinued in this release.

3. The Domain Language of Batch

To any experienced batch architect, the overall concepts of batch processing used in Spring Batch should be familiar and comfortable. There are “Jobs” and “Steps” and developer-supplied processing units called ItemReader and ItemWriter. However, because of the Spring patterns, operations, templates, callbacks, and idioms, there are opportunities for the following:

  • Significant improvement in adherence to a clear separation of concerns.

  • Clearly delineated architectural layers and services provided as interfaces.

  • Simple and default implementations that allow for quick adoption and ease of use out of the box.

  • Significantly enhanced extensibility.

The following diagram is a simplified version of the batch reference architecture that has been used for decades. It provides an overview of the components that make up the domain language of batch processing. This architecture framework is a blueprint that has been proven through decades of implementations on the last several generations of platforms (COBOL on mainframes, C on Unix, and now Java anywhere). JCL and COBOL developers are likely to be as comfortable with the concepts as C, C#, and Java developers. Spring Batch provides a physical implementation of the layers, components, and technical services commonly found in the robust, maintainable systems that are used to address the creation of simple to complex batch applications, with the infrastructure and extensions to address very complex processing needs.

Figure 2.1: Batch Stereotypes
Figure 3. Batch Stereotypes

The preceding diagram highlights the key concepts that make up the domain language of Spring Batch. A Job has one to many steps, each of which has exactly one ItemReader, one ItemProcessor, and one ItemWriter. A job needs to be launched (with JobLauncher), and metadata about the currently running process needs to be stored (in JobRepository).

3.1. Job

This section describes stereotypes relating to the concept of a batch job. A Job is an entity that encapsulates an entire batch process. As is common with other Spring projects, a Job is wired together with either an XML configuration file or Java-based configuration. This configuration may be referred to as the “job configuration”. However, Job is only the top of an overall hierarchy, as shown in the following diagram:

Job Hierarchy
Figure 4. Job Hierarchy

In Spring Batch, a Job is simply a container for Step instances. It combines multiple steps that logically belong together in a flow and allows for configuration of properties global to all steps, such as restartability. The job configuration contains:

  • The name of the job.

  • Definition and ordering of Step instances.

  • Whether or not the job is restartable.

For those who use Java configuration, Spring Batch provides a default implementation of the Job interface in the form of the SimpleJob class, which creates some standard functionality on top of Job. When using Java-based configuration, a collection of builders is made available for the instantiation of a Job, as the following example shows:

@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
                     .start(playerLoad())
                     .next(gameLoad())
                     .next(playerSummarization())
                     .build();
}

For those who use XML configuration, Spring Batch provides a default implementation of the Job interface in the form of the SimpleJob class, which creates some standard functionality on top of Job. However, the batch namespace abstracts away the need to instantiate it directly. Instead, you can use the <job> element, as the following example shows:

<job id="footballJob">
    <step id="playerload" next="gameLoad"/>
    <step id="gameLoad" next="playerSummarization"/>
    <step id="playerSummarization"/>
</job>

3.1.1. JobInstance

A JobInstance refers to the concept of a logical job run. Consider a batch job that should be run once at the end of the day, such as the EndOfDay Job from the preceding diagram. There is one EndOfDay job, but each individual run of the Job must be tracked separately. In the case of this job, there is one logical JobInstance per day. For example, there is a January 1st run, a January 2nd run, and so on. If the January 1st run fails the first time and is run again the next day, it is still the January 1st run. (Usually, this corresponds with the data it is processing as well, meaning the January 1st run processes data for January 1st). Therefore, each JobInstance can have multiple executions (JobExecution is discussed in more detail later in this chapter), and only one JobInstance (which corresponds to a particular Job and identifying JobParameters) can run at a given time.

The definition of a JobInstance has absolutely no bearing on the data to be loaded. It is entirely up to the ItemReader implementation to determine how data is loaded. For example, in the EndOfDay scenario, there may be a column on the data that indicates the effective date or schedule date to which the data belongs. So, the January 1st run would load only data from the 1st, and the January 2nd run would use only data from the 2nd. Because this determination is likely to be a business decision, it is left up to the ItemReader to decide. However, using the same JobInstance determines whether or not the “state” (that is, the ExecutionContext, which is discussed later in this chapter) from previous executions is used. Using a new JobInstance means “start from the beginning,” and using an existing instance generally means “start from where you left off”.

3.1.2. JobParameters

Having discussed JobInstance and how it differs from Job, the natural question to ask is: “How is one JobInstance distinguished from another?” The answer is: JobParameters. A JobParameters object holds a set of parameters used to start a batch job. They can be used for identification or even as reference data during the run, as the following image shows:

Job Parameters
Figure 5. Job Parameters

In the preceding example, where there are two instances, one for January 1st and another for January 2nd, there is really only one Job, but it has two JobParameter objects: one that was started with a job parameter of 01-01-2017 and another that was started with a parameter of 01-02-2017. Thus, the contract can be defined as: JobInstance = Job + identifying JobParameters. This allows a developer to effectively control how a JobInstance is defined, since they control what parameters are passed in.

Not all job parameters are required to contribute to the identification of a JobInstance. By default, they do so. However, the framework also allows the submission of a Job with parameters that do not contribute to the identity of a JobInstance.

3.1.3. JobExecution

A JobExecution refers to the technical concept of a single attempt to run a Job. An execution may end in failure or success, but the JobInstance corresponding to a given execution is not considered to be complete unless the execution completes successfully. Using the EndOfDay Job described previously as an example, consider a JobInstance for 01-01-2017 that failed the first time it was run. If it is run again with the same identifying job parameters as the first run (01-01-2017), a new JobExecution is created. However, there is still only one JobInstance.

A Job defines what a job is and how it is to be executed, and a JobInstance is a purely organizational object to group executions together, primarily to enable correct restart semantics. A JobExecution, however, is the primary storage mechanism for what actually happened during a run and contains many more properties that must be controlled and persisted, as the following table shows:

Table 1. JobExecution Properties

Property

Definition

Status

A BatchStatus object that indicates the status of the execution. While running, it is BatchStatus#STARTED. If it fails, it is BatchStatus#FAILED. If it finishes successfully, it is BatchStatus#COMPLETED

startTime

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the current system time when the execution was started. This field is empty if the job has yet to start.

endTime

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the current system time when the execution finished, regardless of whether or not it was successful. The field is empty if the job has yet to finish.

exitStatus

The ExitStatus, indicating the result of the run. It is most important, because it contains an exit code that is returned to the caller. See chapter 5 for more details. The field is empty if the job has yet to finish.

createTime

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the current system time when the JobExecution was first persisted. The job may not have been started yet (and thus has no start time), but it always has a createTime, which is required by the framework for managing job-level ExecutionContexts.

lastUpdated

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the last time a JobExecution was persisted. This field is empty if the job has yet to start.

executionContext

The “property bag” containing any user data that needs to be persisted between executions.

failureExceptions

The list of exceptions encountered during the execution of a Job. These can be useful if more than one exception is encountered during the failure of a Job.

These properties are important because they are persisted and can be used to completely determine the status of an execution. For example, if the EndOfDay job for 01-01 is executed at 9:00 PM and fails at 9:30, the following entries are made in the batch metadata tables:

Table 2. BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE

JOB_INST_ID

JOB_NAME

1

EndOfDayJob

Table 3. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS

JOB_EXECUTION_ID

TYPE_CD

KEY_NAME

DATE_VAL

IDENTIFYING

1

DATE

schedule.Date

2017-01-01

TRUE

Table 4. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION

JOB_EXEC_ID

JOB_INST_ID

START_TIME

END_TIME

STATUS

1

1

2017-01-01 21:00

2017-01-01 21:30

FAILED

Column names may have been abbreviated or removed for the sake of clarity and formatting.

Now that the job has failed, assume that it took the entire night for the problem to be determined, so that the “batch window” is now closed. Further assuming that the window starts at 9:00 PM, the job is kicked off again for 01-01, starting where it left off and completing successfully at 9:30. Because it is now the next day, the 01-02 job must be run as well, and it is kicked off just afterwards at 9:31 and completes in its normal one hour time at 10:30. There is no requirement that one JobInstance be kicked off after another, unless there is potential for the two jobs to attempt to access the same data, causing issues with locking at the database level. It is entirely up to the scheduler to determine when a Job should be run. Since they are separate JobInstances, Spring Batch makes no attempt to stop them from being run concurrently. (Attempting to run the same JobInstance while another is already running results in a JobExecutionAlreadyRunningException being thrown). There should now be an extra entry in both the JobInstance and JobParameters tables and two extra entries in the JobExecution table, as shown in the following tables:

Table 5. BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE

JOB_INST_ID

JOB_NAME

1

EndOfDayJob

2

EndOfDayJob

Table 6. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS

JOB_EXECUTION_ID

TYPE_CD

KEY_NAME

DATE_VAL

IDENTIFYING

1

DATE

schedule.Date

2017-01-01 00:00:00

TRUE

2

DATE

schedule.Date

2017-01-01 00:00:00

TRUE

3

DATE

schedule.Date

2017-01-02 00:00:00

TRUE

Table 7. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION

JOB_EXEC_ID

JOB_INST_ID

START_TIME

END_TIME

STATUS

1

1

2017-01-01 21:00

2017-01-01 21:30

FAILED

2

1

2017-01-02 21:00

2017-01-02 21:30

COMPLETED

3

2

2017-01-02 21:31

2017-01-02 22:29

COMPLETED

Column names may have been abbreviated or removed for the sake of clarity and formatting.

3.2. Step

A Step is a domain object that encapsulates an independent, sequential phase of a batch job. Therefore, every Job is composed entirely of one or more steps. A Step contains all of the information necessary to define and control the actual batch processing. This is a necessarily vague description because the contents of any given Step are at the discretion of the developer writing a Job. A Step can be as simple or complex as the developer desires. A simple Step might load data from a file into the database, requiring little or no code (depending upon the implementations used). A more complex Step may have complicated business rules that are applied as part of the processing. As with a Job, a Step has an individual StepExecution that correlates with a unique JobExecution, as the following image shows:

Figure 2.1: Job Hierarchy With Steps
Figure 6. Job Hierarchy With Steps

3.2.1. StepExecution

A StepExecution represents a single attempt to execute a Step. A new StepExecution is created each time a Step is run, similar to JobExecution. However, if a step fails to execute because the step before it fails, no execution is persisted for it. A StepExecution is created only when its Step is actually started.

Step executions are represented by objects of the StepExecution class. Each execution contains a reference to its corresponding step and JobExecution and transaction-related data, such as commit and rollback counts and start and end times. Additionally, each step execution contains an ExecutionContext, which contains any data a developer needs to have persisted across batch runs, such as statistics or state information needed to restart. The following table lists the properties for StepExecution:

Table 8. StepExecution Properties

Property

Definition

Status

A BatchStatus object that indicates the status of the execution. While running, the status is BatchStatus.STARTED. If it fails, the status is BatchStatus.FAILED. If it finishes successfully, the status is BatchStatus.COMPLETED.

startTime

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the current system time when the execution was started. This field is empty if the step has yet to start.

endTime

A java.time.LocalDateTime representing the current system time when the execution finished, regardless of whether or not it was successful. This field is empty if the step has yet to exit.

exitStatus

The ExitStatus indicating the result of the execution. It is most important, because it contains an exit code that is returned to the caller. See chapter 5 for more details. This field is empty if the job has yet to exit.

executionContext

The “property bag” containing any user data that needs to be persisted between executions.

readCount

The number of items that have been successfully read.

writeCount

The number of items that have been successfully written.

commitCount

The number of transactions that have been committed for this execution.

rollbackCount

The number of times the business transaction controlled by the Step has been rolled back.

readSkipCount

The number of times read has failed, resulting in a skipped item.

processSkipCount

The number of times process has failed, resulting in a skipped item.

filterCount

The number of items that have been “filtered” by the ItemProcessor.

writeSkipCount

The number of times write has failed, resulting in a skipped item.

3.3. ExecutionContext

An ExecutionContext represents a collection of key/value pairs that are persisted and controlled by the framework to give developers a place to store persistent state that is scoped to a StepExecution object or a JobExecution object. (For those familiar with Quartz, it is very similar to JobDataMap.) The best usage example is to facilitate restart. Using flat file input as an example, while processing individual lines, the framework periodically persists the ExecutionContext at commit points. Doing so lets the ItemReader store its state in case a fatal error occurs during the run or even if the power goes out. All that is needed is to put the current number of lines read into the context, as the following example shows, and the framework does the rest:

executionContext.putLong(getKey(LINES_READ_COUNT), reader.getPosition());

Using the EndOfDay example from the Job stereotypes section as an example, assume there is one step, loadData, that loads a file into the database. After the first failed run, the metadata tables would look like the following example:

Table 9. BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE

JOB_INST_ID

JOB_NAME

1

EndOfDayJob

Table 10. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS

JOB_INST_ID

TYPE_CD

KEY_NAME

DATE_VAL

1

DATE

schedule.Date

2017-01-01

Table 11. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION

JOB_EXEC_ID

JOB_INST_ID

START_TIME

END_TIME

STATUS

1

1

2017-01-01 21:00

2017-01-01 21:30

FAILED

Table 12. BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION

STEP_EXEC_ID

JOB_EXEC_ID

STEP_NAME

START_TIME

END_TIME

STATUS

1

1

loadData

2017-01-01 21:00

2017-01-01 21:30

FAILED

Table 13. BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT

STEP_EXEC_ID

SHORT_CONTEXT

1

{piece.count=40321}

In the preceding case, the Step ran for 30 minutes and processed 40,321 “pieces”, which would represent lines in a file in this scenario. This value is updated just before each commit by the framework and can contain multiple rows corresponding to entries within the ExecutionContext. Being notified before a commit requires one of the various StepListener implementations (or an ItemStream), which are discussed in more detail later in this guide. As with the previous example, it is assumed that the Job is restarted the next day. When it is restarted, the values from the ExecutionContext of the last run are reconstituted from the database. When the ItemReader is opened, it can check to see if it has any stored state in the context and initialize itself from there, as the following example shows:

if (executionContext.containsKey(getKey(LINES_READ_COUNT))) {
    log.debug("Initializing for restart. Restart data is: " + executionContext);

    long lineCount = executionContext.getLong(getKey(LINES_READ_COUNT));

    LineReader reader = getReader();

    Object record = "";
    while (reader.getPosition() < lineCount && record != null) {
        record = readLine();
    }
}

In this case, after the preceding code runs, the current line is 40,322, letting the Step start again from where it left off. You can also use the ExecutionContext for statistics that need to be persisted about the run itself. For example, if a flat file contains orders for processing that exist across multiple lines, it may be necessary to store how many orders have been processed (which is much different from the number of lines read), so that an email can be sent at the end of the Step with the total number of orders processed in the body. The framework handles storing this for the developer, to correctly scope it with an individual JobInstance. It can be very difficult to know whether an existing ExecutionContext should be used or not. For example, using the EndOfDay example from above, when the 01-01 run starts again for the second time, the framework recognizes that it is the same JobInstance and on an individual Step basis, pulls the ExecutionContext out of the database, and hands it (as part of the StepExecution) to the Step itself. Conversely, for the 01-02 run, the framework recognizes that it is a different instance, so an empty context must be handed to the Step. There are many of these types of determinations that the framework makes for the developer, to ensure the state is given to them at the correct time. It is also important to note that exactly one ExecutionContext exists per StepExecution at any given time. Clients of the ExecutionContext should be careful, because this creates a shared keyspace. As a result, care should be taken when putting values in to ensure no data is overwritten. However, the Step stores absolutely no data in the context, so there is no way to adversely affect the framework.

Note that there is at least one ExecutionContext per JobExecution and one for every StepExecution. For example, consider the following code snippet:

ExecutionContext ecStep = stepExecution.getExecutionContext();
ExecutionContext ecJob = jobExecution.getExecutionContext();
//ecStep does not equal ecJob

As noted in the comment, ecStep does not equal ecJob. They are two different ExecutionContexts. The one scoped to the Step is saved at every commit point in the Step, whereas the one scoped to the Job is saved in between every Step execution.

In the ExecutionContext, all non-transient entries must be Serializable. Proper serialization of the execution context underpins the restart capability of steps and jobs. Should you use keys or values that are not natively serializable, you are required to employ a tailored serialization approach. Failing to serialize the execution context may jeopardize the state persistence process, making failed jobs impossible to recover properly.

3.4. JobRepository

JobRepository is the persistence mechanism for all of the stereotypes mentioned earlier. It provides CRUD operations for JobLauncher, Job, and Step implementations. When a Job is first launched, a JobExecution is obtained from the repository. Also, during the course of execution, StepExecution and JobExecution implementations are persisted by passing them to the repository.

The Spring Batch XML namespace provides support for configuring a JobRepository instance with the <job-repository> tag, as the following example shows:

<job-repository id="jobRepository"/>

When using Java configuration, the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation provides a JobRepository as one of the components that is automatically configured.

3.5. JobLauncher

JobLauncher represents a simple interface for launching a Job with a given set of JobParameters, as the following example shows:

public interface JobLauncher {

public JobExecution run(Job job, JobParameters jobParameters)
            throws JobExecutionAlreadyRunningException, JobRestartException,
                   JobInstanceAlreadyCompleteException, JobParametersInvalidException;
}

It is expected that implementations obtain a valid JobExecution from the JobRepository and execute the Job.

3.6. ItemReader

ItemReader is an abstraction that represents the retrieval of input for a Step, one item at a time. When the ItemReader has exhausted the items it can provide, it indicates this by returning null. You can find more details about the ItemReader interface and its various implementations in Readers And Writers.

3.7. ItemWriter

ItemWriter is an abstraction that represents the output of a Step, one batch or chunk of items at a time. Generally, an ItemWriter has no knowledge of the input it should receive next and knows only the item that was passed in its current invocation. You can find more details about the ItemWriter interface and its various implementations in Readers And Writers.

3.8. ItemProcessor

ItemProcessor is an abstraction that represents the business processing of an item. While the ItemReader reads one item, and the ItemWriter writes one item, the ItemProcessor provides an access point to transform or apply other business processing. If, while processing the item, it is determined that the item is not valid, returning null indicates that the item should not be written out. You can find more details about the ItemProcessor interface in Readers And Writers.

3.9. Batch Namespace

Many of the domain concepts listed previously need to be configured in a Spring ApplicationContext. While there are implementations of the interfaces above that you can use in a standard bean definition, a namespace has been provided for ease of configuration, as the following example shows:

<beans:beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch"
xmlns:beans="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="
   http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
   https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
   http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch
   https://www.springframework.org/schema/batch/spring-batch.xsd">

<job id="ioSampleJob">
    <step id="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="2"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

</beans:beans>

As long as the batch namespace has been declared, any of its elements can be used. You can find more information on configuring a Job in Configuring and Running a Job. You can find more information on configuring a Step in Configuring a Step.

4. Configuring and Running a Job

In the domain section , the overall architecture design was discussed, using the following diagram as a guide:

Figure 2.1: Batch Stereotypes
Figure 7. Batch Stereotypes

While the Job object may seem like a simple container for steps, you must be aware of many configuration options. Furthermore, you must consider many options about how a Job can be run and how its metadata can be stored during that run. This chapter explains the various configuration options and runtime concerns of a Job.

4.1. Configuring a Job

There are multiple implementations of the Job interface. However, builders abstract away the difference in configuration. The following example creates a footballJob:

@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
                     .start(playerLoad())
                     .next(gameLoad())
                     .next(playerSummarization())
                     .build();
}

A Job (and, typically, any Step within it) requires a JobRepository. The configuration of the JobRepository is handled through the Java Configuration.

The preceding example illustrates a Job that consists of three Step instances. The job related builders can also contain other elements that help with parallelization (Split), declarative flow control (Decision), and externalization of flow definitions (Flow).

There are multiple implementations of the Job interface. However, the namespace abstracts away the differences in configuration. It has only three required dependencies: a name, JobRepository , and a list of Step instances. The following example creates a footballJob:

<job id="footballJob">
    <step id="playerload"          parent="s1" next="gameLoad"/>
    <step id="gameLoad"            parent="s2" next="playerSummarization"/>
    <step id="playerSummarization" parent="s3"/>
</job>

The examples here use a parent bean definition to create the steps. See the section on step configuration for more options when declaring specific step details inline. The XML namespace defaults to referencing a repository with an ID of jobRepository, which is a sensible default. However, you can explicitly override it:

<job id="footballJob" job-repository="specialRepository">
    <step id="playerload"          parent="s1" next="gameLoad"/>
    <step id="gameLoad"            parent="s3" next="playerSummarization"/>
    <step id="playerSummarization" parent="s3"/>
</job>

In addition to steps, a job configuration can contain other elements that help with parallelization (<split>), declarative flow control (<decision>) and externalization of flow definitions (<flow/>).

4.1.1. Restartability

One key issue when executing a batch job concerns the behavior of a Job when it is restarted. The launching of a Job is considered to be a “restart” if a JobExecution already exists for the particular JobInstance. Ideally, all jobs should be able to start up where they left off, but there are scenarios where this is not possible. In this scenario, it is entirely up to the developer to ensure that a new JobInstance is created. However, Spring Batch does provide some help. If a Job should never be restarted but should always be run as part of a new JobInstance, you can set the restartable property to false.

The following example shows how to set the restartable field to false in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="footballJob" restartable="false">
    ...
</job>

The following example shows how to set the restartable field to false in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
                     .preventRestart()
                     ...
                     .build();
}

To phrase it another way, setting restartable to false means “this Job does not support being started again”. Restarting a Job that is not restartable causes a JobRestartException to be thrown. The following Junit code causes the exception to be thrown:

Job job = new SimpleJob();
job.setRestartable(false);

JobParameters jobParameters = new JobParameters();

JobExecution firstExecution = jobRepository.createJobExecution(job, jobParameters);
jobRepository.saveOrUpdate(firstExecution);

try {
    jobRepository.createJobExecution(job, jobParameters);
    fail();
}
catch (JobRestartException e) {
    // expected
}

The first attempt to create a JobExecution for a non-restartable job causes no issues. However, the second attempt throws a JobRestartException.

4.1.2. Intercepting Job Execution

During the course of the execution of a Job, it may be useful to be notified of various events in its lifecycle so that custom code can be run. SimpleJob allows for this by calling a JobListener at the appropriate time:

public interface JobExecutionListener {

    void beforeJob(JobExecution jobExecution);

    void afterJob(JobExecution jobExecution);
}

You can add JobListeners to a SimpleJob by setting listeners on the job.

The following example shows how to add a listener element to an XML job definition:

XML Configuration
<job id="footballJob">
    <step id="playerload"          parent="s1" next="gameLoad"/>
    <step id="gameLoad"            parent="s2" next="playerSummarization"/>
    <step id="playerSummarization" parent="s3"/>
    <listeners>
        <listener ref="sampleListener"/>
    </listeners>
</job>

The following example shows how to add a listener method to a Java job definition:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
                     .listener(sampleListener())
                     ...
                     .build();
}

Note that the afterJob method is called regardless of the success or failure of the Job. If you need to determine success or failure, you can get that information from the JobExecution:

public void afterJob(JobExecution jobExecution){
    if (jobExecution.getStatus() == BatchStatus.COMPLETED ) {
        //job success
    }
    else if (jobExecution.getStatus() == BatchStatus.FAILED) {
        //job failure
    }
}

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeJob

  • @AfterJob

4.1.3. Inheriting from a Parent Job

If a group of Jobs share similar but not identical configurations, it may help to define a “parent” Job from which the concrete Job instances can inherit properties. Similar to class inheritance in Java, a “child” Job combines its elements and attributes with the parent’s.

In the following example, baseJob is an abstract Job definition that defines only a list of listeners. The Job (job1) is a concrete definition that inherits the list of listeners from baseJob and merges it with its own list of listeners to produce a Job with two listeners and one Step (step1).

<job id="baseJob" abstract="true">
    <listeners>
        <listener ref="listenerOne"/>
    <listeners>
</job>

<job id="job1" parent="baseJob">
    <step id="step1" parent="standaloneStep"/>

    <listeners merge="true">
        <listener ref="listenerTwo"/>
    <listeners>
</job>

See the section on Inheriting from a Parent Step for more detailed information.

4.1.4. JobParametersValidator

A job declared in the XML namespace or using any subclass of AbstractJob can optionally declare a validator for the job parameters at runtime. This is useful when, for instance, you need to assert that a job is started with all its mandatory parameters. There is a DefaultJobParametersValidator that you can use to constrain combinations of simple mandatory and optional parameters. For more complex constraints, you can implement the interface yourself.

The configuration of a validator is supported through the XML namespace through a child element of the job, as the following example shows:

<job id="job1" parent="baseJob3">
    <step id="step1" parent="standaloneStep"/>
    <validator ref="parametersValidator"/>
</job>

You can specify the validator as a reference (as shown earlier) or as a nested bean definition in the beans namespace.

The configuration of a validator is supported through the Java builders:

@Bean
public Job job1(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("job1", jobRepository)
                     .validator(parametersValidator())
                     ...
                     .build();
}

4.2. Java Configuration

Spring 3 brought the ability to configure applications with Java instead of XML. As of Spring Batch 2.2.0, you can configure batch jobs by using the same Java configuration. There are three components for the Java-based configuration: the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation and two builders.

The @EnableBatchProcessing annotation works similarly to the other @Enable* annotations in the Spring family. In this case, @EnableBatchProcessing provides a base configuration for building batch jobs. Within this base configuration, an instance of StepScope and JobScope are created, in addition to a number of beans being made available to be autowired:

  • JobRepository: a bean named jobRepository

  • JobLauncher: a bean named jobLauncher

  • JobRegistry: a bean named jobRegistry

  • JobExplorer: a bean named jobExplorer

  • JobOperator: a bean named jobOperator

The default implementation provides the beans mentioned in the preceding list and requires a DataSource and a PlatformTransactionManager to be provided as beans within the context. The data source and transaction manager are used by the JobRepository and JobExplorer instances. By default, the data source named dataSource and the transaction manager named transactionManager will be used. You can customize any of these beans by using the attributes of the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation. The following example shows how to provide a custom data source and transaction manager:

@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing(dataSourceRef = "batchDataSource", transactionManagerRef = "batchTransactionManager")
public class MyJobConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public DataSource batchDataSource() {
		return new EmbeddedDatabaseBuilder().setType(EmbeddedDatabaseType.HSQL)
				.addScript("/org/springframework/batch/core/schema-hsqldb.sql")
				.generateUniqueName(true).build();
	}

	@Bean
	public JdbcTransactionManager batchTransactionManager(DataSource dataSource) {
		return new JdbcTransactionManager(dataSource);
	}

	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("myJob", jobRepository)
				//define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

}
Only one configuration class needs to have the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation. Once you have a class annotated with it, you have all of the configuration described earlier.

Starting from v5.0, an alternative, programmatic way of configuring base infrastrucutre beans is provided through the DefaultBatchConfiguration class. This class provides the same beans provided by @EnableBatchProcessing and can be used as a base class to configure batch jobs. The following snippet is a typical example of how to use it:

@Configuration
class MyJobConfiguration extends DefaultBatchConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				// define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

}

The data source and transaction manager will be resolved from the application context and set on the job repository and job explorer. You can customize the configuration of any infrastructure bean by overriding the required setter. The following example shows how to customize the character encoding for instance:

@Configuration
class MyJobConfiguration extends DefaultBatchConfiguration {

	@Bean
	public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				// define job flow as needed
				.build();
	}

	@Override
	protected Charset getCharset() {
		return StandardCharsets.ISO_8859_1;
	}
}
@EnableBatchProcessing should not be used with DefaultBatchConfiguration. You should either use the declarative way of configuring Spring Batch through @EnableBatchProcessing, or use the programmatic way of extending DefaultBatchConfiguration, but not both ways at the same time.

4.3. Configuring a JobRepository

When using @EnableBatchProcessing, a JobRepository is provided for you. This section describes how to configure your own.

As described earlier, the JobRepository is used for basic CRUD operations of the various persisted domain objects within Spring Batch, such as JobExecution and StepExecution. It is required by many of the major framework features, such as the JobLauncher, Job, and Step.

The batch namespace abstracts away many of the implementation details of the JobRepository implementations and their collaborators. However, there are still a few configuration options available, as the following example shows:

XML Configuration
<job-repository id="jobRepository"
    data-source="dataSource"
    transaction-manager="transactionManager"
    isolation-level-for-create="SERIALIZABLE"
    table-prefix="BATCH_"
	max-varchar-length="1000"/>

Other than the id, none of the configuration options listed earlier are required. If they are not set, the defaults shown earlier are used. The max-varchar-length defaults to 2500, which is the length of the long VARCHAR columns in the sample schema scripts.

Other than the dataSource and the transactionManager, none of the configuration options listed earlier are required. If they are not set, the defaults shown earlier are used. The max varchar length defaults to 2500, which is the length of the long VARCHAR columns in the sample schema scripts

4.3.1. Transaction Configuration for the JobRepository

If the namespace or the provided FactoryBean is used, transactional advice is automatically created around the repository. This is to ensure that the batch metadata, including state that is necessary for restarts after a failure, is persisted correctly. The behavior of the framework is not well defined if the repository methods are not transactional. The isolation level in the create* method attributes is specified separately to ensure that, when jobs are launched, if two processes try to launch the same job at the same time, only one succeeds. The default isolation level for that method is SERIALIZABLE, which is quite aggressive. READ_COMMITTED usually works equally well. READ_UNCOMMITTED is fine if two processes are not likely to collide in this way. However, since a call to the create* method is quite short, it is unlikely that SERIALIZED causes problems, as long as the database platform supports it. However, you can override this setting.

The following example shows how to override the isolation level in XML:

XML Configuration
<job-repository id="jobRepository"
                isolation-level-for-create="REPEATABLE_READ" />

The following example shows how to override the isolation level in Java:

Java Configuration
@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing(isolationLevelForCreate = "ISOLATION_REPEATABLE_READ")
public class MyJobConfiguration {

   // job definition

}

If the namespace is not used, you must also configure the transactional behavior of the repository by using AOP.

The following example shows how to configure the transactional behavior of the repository in XML:

XML Configuration
<aop:config>
    <aop:advisor
           pointcut="execution(* org.springframework.batch.core..*Repository+.*(..))"/>
    <advice-ref="txAdvice" />
</aop:config>

<tx:advice id="txAdvice" transaction-manager="transactionManager">
    <tx:attributes>
        <tx:method name="*" />
    </tx:attributes>
</tx:advice>

You can use the preceding fragment nearly as is, with almost no changes. Remember also to include the appropriate namespace declarations and to make sure spring-tx and spring-aop (or the whole of Spring) are on the classpath.

The following example shows how to configure the transactional behavior of the repository in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public TransactionProxyFactoryBean baseProxy() {
	TransactionProxyFactoryBean transactionProxyFactoryBean = new TransactionProxyFactoryBean();
	Properties transactionAttributes = new Properties();
	transactionAttributes.setProperty("*", "PROPAGATION_REQUIRED");
	transactionProxyFactoryBean.setTransactionAttributes(transactionAttributes);
	transactionProxyFactoryBean.setTarget(jobRepository());
	transactionProxyFactoryBean.setTransactionManager(transactionManager());
	return transactionProxyFactoryBean;
}

4.3.2. Changing the Table Prefix

Another modifiable property of the JobRepository is the table prefix of the meta-data tables. By default, they are all prefaced with BATCH_. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION and BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION are two examples. However, there are potential reasons to modify this prefix. If the schema names need to be prepended to the table names or if more than one set of metadata tables is needed within the same schema, the table prefix needs to be changed.

The following example shows how to change the table prefix in XML:

XML Configuration
<job-repository id="jobRepository"
                table-prefix="SYSTEM.TEST_" />

The following example shows how to change the table prefix in Java:

Java Configuration
@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing(tablePrefix = "SYSTEM.TEST_")
public class MyJobConfiguration {

   // job definition

}

Given the preceding changes, every query to the metadata tables is prefixed with SYSTEM.TEST_. BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION is referred to as SYSTEM.TEST_JOB_EXECUTION.

Only the table prefix is configurable. The table and column names are not.

4.3.3. Non-standard Database Types in a Repository

If you use a database platform that is not in the list of supported platforms, you may be able to use one of the supported types, if the SQL variant is close enough. To do this, you can use the raw JobRepositoryFactoryBean instead of the namespace shortcut and use it to set the database type to the closest match.

The following example shows how to use JobRepositoryFactoryBean to set the database type to the closest match in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobRepository" class="org...JobRepositoryFactoryBean">
    <property name="databaseType" value="db2"/>
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
</bean>

The following example shows how to use JobRepositoryFactoryBean to set the database type to the closest match in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JobRepository jobRepository() throws Exception {
    JobRepositoryFactoryBean factory = new JobRepositoryFactoryBean();
    factory.setDataSource(dataSource);
    factory.setDatabaseType("db2");
    factory.setTransactionManager(transactionManager);
    return factory.getObject();
}

If the database type is not specified, the JobRepositoryFactoryBean tries to auto-detect the database type from the DataSource. The major differences between platforms are mainly accounted for by the strategy for incrementing primary keys, so it is often necessary to override the incrementerFactory as well (by using one of the standard implementations from the Spring Framework).

If even that does not work or if you are not using an RDBMS, the only option may be to implement the various Dao interfaces that the SimpleJobRepository depends on and wire one up manually in the normal Spring way.

4.4. Configuring a JobLauncher

When you use @EnableBatchProcessing, a JobRegistry is provided for you. This section describes how to configure your own.

The most basic implementation of the JobLauncher interface is the TaskExecutorJobLauncher. Its only required dependency is a JobRepository (needed to obtain an execution).

The following example shows a TaskExecutorJobLauncher in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobLauncher"
      class="org.springframework.batch.core.launch.support.TaskExecutorJobLauncher">
    <property name="jobRepository" ref="jobRepository" />
</bean>

The following example shows a TaskExecutorJobLauncher in Java:

Java Configuration
...
@Bean
public JobLauncher jobLauncher() throws Exception {
	TaskExecutorJobLauncher jobLauncher = new TaskExecutorJobLauncher();
	jobLauncher.setJobRepository(jobRepository);
	jobLauncher.afterPropertiesSet();
	return jobLauncher;
}
...

Once a JobExecution is obtained, it is passed to the execute method of Job, ultimately returning the JobExecution to the caller, as the following image shows:

Job Launcher Sequence
Figure 8. Job Launcher Sequence

The sequence is straightforward and works well when launched from a scheduler. However, issues arise when trying to launch from an HTTP request. In this scenario, the launching needs to be done asynchronously so that the TaskExecutorJobLauncher returns immediately to its caller. This is because it is not good practice to keep an HTTP request open for the amount of time needed by long running processes (such as batch jobs). The following image shows an example sequence:

Async Job Launcher Sequence
Figure 9. Asynchronous Job Launcher Sequence

You can configure the TaskExecutorJobLauncher to allow for this scenario by configuring a TaskExecutor.

The following XML example configures a TaskExecutorJobLauncher to return immediately:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobLauncher"
      class="org.springframework.batch.core.launch.support.TaskExecutorJobLauncher">
    <property name="jobRepository" ref="jobRepository" />
    <property name="taskExecutor">
        <bean class="org.springframework.core.task.SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor" />
    </property>
</bean>

The following Java example configures a TaskExecutorJobLauncher to return immediately:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JobLauncher jobLauncher() {
	TaskExecutorJobLauncher jobLauncher = new TaskExecutorJobLauncher();
	jobLauncher.setJobRepository(jobRepository());
	jobLauncher.setTaskExecutor(new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor());
	jobLauncher.afterPropertiesSet();
	return jobLauncher;
}

You can use any implementation of the spring TaskExecutor interface to control how jobs are asynchronously executed.

4.5. Running a Job

At a minimum, launching a batch job requires two things: the Job to be launched and a JobLauncher. Both can be contained within the same context or different contexts. For example, if you launch jobs from the command line, a new JVM is instantiated for each Job. Thus, every job has its own JobLauncher. However, if you run from within a web container that is within the scope of an HttpRequest, there is usually one JobLauncher (configured for asynchronous job launching) that multiple requests invoke to launch their jobs.

4.5.1. Running Jobs from the Command Line

If you want to run your jobs from an enterprise scheduler, the command line is the primary interface. This is because most schedulers (with the exception of Quartz, unless using NativeJob) work directly with operating system processes, primarily kicked off with shell scripts. There are many ways to launch a Java process besides a shell script, such as Perl, Ruby, or even build tools, such as Ant or Maven. However, because most people are familiar with shell scripts, this example focuses on them.

The CommandLineJobRunner

Because the script launching the job must kick off a Java Virtual Machine, there needs to be a class with a main method to act as the primary entry point. Spring Batch provides an implementation that serves this purpose: CommandLineJobRunner. Note that this is just one way to bootstrap your application. There are many ways to launch a Java process, and this class should in no way be viewed as definitive. The CommandLineJobRunner performs four tasks:

  • Load the appropriate ApplicationContext.

  • Parse command line arguments into JobParameters.

  • Locate the appropriate job based on arguments.

  • Use the JobLauncher provided in the application context to launch the job.

All of these tasks are accomplished with only the arguments passed in. The following table describes the required arguments:

Table 14. CommandLineJobRunner arguments

jobPath

The location of the XML file that is used to create an ApplicationContext. This file should contain everything needed to run the complete Job.

jobName

The name of the job to be run.

These arguments must be passed in, with the path first and the name second. All arguments after these are considered to be job parameters, are turned into a JobParameters object, and must be in the format of name=value.

The following example shows a date passed as a job parameter to a job defined in XML:

<bash$ java CommandLineJobRunner endOfDayJob.xml endOfDay schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate

The following example shows a date passed as a job parameter to a job defined in Java:

<bash$ java CommandLineJobRunner io.spring.EndOfDayJobConfiguration endOfDay schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate

By default, the CommandLineJobRunner uses a DefaultJobParametersConverter that implicitly converts key/value pairs to identifying job parameters. However, you can explicitly specify which job parameters are identifying and which are not by suffixing them with true or false, respectively.

In the following example, schedule.date is an identifying job parameter, while vendor.id is not:

<bash$ java CommandLineJobRunner endOfDayJob.xml endOfDay \
                                 schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate,true \
                                 vendor.id=123,java.lang.Long,false
<bash$ java CommandLineJobRunner io.spring.EndOfDayJobConfiguration endOfDay \
                                 schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate,true \
                                 vendor.id=123,java.lang.Long,false

You can override this behavior by using a custom JobParametersConverter.

In most cases, you would want to use a manifest to declare your main class in a jar. However, for simplicity, the class was used directly. This example uses the EndOfDay example from the The Domain Language of Batch. The first argument is endOfDayJob.xml, which is the Spring ApplicationContext that contains the Job. The second argument, endOfDay, represents the job name. The final argument, schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate, is converted into a JobParameter object of type java.time.LocalDate.

The following example shows a sample configuration for endOfDay in XML:

<job id="endOfDay">
    <step id="step1" parent="simpleStep" />
</job>

<!-- Launcher details removed for clarity -->
<beans:bean id="jobLauncher"
         class="org.springframework.batch.core.launch.support.TaskExecutorJobLauncher" />

In most cases, you would want to use a manifest to declare your main class in a jar. However, for simplicity, the class was used directly. This example uses the EndOfDay example from the The Domain Language of Batch. The first argument is io.spring.EndOfDayJobConfiguration, which is the fully qualified class name to the configuration class that contains the Job. The second argument, endOfDay, represents the job name. The final argument, schedule.date=2007-05-05,java.time.LocalDate, is converted into a JobParameter object of type java.time.LocalDate.

The following example shows a sample configuration for endOfDay in Java:

@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing
public class EndOfDayJobConfiguration {

    @Bean
    public Job endOfDay(JobRepository jobRepository, Step step1) {
        return new JobBuilder("endOfDay", jobRepository)
    				.start(step1)
    				.build();
    }

    @Bean
    public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
        return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
    				.tasklet((contribution, chunkContext) -> null, transactionManager)
    				.build();
    }
}

The preceding example is overly simplistic, since there are many more requirements to a run a batch job in Spring Batch in general, but it serves to show the two main requirements of the CommandLineJobRunner: Job and JobLauncher.

Exit Codes

When launching a batch job from the command-line, an enterprise scheduler is often used. Most schedulers are fairly dumb and work only at the process level. This means that they only know about some operating system process (such as a shell script that they invoke). In this scenario, the only way to communicate back to the scheduler about the success or failure of a job is through return codes. A return code is a number that is returned to a scheduler by the process to indicate the result of the run. In the simplest case, 0 is success and 1 is failure. However, there may be more complex scenarios, such as “If job A returns 4, kick off job B, and, if it returns 5, kick off job C.” This type of behavior is configured at the scheduler level, but it is important that a processing framework such as Spring Batch provide a way to return a numeric representation of the exit code for a particular batch job. In Spring Batch, this is encapsulated within an ExitStatus, which is covered in more detail in Chapter 5. For the purposes of discussing exit codes, the only important thing to know is that an ExitStatus has an exit code property that is set by the framework (or the developer) and is returned as part of the JobExecution returned from the JobLauncher. The CommandLineJobRunner converts this string value to a number by using the ExitCodeMapper interface:

public interface ExitCodeMapper {

    public int intValue(String exitCode);

}

The essential contract of an ExitCodeMapper is that, given a string exit code, a number representation will be returned. The default implementation used by the job runner is the SimpleJvmExitCodeMapper that returns 0 for completion, 1 for generic errors, and 2 for any job runner errors such as not being able to find a Job in the provided context. If anything more complex than the three values above is needed, a custom implementation of the ExitCodeMapper interface must be supplied. Because the CommandLineJobRunner is the class that creates an ApplicationContext and, thus, cannot be 'wired together', any values that need to be overwritten must be autowired. This means that if an implementation of ExitCodeMapper is found within the BeanFactory, it is injected into the runner after the context is created. All that needs to be done to provide your own ExitCodeMapper is to declare the implementation as a root level bean and ensure that it is part of the ApplicationContext that is loaded by the runner.

4.5.2. Running Jobs from within a Web Container

Historically, offline processing (such as batch jobs) has been launched from the command-line, as described earlier. However, there are many cases where launching from an HttpRequest is a better option. Many such use cases include reporting, ad-hoc job running, and web application support. Because a batch job (by definition) is long running, the most important concern is to launch the job asynchronously:

Async Job Launcher Sequence from web container
Figure 10. Asynchronous Job Launcher Sequence From Web Container

The controller in this case is a Spring MVC controller. See the Spring Framework Reference Guide for more about Spring MVC. The controller launches a Job by using a JobLauncher that has been configured to launch asynchronously, which immediately returns a JobExecution. The Job is likely still running. However, this nonblocking behavior lets the controller return immediately, which is required when handling an HttpRequest. The following listing shows an example:

@Controller
public class JobLauncherController {

    @Autowired
    JobLauncher jobLauncher;

    @Autowired
    Job job;

    @RequestMapping("/jobLauncher.html")
    public void handle() throws Exception{
        jobLauncher.run(job, new JobParameters());
    }
}

4.6. Advanced Metadata Usage

So far, both the JobLauncher and JobRepository interfaces have been discussed. Together, they represent the simple launching of a job and basic CRUD operations of batch domain objects:

Job Repository
Figure 11. Job Repository

A JobLauncher uses the JobRepository to create new JobExecution objects and run them. Job and Step implementations later use the same JobRepository for basic updates of the same executions during the running of a Job. The basic operations suffice for simple scenarios. However, in a large batch environment with hundreds of batch jobs and complex scheduling requirements, more advanced access to the metadata is required:

Job Repository Advanced
Figure 12. Advanced Job Repository Access

The JobExplorer and JobOperator interfaces, which are discussed in the coming sections, add additional functionality for querying and controlling the metadata.

4.6.1. Querying the Repository

The most basic need before any advanced features is the ability to query the repository for existing executions. This functionality is provided by the JobExplorer interface:

public interface JobExplorer {

    List<JobInstance> getJobInstances(String jobName, int start, int count);

    JobExecution getJobExecution(Long executionId);

    StepExecution getStepExecution(Long jobExecutionId, Long stepExecutionId);

    JobInstance getJobInstance(Long instanceId);

    List<JobExecution> getJobExecutions(JobInstance jobInstance);

    Set<JobExecution> findRunningJobExecutions(String jobName);
}

As is evident from its method signatures, JobExplorer is a read-only version of the JobRepository, and, like the JobRepository, it can be easily configured by using a factory bean.

The following example shows how to configure a JobExplorer in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobExplorer" class="org.spr...JobExplorerFactoryBean"
      p:dataSource-ref="dataSource" />

The following example shows how to configure a JobExplorer in Java:

Java Configuration
...
// This would reside in your DefaultBatchConfiguration extension
@Bean
public JobExplorer jobExplorer() throws Exception {
	JobExplorerFactoryBean factoryBean = new JobExplorerFactoryBean();
	factoryBean.setDataSource(this.dataSource);
	return factoryBean.getObject();
}
...

Earlier in this chapter, we noted that you can modify the table prefix of the JobRepository to allow for different versions or schemas. Because the JobExplorer works with the same tables, it also needs the ability to set a prefix.

The following example shows how to set the table prefix for a JobExplorer in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobExplorer" class="org.spr...JobExplorerFactoryBean"
		p:tablePrefix="SYSTEM."/>

The following example shows how to set the table prefix for a JobExplorer in Java:

Java Configuration
...
// This would reside in your DefaultBatchConfiguration extension
@Bean
public JobExplorer jobExplorer() throws Exception {
	JobExplorerFactoryBean factoryBean = new JobExplorerFactoryBean();
	factoryBean.setDataSource(this.dataSource);
	factoryBean.setTablePrefix("SYSTEM.");
	return factoryBean.getObject();
}
...

4.6.2. JobRegistry

A JobRegistry (and its parent interface, JobLocator) is not mandatory, but it can be useful if you want to keep track of which jobs are available in the context. It is also useful for collecting jobs centrally in an application context when they have been created elsewhere (for example, in child contexts). You can also use custom JobRegistry implementations to manipulate the names and other properties of the jobs that are registered. There is only one implementation provided by the framework and this is based on a simple map from job name to job instance.

The following example shows how to include a JobRegistry for a job defined in XML:

<bean id="jobRegistry" class="org.springframework.batch.core.configuration.support.MapJobRegistry" />

When using @EnableBatchProcessing, a JobRegistry is provided for you. The following example shows how to configure your own JobRegistry:

...
// This is already provided via the @EnableBatchProcessing but can be customized via
// overriding the bean in the DefaultBatchConfiguration
@Override
@Bean
public JobRegistry jobRegistry() throws Exception {
	return new MapJobRegistry();
}
...

You can populate a JobRegistry in either of two ways: by using a bean post processor or by using a registrar lifecycle component. The coming sections describe these two mechanisms.

JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor

This is a bean post-processor that can register all jobs as they are created.

The following example shows how to include the JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor for a job defined in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="jobRegistryBeanPostProcessor" class="org.spr...JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor">
    <property name="jobRegistry" ref="jobRegistry"/>
</bean>

The following example shows how to include the JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor for a job defined in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor jobRegistryBeanPostProcessor(JobRegistry jobRegistry) {
    JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor postProcessor = new JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor();
    postProcessor.setJobRegistry(jobRegistry);
    return postProcessor;
}

Although it is not strictly necessary, the post-processor in the example has been given an id so that it can be included in child contexts (for example, as a parent bean definition) and cause all jobs created there to also be registered automatically.

AutomaticJobRegistrar

This is a lifecycle component that creates child contexts and registers jobs from those contexts as they are created. One advantage of doing this is that, while the job names in the child contexts still have to be globally unique in the registry, their dependencies can have “natural” names. So, for example, you can create a set of XML configuration files that each have only one Job but that all have different definitions of an ItemReader with the same bean name, such as reader. If all those files were imported into the same context, the reader definitions would clash and override one another, but, with the automatic registrar, this is avoided. This makes it easier to integrate jobs that have been contributed from separate modules of an application.

The following example shows how to include the AutomaticJobRegistrar for a job defined in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean class="org.spr...AutomaticJobRegistrar">
   <property name="applicationContextFactories">
      <bean class="org.spr...ClasspathXmlApplicationContextsFactoryBean">
         <property name="resources" value="classpath*:/config/job*.xml" />
      </bean>
   </property>
   <property name="jobLoader">
      <bean class="org.spr...DefaultJobLoader">
         <property name="jobRegistry" ref="jobRegistry" />
      </bean>
   </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to include the AutomaticJobRegistrar for a job defined in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public AutomaticJobRegistrar registrar() {

    AutomaticJobRegistrar registrar = new AutomaticJobRegistrar();
    registrar.setJobLoader(jobLoader());
    registrar.setApplicationContextFactories(applicationContextFactories());
    registrar.afterPropertiesSet();
    return registrar;

}

The registrar has two mandatory properties: an array of ApplicationContextFactory (created from a convenient factory bean in the preceding example) and a JobLoader. The JobLoader is responsible for managing the lifecycle of the child contexts and registering jobs in the JobRegistry.

The ApplicationContextFactory is responsible for creating the child context. The most common usage is (as in the preceding example) to use a ClassPathXmlApplicationContextFactory. One of the features of this factory is that, by default, it copies some of the configuration down from the parent context to the child. So, for instance, you need not redefine the PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer or AOP configuration in the child, provided it should be the same as the parent.

You can use AutomaticJobRegistrar in conjunction with a JobRegistryBeanPostProcessor (as long as you also use DefaultJobLoader). For instance, this might be desirable if there are jobs defined in the main parent context as well as in the child locations.

4.6.3. JobOperator

As previously discussed, the JobRepository provides CRUD operations on the meta-data, and the JobExplorer provides read-only operations on the metadata. However, those operations are most useful when used together to perform common monitoring tasks such as stopping, restarting, or summarizing a Job, as is commonly done by batch operators. Spring Batch provides these types of operations in the JobOperator interface:

public interface JobOperator {

    List<Long> getExecutions(long instanceId) throws NoSuchJobInstanceException;

    List<Long> getJobInstances(String jobName, int start, int count)
          throws NoSuchJobException;

    Set<Long> getRunningExecutions(String jobName) throws NoSuchJobException;

    String getParameters(long executionId) throws NoSuchJobExecutionException;

    Long start(String jobName, String parameters)
          throws NoSuchJobException, JobInstanceAlreadyExistsException;

    Long restart(long executionId)
          throws JobInstanceAlreadyCompleteException, NoSuchJobExecutionException,
                  NoSuchJobException, JobRestartException;

    Long startNextInstance(String jobName)
          throws NoSuchJobException, JobParametersNotFoundException, JobRestartException,
                 JobExecutionAlreadyRunningException, JobInstanceAlreadyCompleteException;

    boolean stop(long executionId)
          throws NoSuchJobExecutionException, JobExecutionNotRunningException;

    String getSummary(long executionId) throws NoSuchJobExecutionException;

    Map<Long, String> getStepExecutionSummaries(long executionId)
          throws NoSuchJobExecutionException;

    Set<String> getJobNames();

}

The preceding operations represent methods from many different interfaces, such as JobLauncher, JobRepository, JobExplorer, and JobRegistry. For this reason, the provided implementation of JobOperator (SimpleJobOperator) has many dependencies.

The following example shows a typical bean definition for SimpleJobOperator in XML:

<bean id="jobOperator" class="org.spr...SimpleJobOperator">
    <property name="jobExplorer">
        <bean class="org.spr...JobExplorerFactoryBean">
            <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" />
        </bean>
    </property>
    <property name="jobRepository" ref="jobRepository" />
    <property name="jobRegistry" ref="jobRegistry" />
    <property name="jobLauncher" ref="jobLauncher" />
</bean>

The following example shows a typical bean definition for SimpleJobOperator in Java:

 /**
  * All injected dependencies for this bean are provided by the @EnableBatchProcessing
  * infrastructure out of the box.
  */
 @Bean
 public SimpleJobOperator jobOperator(JobExplorer jobExplorer,
                                JobRepository jobRepository,
                                JobRegistry jobRegistry,
                                JobLauncher jobLauncher) {

	SimpleJobOperator jobOperator = new SimpleJobOperator();
	jobOperator.setJobExplorer(jobExplorer);
	jobOperator.setJobRepository(jobRepository);
	jobOperator.setJobRegistry(jobRegistry);
	jobOperator.setJobLauncher(jobLauncher);

	return jobOperator;
 }

As of version 5.0, the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation automatically registers a job operator bean in the application context.

If you set the table prefix on the job repository, do not forget to set it on the job explorer as well.

4.6.4. JobParametersIncrementer

Most of the methods on JobOperator are self-explanatory, and you can find more detailed explanations in the Javadoc of the interface. However, the startNextInstance method is worth noting. This method always starts a new instance of a Job. This can be extremely useful if there are serious issues in a JobExecution and the Job needs to be started over again from the beginning. Unlike JobLauncher (which requires a new JobParameters object that triggers a new JobInstance), if the parameters are different from any previous set of parameters, the startNextInstance method uses the JobParametersIncrementer tied to the Job to force the Job to a new instance:

public interface JobParametersIncrementer {

    JobParameters getNext(JobParameters parameters);

}

The contract of JobParametersIncrementer is that, given a JobParameters object, it returns the “next” JobParameters object by incrementing any necessary values it may contain. This strategy is useful because the framework has no way of knowing what changes to the JobParameters make it the “next” instance. For example, if the only value in JobParameters is a date and the next instance should be created, should that value be incremented by one day or one week (if the job is weekly, for instance)? The same can be said for any numerical values that help to identify the Job, as the following example shows:

public class SampleIncrementer implements JobParametersIncrementer {

    public JobParameters getNext(JobParameters parameters) {
        if (parameters==null || parameters.isEmpty()) {
            return new JobParametersBuilder().addLong("run.id", 1L).toJobParameters();
        }
        long id = parameters.getLong("run.id",1L) + 1;
        return new JobParametersBuilder().addLong("run.id", id).toJobParameters();
    }
}

In this example, the value with a key of run.id is used to discriminate between JobInstances. If the JobParameters passed in is null, it can be assumed that the Job has never been run before and, thus, its initial state can be returned. However, if not, the old value is obtained, incremented by one, and returned.

For jobs defined in XML, you can associate an incrementer with a Job through the incrementer attribute in the namespace, as follows:

<job id="footballJob" incrementer="sampleIncrementer">
    ...
</job>

For jobs defined in Java, you can associate an incrementer with a Job through the incrementer method provided in the builders, as follows:

@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
    				 .incrementer(sampleIncrementer())
    				 ...
                     .build();
}

4.6.5. Stopping a Job

One of the most common use cases of JobOperator is gracefully stopping a Job:

Set<Long> executions = jobOperator.getRunningExecutions("sampleJob");
jobOperator.stop(executions.iterator().next());

The shutdown is not immediate, since there is no way to force immediate shutdown, especially if the execution is currently in developer code that the framework has no control over, such as a business service. However, as soon as control is returned back to the framework, it sets the status of the current StepExecution to BatchStatus.STOPPED, saves it, and does the same for the JobExecution before finishing.

4.6.6. Aborting a Job

A job execution that is FAILED can be restarted (if the Job is restartable). A job execution whose status is ABANDONED cannot be restarted by the framework. The ABANDONED status is also used in step executions to mark them as skippable in a restarted job execution. If a job is running and encounters a step that has been marked ABANDONED in the previous failed job execution, it moves on to the next step (as determined by the job flow definition and the step execution exit status).

If the process died (kill -9 or server failure), the job is, of course, not running, but the JobRepository has no way of knowing because no one told it before the process died. You have to tell it manually that you know that the execution either failed or should be considered aborted (change its status to FAILED or ABANDONED). This is a business decision, and there is no way to automate it. Change the status to FAILED only if it is restartable and you know that the restart data is valid.

5. Configuring a Step

As discussed in the domain chapter, a Step is a domain object that encapsulates an independent, sequential phase of a batch job and contains all of the information necessary to define and control the actual batch processing. This is a necessarily vague description because the contents of any given Step are at the discretion of the developer writing a Job. A Step can be as simple or complex as the developer desires. A simple Step might load data from a file into the database, requiring little or no code (depending upon the implementations used). A more complex Step might have complicated business rules that are applied as part of the processing, as the following image shows:

Step
Figure 13. Step

5.1. Chunk-oriented Processing

Spring Batch uses a “chunk-oriented” processing style in its most common implementation. Chunk oriented processing refers to reading the data one at a time and creating 'chunks' that are written out within a transaction boundary. Once the number of items read equals the commit interval, the entire chunk is written out by the ItemWriter, and then the transaction is committed. The following image shows the process:

Chunk Oriented Processing
Figure 14. Chunk-oriented Processing

The following pseudo code shows the same concepts in a simplified form:

List items = new Arraylist();
for(int i = 0; i < commitInterval; i++){
    Object item = itemReader.read();
    if (item != null) {
        items.add(item);
    }
}
itemWriter.write(items);

You can also configure a chunk-oriented step with an optional ItemProcessor to process items before passing them to the ItemWriter. The following image shows the process when an ItemProcessor is registered in the step:

Chunk Oriented Processing With Item Processor
Figure 15. Chunk-oriented Processing with Item Processor

The following pseudo code shows how this is implemented in a simplified form:

List items = new Arraylist();
for(int i = 0; i < commitInterval; i++){
    Object item = itemReader.read();
    if (item != null) {
        items.add(item);
    }
}

List processedItems = new Arraylist();
for(Object item: items){
    Object processedItem = itemProcessor.process(item);
    if (processedItem != null) {
        processedItems.add(processedItem);
    }
}

itemWriter.write(processedItems);

For more details about item processors and their use cases, see the Item processing section.

5.1.1. Configuring a Step

Despite the relatively short list of required dependencies for a Step, it is an extremely complex class that can potentially contain many collaborators.

To ease configuration, you can use the Spring Batch XML namespace, as the following example shows:

XML Configuration
<job id="sampleJob" job-repository="jobRepository">
    <step id="step1">
        <tasklet transaction-manager="transactionManager">
            <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

When using Java configuration, you can use the Spring Batch builders, as the following example shows:

Java Configuration
/**
 * Note the JobRepository is typically autowired in and not needed to be explicitly
 * configured
 */
@Bean
public Job sampleJob(JobRepository jobRepository, Step sampleStep) {
    return new JobBuilder("sampleJob", jobRepository)
                .start(sampleStep)
                .build();
}

/**
 * Note the TransactionManager is typically autowired in and not needed to be explicitly
 * configured
 */
@Bean
public Step sampleStep(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("sampleStep", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.build();
}

The preceding configuration includes the only required dependencies to create a item-oriented step:

  • reader: The ItemReader that provides items for processing.

  • writer: The ItemWriter that processes the items provided by the ItemReader.

  • transaction-manager: Spring’s PlatformTransactionManager that begins and commits transactions during processing.

  • transactionManager: Spring’s PlatformTransactionManager that begins and commits transactions during processing.

  • job-repository: The XML-specific name of the JobRepository that periodically stores the StepExecution and ExecutionContext during processing (just before committing). For an in-line <step/> (one defined within a <job/>), it is an attribute on the <job/> element. For a standalone <step/>, it is defined as an attribute of the <tasklet/>.

  • repository: The Java-specific name of the JobRepository that periodically stores the StepExecution and ExecutionContext during processing (just before committing).

  • commit-interval: The XML-specific name of the number of items to be processed before the transaction is committed.

  • chunk: The Java-specific name of the dependency that indicates that this is an item-based step and the number of items to be processed before the transaction is committed.

Note that job-repository defaults to jobRepository and transaction-manager defaults to transactionManager. Also, the ItemProcessor is optional, since the item could be directly passed from the reader to the writer.

Note that repository defaults to jobRepository (provided through @EnableBatchProcessing) and transactionManager defaults to transactionManager (provided from the application context). Also, the ItemProcessor is optional, since the item could be directly passed from the reader to the writer.

5.1.2. Inheriting from a Parent Step

If a group of Steps share similar configurations, then it may be helpful to define a “parent” Step from which the concrete Steps may inherit properties. Similar to class inheritance in Java, the “child” Step combines its elements and attributes with the parent’s. The child also overrides any of the parent’s Steps.

In the following example, the Step, concreteStep1, inherits from parentStep. It is instantiated with itemReader, itemProcessor, itemWriter, startLimit=5, and allowStartIfComplete=true. Additionally, the commitInterval is 5, since it is overridden by the concreteStep1 Step, as the following example shows:

<step id="parentStep">
    <tasklet allow-start-if-complete="true">
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

<step id="concreteStep1" parent="parentStep">
    <tasklet start-limit="5">
        <chunk processor="itemProcessor" commit-interval="5"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The id attribute is still required on the step within the job element. This is for two reasons:

  • The id is used as the step name when persisting the StepExecution. If the same standalone step is referenced in more than one step in the job, an error occurs.

  • When creating job flows, as described later in this chapter, the next attribute should refer to the step in the flow, not the standalone step.

Abstract Step

Sometimes, it may be necessary to define a parent Step that is not a complete Step configuration. If, for instance, the reader, writer, and tasklet attributes are left off of a Step configuration, then initialization fails. If a parent must be defined without one or more of these properties, the abstract attribute should be used. An abstract Step is only extended, never instantiated.

In the following example, the Step (abstractParentStep) would not be instantiated if it were not declared to be abstract. The Step, (concreteStep2) has itemReader, itemWriter, and commit-interval=10.

<step id="abstractParentStep" abstract="true">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk commit-interval="10"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

<step id="concreteStep2" parent="abstractParentStep">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>
Merging Lists

Some of the configurable elements on Steps are lists, such as the <listeners/> element. If both the parent and child Steps declare a <listeners/> element, the child’s list overrides the parent’s. To allow a child to add additional listeners to the list defined by the parent, every list element has a merge attribute. If the element specifies that merge="true", then the child’s list is combined with the parent’s instead of overriding it.

In the following example, the Step "concreteStep3", is created with two listeners: listenerOne and listenerTwo:

<step id="listenersParentStep" abstract="true">
    <listeners>
        <listener ref="listenerOne"/>
    <listeners>
</step>

<step id="concreteStep3" parent="listenersParentStep">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="5"/>
    </tasklet>
    <listeners merge="true">
        <listener ref="listenerTwo"/>
    <listeners>
</step>

5.1.3. The Commit Interval

As mentioned previously, a step reads in and writes out items, periodically committing by using the supplied PlatformTransactionManager. With a commit-interval of 1, it commits after writing each individual item. This is less than ideal in many situations, since beginning and committing a transaction is expensive. Ideally, it is preferable to process as many items as possible in each transaction, which is completely dependent upon the type of data being processed and the resources with which the step is interacting. For this reason, you can configure the number of items that are processed within a commit.

The following example shows a step whose tasklet has a commit-interval value of 10 as it would be defined in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="sampleJob">
    <step id="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

The following example shows a step whose tasklet has a commit-interval value of 10 as it would be defined in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job sampleJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("sampleJob", jobRepository)
                     .start(step1())
                     .build();
}

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.build();
}

In the preceding example, 10 items are processed within each transaction. At the beginning of processing, a transaction is begun. Also, each time read is called on the ItemReader, a counter is incremented. When it reaches 10, the list of aggregated items is passed to the ItemWriter, and the transaction is committed.

5.1.4. Configuring a Step for Restart

In the “Configuring and Running a Job” section , restarting a Job was discussed. Restart has numerous impacts on steps, and, consequently, may require some specific configuration.

Setting a Start Limit

There are many scenarios where you may want to control the number of times a Step can be started. For example, you might need to configure a particular Step might so that it runs only once because it invalidates some resource that must be fixed manually before it can be run again. This is configurable on the step level, since different steps may have different requirements. A Step that can be executed only once can exist as part of the same Job as a Step that can be run infinitely.

The following code fragment shows an example of a start limit configuration in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet start-limit="1">
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following code fragment shows an example of a start limit configuration in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.startLimit(1)
				.build();
}

The step shown in the preceding example can be run only once. Attempting to run it again causes a StartLimitExceededException to be thrown. Note that the default value for the start-limit is Integer.MAX_VALUE.

Restarting a Completed Step

In the case of a restartable job, there may be one or more steps that should always be run, regardless of whether or not they were successful the first time. An example might be a validation step or a Step that cleans up resources before processing. During normal processing of a restarted job, any step with a status of COMPLETED (meaning it has already been completed successfully), is skipped. Setting allow-start-if-complete to true overrides this so that the step always runs.

The following code fragment shows how to define a restartable job in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet allow-start-if-complete="true">
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following code fragment shows how to define a restartable job in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.allowStartIfComplete(true)
				.build();
}
Step Restart Configuration Example

The following XML example shows how to configure a job to have steps that can be restarted:

XML Configuration
<job id="footballJob" restartable="true">
    <step id="playerload" next="gameLoad">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="playerFileItemReader" writer="playerWriter"
                   commit-interval="10" />
        </tasklet>
    </step>
    <step id="gameLoad" next="playerSummarization">
        <tasklet allow-start-if-complete="true">
            <chunk reader="gameFileItemReader" writer="gameWriter"
                   commit-interval="10"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
    <step id="playerSummarization">
        <tasklet start-limit="2">
            <chunk reader="playerSummarizationSource" writer="summaryWriter"
                   commit-interval="10"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

The following Java example shows how to configure a job to have steps that can be restarted:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job footballJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("footballJob", jobRepository)
				.start(playerLoad())
				.next(gameLoad())
				.next(playerSummarization())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step playerLoad(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("playerLoad", jobRepository)
			.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
			.reader(playerFileItemReader())
			.writer(playerWriter())
			.build();
}

@Bean
public Step gameLoad(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("gameLoad", jobRepository)
			.allowStartIfComplete(true)
			.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
			.reader(gameFileItemReader())
			.writer(gameWriter())
			.build();
}

@Bean
public Step playerSummarization(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("playerSummarization", jobRepository)
			.startLimit(2)
			.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
			.reader(playerSummarizationSource())
			.writer(summaryWriter())
			.build();
}

The preceding example configuration is for a job that loads in information about football games and summarizes them. It contains three steps: playerLoad, gameLoad, and playerSummarization. The playerLoad step loads player information from a flat file, while the gameLoad step does the same for games. The final step, playerSummarization, then summarizes the statistics for each player, based upon the provided games. It is assumed that the file loaded by playerLoad must be loaded only once but that gameLoad can load any games found within a particular directory, deleting them after they have been successfully loaded into the database. As a result, the playerLoad step contains no additional configuration. It can be started any number of times is skipped if complete. The gameLoad step, however, needs to be run every time in case extra files have been added since it last ran. It has allow-start-if-complete set to true to always be started. (It is assumed that the database table that games are loaded into has a process indicator on it, to ensure new games can be properly found by the summarization step). The summarization step, which is the most important in the job, is configured to have a start limit of 2. This is useful because, if the step continually fails, a new exit code is returned to the operators that control job execution, and it can not start again until manual intervention has taken place.

This job provides an example for this document and is not the same as the footballJob found in the samples project.

The remainder of this section describes what happens for each of the three runs of the footballJob example.

Run 1:

  1. playerLoad runs and completes successfully, adding 400 players to the PLAYERS table.

  2. gameLoad runs and processes 11 files worth of game data, loading their contents into the GAMES table.

  3. playerSummarization begins processing and fails after 5 minutes.

Run 2:

  1. playerLoad does not run, since it has already completed successfully, and allow-start-if-complete is false (the default).

  2. gameLoad runs again and processes another 2 files, loading their contents into the GAMES table as well (with a process indicator indicating they have yet to be processed).

  3. playerSummarization begins processing of all remaining game data (filtering using the process indicator) and fails again after 30 minutes.

Run 3:

  1. playerLoad does not run, since it has already completed successfully, and allow-start-if-complete is false (the default).

  2. gameLoad runs again and processes another 2 files, loading their contents into the GAMES table as well (with a process indicator indicating they have yet to be processed).

  3. playerSummarization is not started and the job is immediately killed, since this is the third execution of playerSummarization, and its limit is only 2. Either the limit must be raised or the Job must be executed as a new JobInstance.

5.1.5. Configuring Skip Logic

There are many scenarios where errors encountered while processing should not result in Step failure but should be skipped instead. This is usually a decision that must be made by someone who understands the data itself and what meaning it has. Financial data, for example, may not be skippable because it results in money being transferred, which needs to be completely accurate. Loading a list of vendors, on the other hand, might allow for skips. If a vendor is not loaded because it was formatted incorrectly or was missing necessary information, there probably are not issues. Usually, these bad records are logged as well, which is covered later when discussing listeners.

The following XML example shows an example of using a skip limit:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
   <tasklet>
      <chunk reader="flatFileItemReader" writer="itemWriter"
             commit-interval="10" skip-limit="10">
         <skippable-exception-classes>
            <include class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileParseException"/>
         </skippable-exception-classes>
      </chunk>
   </tasklet>
</step>

The following Java example shows an example of using a skip limit:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(flatFileItemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.faultTolerant()
				.skipLimit(10)
				.skip(FlatFileParseException.class)
				.build();
}

In the preceding example, a FlatFileItemReader is used. If, at any point, a FlatFileParseException is thrown, the item is skipped and counted against the total skip limit of 10. Exceptions (and their subclasses) that are declared might be thrown during any phase of the chunk processing (read, process, or write). Separate counts are made of skips on read, process, and write inside the step execution, but the limit applies across all skips. Once the skip limit is reached, the next exception found causes the step to fail. In other words, the eleventh skip triggers the exception, not the tenth.

One problem with the preceding example is that any other exception besides a FlatFileParseException causes the Job to fail. In certain scenarios, this may be the correct behavior. However, in other scenarios, it may be easier to identify which exceptions should cause failure and skip everything else.

The following XML example shows an example excluding a particular exception:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="flatFileItemReader" writer="itemWriter"
               commit-interval="10" skip-limit="10">
            <skippable-exception-classes>
                <include class="java.lang.Exception"/>
                <exclude class="java.io.FileNotFoundException"/>
            </skippable-exception-classes>
        </chunk>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following Java example shows an example excluding a particular exception:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(flatFileItemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.faultTolerant()
				.skipLimit(10)
				.skip(Exception.class)
				.noSkip(FileNotFoundException.class)
				.build();
}

By identifying java.lang.Exception as a skippable exception class, the configuration indicates that all Exceptions are skippable. However, by “excluding” java.io.FileNotFoundException, the configuration refines the list of skippable exception classes to be all Exceptions except FileNotFoundException. Any excluded exception class is fatal if encountered (that is, they are not skipped).

For any exception encountered, the skippability is determined by the nearest superclass in the class hierarchy. Any unclassified exception is treated as 'fatal'.

The order of the <include/> and <exclude/> elements does not matter.

The order of the skip and noSkip method calls does not matter.

5.1.6. Configuring Retry Logic

In most cases, you want an exception to cause either a skip or a Step failure. However, not all exceptions are deterministic. If a FlatFileParseException is encountered while reading, it is always thrown for that record. Resetting the ItemReader does not help. However, for other exceptions (such as a DeadlockLoserDataAccessException, which indicates that the current process has attempted to update a record that another process holds a lock on), waiting and trying again might result in success.

In XML, retry should be configured as follows:

<step id="step1">
   <tasklet>
      <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter"
             commit-interval="2" retry-limit="3">
         <retryable-exception-classes>
            <include class="org.springframework.dao.DeadlockLoserDataAccessException"/>
         </retryable-exception-classes>
      </chunk>
   </tasklet>
</step>

In Java, retry should be configured as follows:

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.faultTolerant()
				.retryLimit(3)
				.retry(DeadlockLoserDataAccessException.class)
				.build();
}

The Step allows a limit for the number of times an individual item can be retried and a list of exceptions that are “retryable”. You can find more details on how retry works in retry.

5.1.7. Controlling Rollback

By default, regardless of retry or skip, any exceptions thrown from the ItemWriter cause the transaction controlled by the Step to rollback. If skip is configured as described earlier, exceptions thrown from the ItemReader do not cause a rollback. However, there are many scenarios in which exceptions thrown from the ItemWriter should not cause a rollback, because no action has taken place to invalidate the transaction. For this reason, you can configure the Step with a list of exceptions that should not cause rollback.

In XML, you can control rollback as follows:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
   <tasklet>
      <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="2"/>
      <no-rollback-exception-classes>
         <include class="org.springframework.batch.item.validator.ValidationException"/>
      </no-rollback-exception-classes>
   </tasklet>
</step>

In Java, you can control rollback as follows:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.faultTolerant()
				.noRollback(ValidationException.class)
				.build();
}
Transactional Readers

The basic contract of the ItemReader is that it is forward-only. The step buffers reader input so that, in case of a rollback, the items do not need to be re-read from the reader. However, there are certain scenarios in which the reader is built on top of a transactional resource, such as a JMS queue. In this case, since the queue is tied to the transaction that is rolled back, the messages that have been pulled from the queue are put back on. For this reason, you can configure the step to not buffer the items.

The following example shows how to create a reader that does not buffer items in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="2"
               is-reader-transactional-queue="true"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following example shows how to create a reader that does not buffer items in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.readerIsTransactionalQueue()
				.build();
}

5.1.8. Transaction Attributes

You can use transaction attributes to control the isolation, propagation, and timeout settings. You can find more information on setting transaction attributes in the Spring core documentation.

The following example sets the isolation, propagation, and timeout transaction attributes in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="2"/>
        <transaction-attributes isolation="DEFAULT"
                                propagation="REQUIRED"
                                timeout="30"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following example sets the isolation, propagation, and timeout transaction attributes in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	DefaultTransactionAttribute attribute = new DefaultTransactionAttribute();
	attribute.setPropagationBehavior(Propagation.REQUIRED.value());
	attribute.setIsolationLevel(Isolation.DEFAULT.value());
	attribute.setTimeout(30);

	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.transactionAttribute(attribute)
				.build();
}

5.1.9. Registering ItemStream with a Step

The step has to take care of ItemStream callbacks at the necessary points in its lifecycle. (For more information on the ItemStream interface, see ItemStream). This is vital if a step fails and might need to be restarted, because the ItemStream interface is where the step gets the information it needs about persistent state between executions.

If the ItemReader, ItemProcessor, or ItemWriter itself implements the ItemStream interface, these are registered automatically. Any other streams need to be registered separately. This is often the case where indirect dependencies, such as delegates, are injected into the reader and writer. You can register a stream on the step through the stream element.

The following example shows how to register a stream on a step in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="compositeWriter" commit-interval="2">
            <streams>
                <stream ref="fileItemWriter1"/>
                <stream ref="fileItemWriter2"/>
            </streams>
        </chunk>
    </tasklet>
</step>

<beans:bean id="compositeWriter"
            class="org.springframework.batch.item.support.CompositeItemWriter">
    <beans:property name="delegates">
        <beans:list>
            <beans:ref bean="fileItemWriter1" />
            <beans:ref bean="fileItemWriter2" />
        </beans:list>
    </beans:property>
</beans:bean>

The following example shows how to register a stream on a step in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(compositeItemWriter())
				.stream(fileItemWriter1())
				.stream(fileItemWriter2())
				.build();
}

/**
 * In Spring Batch 4, the CompositeItemWriter implements ItemStream so this isn't
 * necessary, but used for an example.
 */
@Bean
public CompositeItemWriter compositeItemWriter() {
	List<ItemWriter> writers = new ArrayList<>(2);
	writers.add(fileItemWriter1());
	writers.add(fileItemWriter2());

	CompositeItemWriter itemWriter = new CompositeItemWriter();

	itemWriter.setDelegates(writers);

	return itemWriter;
}

In the preceding example, the CompositeItemWriter is not an ItemStream, but both of its delegates are. Therefore, both delegate writers must be explicitly registered as streams for the framework to handle them correctly. The ItemReader does not need to be explicitly registered as a stream because it is a direct property of the Step. The step is now restartable, and the state of the reader and writer is correctly persisted in the event of a failure.

5.1.10. Intercepting Step Execution

Just as with the Job, there are many events during the execution of a Step where a user may need to perform some functionality. For example, to write out to a flat file that requires a footer, the ItemWriter needs to be notified when the Step has been completed so that the footer can be written. This can be accomplished with one of many Step scoped listeners.

You can apply any class that implements one of the extensions of StepListener (but not that interface itself, since it is empty) to a step through the listeners element. The listeners element is valid inside a step, tasklet, or chunk declaration. We recommend that you declare the listeners at the level at which its function applies or, if it is multi-featured (such as StepExecutionListener and ItemReadListener), declare it at the most granular level where it applies.

The following example shows a listener applied at the chunk level in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="reader" writer="writer" commit-interval="10"/>
        <listeners>
            <listener ref="chunkListener"/>
        </listeners>
    </tasklet>
</step>

The following example shows a listener applied at the chunk level in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(reader())
				.writer(writer())
				.listener(chunkListener())
				.build();
}

An ItemReader, ItemWriter, or ItemProcessor that itself implements one of the StepListener interfaces is registered automatically with the Step if using the namespace <step> element or one of the *StepFactoryBean factories. This only applies to components directly injected into the Step. If the listener is nested inside another component, you need to explicitly register it (as described previously under Registering ItemStream with a Step).

In addition to the StepListener interfaces, annotations are provided to address the same concerns. Plain old Java objects can have methods with these annotations that are then converted into the corresponding StepListener type. It is also common to annotate custom implementations of chunk components, such as ItemReader or ItemWriter or Tasklet. The annotations are analyzed by the XML parser for the <listener/> elements as well as registered with the listener methods in the builders, so all you need to do is use the XML namespace or builders to register the listeners with a step.

StepExecutionListener

StepExecutionListener represents the most generic listener for Step execution. It allows for notification before a Step is started and after it ends, whether it ended normally or failed, as the following example shows:

public interface StepExecutionListener extends StepListener {

    void beforeStep(StepExecution stepExecution);

    ExitStatus afterStep(StepExecution stepExecution);

}

ExitStatus has a return type of afterStep, to give listeners the chance to modify the exit code that is returned upon completion of a Step.

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeStep

  • @AfterStep

ChunkListener

A “chunk” is defined as the items processed within the scope of a transaction. Committing a transaction, at each commit interval, commits a chunk. You can use a ChunkListener to perform logic before a chunk begins processing or after a chunk has completed successfully, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface ChunkListener extends StepListener {

    void beforeChunk(ChunkContext context);
    void afterChunk(ChunkContext context);
    void afterChunkError(ChunkContext context);

}

The beforeChunk method is called after the transaction is started but before reading begins on the ItemReader. Conversely, afterChunk is called after the chunk has been committed (or not at all if there is a rollback).

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeChunk

  • @AfterChunk

  • @AfterChunkError

You can apply a ChunkListener when there is no chunk declaration. The TaskletStep is responsible for calling the ChunkListener, so it applies to a non-item-oriented tasklet as well (it is called before and after the tasklet).

ItemReadListener

When discussing skip logic previously, it was mentioned that it may be beneficial to log the skipped records so that they can be dealt with later. In the case of read errors, this can be done with an ItemReaderListener, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface ItemReadListener<T> extends StepListener {

    void beforeRead();
    void afterRead(T item);
    void onReadError(Exception ex);

}

The beforeRead method is called before each call to read on the ItemReader. The afterRead method is called after each successful call to read and is passed the item that was read. If there was an error while reading, the onReadError method is called. The exception encountered is provided so that it can be logged.

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeRead

  • @AfterRead

  • @OnReadError

ItemProcessListener

As with the ItemReadListener, the processing of an item can be “listened” to, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface ItemProcessListener<T, S> extends StepListener {

    void beforeProcess(T item);
    void afterProcess(T item, S result);
    void onProcessError(T item, Exception e);

}

The beforeProcess method is called before process on the ItemProcessor and is handed the item that is to be processed. The afterProcess method is called after the item has been successfully processed. If there was an error while processing, the onProcessError method is called. The exception encountered and the item that was attempted to be processed are provided, so that they can be logged.

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeProcess

  • @AfterProcess

  • @OnProcessError

ItemWriteListener

You can “listen” to the writing of an item with the ItemWriteListener, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface ItemWriteListener<S> extends StepListener {

    void beforeWrite(List<? extends S> items);
    void afterWrite(List<? extends S> items);
    void onWriteError(Exception exception, List<? extends S> items);

}

The beforeWrite method is called before write on the ItemWriter and is handed the list of items that is written. The afterWrite method is called after the item has been successfully written. If there was an error while writing, the onWriteError method is called. The exception encountered and the item that was attempted to be written are provided, so that they can be logged.

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @BeforeWrite

  • @AfterWrite

  • @OnWriteError

SkipListener

ItemReadListener, ItemProcessListener, and ItemWriteListener all provide mechanisms for being notified of errors, but none informs you that a record has actually been skipped. onWriteError, for example, is called even if an item is retried and successful. For this reason, there is a separate interface for tracking skipped items, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface SkipListener<T,S> extends StepListener {

    void onSkipInRead(Throwable t);
    void onSkipInProcess(T item, Throwable t);
    void onSkipInWrite(S item, Throwable t);

}

onSkipInRead is called whenever an item is skipped while reading. It should be noted that rollbacks may cause the same item to be registered as skipped more than once. onSkipInWrite is called when an item is skipped while writing. Because the item has been read successfully (and not skipped), it is also provided the item itself as an argument.

The annotations corresponding to this interface are:

  • @OnSkipInRead

  • @OnSkipInWrite

  • @OnSkipInProcess

SkipListeners and Transactions

One of the most common use cases for a SkipListener is to log out a skipped item, so that another batch process or even human process can be used to evaluate and fix the issue that leads to the skip. Because there are many cases in which the original transaction may be rolled back, Spring Batch makes two guarantees:

  • The appropriate skip method (depending on when the error happened) is called only once per item.

  • The SkipListener is always called just before the transaction is committed. This is to ensure that any transactional resources call by the listener are not rolled back by a failure within the ItemWriter.

5.2. TaskletStep

Chunk-oriented processing is not the only way to process in a Step. What if a Step must consist of a stored procedure call? You could implement the call as an ItemReader and return null after the procedure finishes. However, doing so is a bit unnatural, since there would need to be a no-op ItemWriter. Spring Batch provides the TaskletStep for this scenario.

The Tasklet interface has one method, execute, which is called repeatedly by the TaskletStep until it either returns RepeatStatus.FINISHED or throws an exception to signal a failure. Each call to a Tasklet is wrapped in a transaction. Tasklet implementors might call a stored procedure, a script, or a SQL update statement.

To create a TaskletStep in XML, the ref attribute of the <tasklet/> element should reference a bean that defines a Tasklet object. No <chunk/> element should be used within the <tasklet/>. The following example shows a simple tasklet:

<step id="step1">
    <tasklet ref="myTasklet"/>
</step>

To create a TaskletStep in Java, the bean passed to the tasklet method of the builder should implement the Tasklet interface. No call to chunk should be called when building a TaskletStep. The following example shows a simple tasklet:

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
    return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
    			.tasklet(myTasklet(), transactionManager)
    			.build();
}
If it implements the StepListener interface, TaskletStep automatically registers the tasklet as a StepListener.

5.2.1. TaskletAdapter

As with other adapters for the ItemReader and ItemWriter interfaces, the Tasklet interface contains an implementation that allows for adapting itself to any pre-existing class: TaskletAdapter. An example where this may be useful is an existing DAO that is used to update a flag on a set of records. You can use the TaskletAdapter to call this class without having to write an adapter for the Tasklet interface.

The following example shows how to define a TaskletAdapter in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="myTasklet" class="o.s.b.core.step.tasklet.MethodInvokingTaskletAdapter">
    <property name="targetObject">
        <bean class="org.mycompany.FooDao"/>
    </property>
    <property name="targetMethod" value="updateFoo" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to define a TaskletAdapter in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public MethodInvokingTaskletAdapter myTasklet() {
	MethodInvokingTaskletAdapter adapter = new MethodInvokingTaskletAdapter();

	adapter.setTargetObject(fooDao());
	adapter.setTargetMethod("updateFoo");

	return adapter;
}

5.2.2. Example Tasklet Implementation

Many batch jobs contain steps that must be done before the main processing begins, to set up various resources or after processing has completed to cleanup those resources. In the case of a job that works heavily with files, it is often necessary to delete certain files locally after they have been uploaded successfully to another location. The following example (taken from the Spring Batch samples project) is a Tasklet implementation with just such a responsibility:

public class FileDeletingTasklet implements Tasklet, InitializingBean {

    private Resource directory;

    public RepeatStatus execute(StepContribution contribution,
                                ChunkContext chunkContext) throws Exception {
        File dir = directory.getFile();
        Assert.state(dir.isDirectory());

        File[] files = dir.listFiles();
        for (int i = 0; i < files.length; i++) {
            boolean deleted = files[i].delete();
            if (!deleted) {
                throw new UnexpectedJobExecutionException("Could not delete file " +
                                                          files[i].getPath());
            }
        }
        return RepeatStatus.FINISHED;
    }

    public void setDirectoryResource(Resource directory) {
        this.directory = directory;
    }

    public void afterPropertiesSet() throws Exception {
        Assert.state(directory != null, "directory must be set");
    }
}

The preceding tasklet implementation deletes all files within a given directory. It should be noted that the execute method is called only once. All that is left is to reference the tasklet from the step.

The following example shows how to reference the tasklet from the step in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="taskletJob">
    <step id="deleteFilesInDir">
       <tasklet ref="fileDeletingTasklet"/>
    </step>
</job>

<beans:bean id="fileDeletingTasklet"
            class="org.springframework.batch.sample.tasklet.FileDeletingTasklet">
    <beans:property name="directoryResource">
        <beans:bean id="directory"
                    class="org.springframework.core.io.FileSystemResource">
            <beans:constructor-arg value="target/test-outputs/test-dir" />
        </beans:bean>
    </beans:property>
</beans:bean>

The following example shows how to reference the tasklet from the step in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job taskletJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("taskletJob", jobRepository)
				.start(deleteFilesInDir())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step deleteFilesInDir(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("deleteFilesInDir", jobRepository)
				.tasklet(fileDeletingTasklet(), transactionManager)
				.build();
}

@Bean
public FileDeletingTasklet fileDeletingTasklet() {
	FileDeletingTasklet tasklet = new FileDeletingTasklet();

	tasklet.setDirectoryResource(new FileSystemResource("target/test-outputs/test-dir"));

	return tasklet;
}

5.3. Controlling Step Flow

With the ability to group steps together within an owning job comes the need to be able to control how the job “flows” from one step to another. The failure of a Step does not necessarily mean that the Job should fail. Furthermore, there may be more than one type of “success” that determines which Step should be executed next. Depending upon how a group of Steps is configured, certain steps may not even be processed at all.

5.3.1. Sequential Flow

The simplest flow scenario is a job where all of the steps execute sequentially, as the following image shows:

Sequential Flow
Figure 16. Sequential Flow

This can be achieved by using next in a step.

The following example shows how to use the next attribute in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="job">
    <step id="stepA" parent="s1" next="stepB" />
    <step id="stepB" parent="s2" next="stepC"/>
    <step id="stepC" parent="s3" />
</job>

The following example shows how to use the next() method in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(stepA())
				.next(stepB())
				.next(stepC())
				.build();
}

In the scenario above, stepA runs first because it is the first Step listed. If stepA completes normally, stepB runs, and so on. However, if step A fails, the entire Job fails and stepB does not execute.

With the Spring Batch XML namespace, the first step listed in the configuration is always the first step run by the Job. The order of the other step elements does not matter, but the first step must always appear first in the XML.

5.3.2. Conditional Flow

In the preceding example, there are only two possibilities:

  1. The step is successful, and the next step should be executed.

  2. The step failed, and, thus, the job should fail.

In many cases, this may be sufficient. However, what about a scenario in which the failure of a step should trigger a different step, rather than causing failure? The following image shows such a flow:

Conditional Flow
Figure 17. Conditional Flow

To handle more complex scenarios, the Spring Batch XML namespace lets you define transitions elements within the step element. One such transition is the next element. Like the next attribute, the next element tells the Job which Step to execute next. However, unlike the attribute, any number of next elements are allowed on a given Step, and there is no default behavior in the case of failure. This means that, if transition elements are used, all of the behavior for the Step transitions must be defined explicitly. Note also that a single step cannot have both a next attribute and a transition element.

The next element specifies a pattern to match and the step to execute next, as the following example shows:

XML Configuration
<job id="job">
    <step id="stepA" parent="s1">
        <next on="*" to="stepB" />
        <next on="FAILED" to="stepC" />
    </step>
    <step id="stepB" parent="s2" next="stepC" />
    <step id="stepC" parent="s3" />
</job>

The Java API offers a fluent set of methods that let you specify the flow and what to do when a step fails. The following example shows how to specify one step (stepA) and then proceed to either of two different steps (stepB or stepC), depending on whether stepA succeeds:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(stepA())
				.on("*").to(stepB())
				.from(stepA()).on("FAILED").to(stepC())
				.end()
				.build();
}

When using XML configuration, the on attribute of a transition element uses a simple pattern-matching scheme to match the ExitStatus that results from the execution of the Step.

When using java configuration, the on() method uses a simple pattern-matching scheme to match the ExitStatus that results from the execution of the Step.

Only two special characters are allowed in the pattern:

  • * matches zero or more characters

  • ? matches exactly one character

For example, c*t matches cat and count, while c?t matches cat but not count.

While there is no limit to the number of transition elements on a Step, if the Step execution results in an ExitStatus that is not covered by an element, the framework throws an exception and the Job fails. The framework automatically orders transitions from most specific to least specific. This means that, even if the ordering were swapped for stepA in the preceding example, an ExitStatus of FAILED would still go to stepC.

Batch Status Versus Exit Status

When configuring a Job for conditional flow, it is important to understand the difference between BatchStatus and ExitStatus. BatchStatus is an enumeration that is a property of both JobExecution and StepExecution and is used by the framework to record the status of a Job or Step. It can be one of the following values: COMPLETED, STARTING, STARTED, STOPPING, STOPPED, FAILED, ABANDONED, or UNKNOWN. Most of them are self explanatory: COMPLETED is the status set when a step or job has completed successfully, FAILED is set when it fails, and so on.

The following example contains the next element when using XML configuration:

<next on="FAILED" to="stepB" />

The following example contains the on element when using Java Configuration:

...
.from(stepA()).on("FAILED").to(stepB())
...

At first glance, it would appear that on references the BatchStatus of the Step to which it belongs. However, it actually references the ExitStatus of the Step. As the name implies, ExitStatus represents the status of a Step after it finishes execution.

More specifically, when using XML configuration, the next element shown in the preceding XML configuration example references the exit code of ExitStatus.

When using Java configuration, the on() method shown in the preceding Java configuration example references the exit code of ExitStatus.

In English, it says: “go to stepB if the exit code is FAILED”. By default, the exit code is always the same as the BatchStatus for the Step, which is why the preceding entry works. However, what if the exit code needs to be different? A good example comes from the skip sample job within the samples project:

The following example shows how to work with a different exit code in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1" parent="s1">
    <end on="FAILED" />
    <next on="COMPLETED WITH SKIPS" to="errorPrint1" />
    <next on="*" to="step2" />
</step>

The following example shows how to work with a different exit code in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
			.start(step1()).on("FAILED").end()
			.from(step1()).on("COMPLETED WITH SKIPS").to(errorPrint1())
			.from(step1()).on("*").to(step2())
			.end()
			.build();
}

step1 has three possibilities:

  • The Step failed, in which case the job should fail.

  • The Step completed successfully.

  • The Step completed successfully but with an exit code of COMPLETED WITH SKIPS. In this case, a different step should be run to handle the errors.

The preceding configuration works. However, something needs to change the exit code based on the condition of the execution having skipped records, as the following example shows:

public class SkipCheckingListener extends StepExecutionListenerSupport {
    public ExitStatus afterStep(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        String exitCode = stepExecution.getExitStatus().getExitCode();
        if (!exitCode.equals(ExitStatus.FAILED.getExitCode()) &&
              stepExecution.getSkipCount() > 0) {
            return new ExitStatus("COMPLETED WITH SKIPS");
        }
        else {
            return null;
        }
    }
}

The preceding code is a StepExecutionListener that first checks to make sure the Step was successful and then checks to see if the skip count on the StepExecution is higher than 0. If both conditions are met, a new ExitStatus with an exit code of COMPLETED WITH SKIPS is returned.

5.3.3. Configuring for Stop

After the discussion of BatchStatus and ExitStatus, one might wonder how the BatchStatus and ExitStatus are determined for the Job. While these statuses are determined for the Step by the code that is executed, the statuses for the Job are determined based on the configuration.

So far, all of the job configurations discussed have had at least one final Step with no transitions.

In the following XML example, after the step executes, the Job ends:

<step id="stepC" parent="s3"/>

In the following Java example, after the step executes, the Job ends:

@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.build();
}

If no transitions are defined for a Step, the status of the Job is defined as follows:

  • If the Step ends with ExitStatus of FAILED, the BatchStatus and ExitStatus of the Job are both FAILED.

  • Otherwise, the BatchStatus and ExitStatus of the Job are both COMPLETED.

While this method of terminating a batch job is sufficient for some batch jobs, such as a simple sequential step job, custom defined job-stopping scenarios may be required. For this purpose, Spring Batch provides three transition elements to stop a Job (in addition to the next element that we discussed previously). Each of these stopping elements stops a Job with a particular BatchStatus. It is important to note that the stop transition elements have no effect on either the BatchStatus or ExitStatus of any Steps in the Job. These elements affect only the final statuses of the Job. For example, it is possible for every step in a job to have a status of FAILED but for the job to have a status of COMPLETED.

Ending at a Step

Configuring a step end instructs a Job to stop with a BatchStatus of COMPLETED. A Job that has finished with a status of COMPLETED cannot be restarted (the framework throws a JobInstanceAlreadyCompleteException).

When using XML configuration, you can use the end element for this task. The end element also allows for an optional exit-code attribute that you can use to customize the ExitStatus of the Job. If no exit-code attribute is given, the ExitStatus is COMPLETED by default, to match the BatchStatus.

When using Java configuration, the end method is used for this task. The end method also allows for an optional exitStatus parameter that you can use to customize the ExitStatus of the Job. If no exitStatus value is provided, the ExitStatus is COMPLETED by default, to match the BatchStatus.

Consider the following scenario: If step2 fails, the Job stops with a BatchStatus of COMPLETED and an ExitStatus of COMPLETED, and step3 does not run. Otherwise, execution moves to step3. Note that if step2 fails, the Job is not restartable (because the status is COMPLETED).

The following example shows the scenario in XML:

<step id="step1" parent="s1" next="step2">

<step id="step2" parent="s2">
    <end on="FAILED"/>
    <next on="*" to="step3"/>
</step>

<step id="step3" parent="s3">

The following example shows the scenario in Java:

@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.next(step2())
				.on("FAILED").end()
				.from(step2()).on("*").to(step3())
				.end()
				.build();
}
Failing a Step

Configuring a step to fail at a given point instructs a Job to stop with a BatchStatus of FAILED. Unlike end, the failure of a Job does not prevent the Job from being restarted.

When using XML configuration, the fail element also allows for an optional exit-code attribute that can be used to customize the ExitStatus of the Job. If no exit-code attribute is given, the ExitStatus is FAILED by default, to match the BatchStatus.

Consider the following scenario: If step2 fails, the Job stops with a BatchStatus of FAILED and an ExitStatus of EARLY TERMINATION and step3 does not execute. Otherwise, execution moves to step3. Additionally, if step2 fails and the Job is restarted, execution begins again on step2.

The following example shows the scenario in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="step1" parent="s1" next="step2">

<step id="step2" parent="s2">
    <fail on="FAILED" exit-code="EARLY TERMINATION"/>
    <next on="*" to="step3"/>
</step>

<step id="step3" parent="s3">

The following example shows the scenario in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
			.start(step1())
			.next(step2()).on("FAILED").fail()
			.from(step2()).on("*").to(step3())
			.end()
			.build();
}
Stopping a Job at a Given Step

Configuring a job to stop at a particular step instructs a Job to stop with a BatchStatus of STOPPED. Stopping a Job can provide a temporary break in processing, so that the operator can take some action before restarting the Job.

When using XML configuration, a stop element requires a restart attribute that specifies the step where execution should pick up when the Job is restarted.

When using Java configuration, the stopAndRestart method requires a restart attribute that specifies the step where execution should pick up when the Job is restarted.

Consider the following scenario: If step1 finishes with COMPLETE, the job then stops. Once it is restarted, execution begins on step2.

The following listing shows the scenario in XML:

<step id="step1" parent="s1">
    <stop on="COMPLETED" restart="step2"/>
</step>

<step id="step2" parent="s2"/>

The following example shows the scenario in Java:

@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
			.start(step1()).on("COMPLETED").stopAndRestart(step2())
			.end()
			.build();
}

5.3.4. Programmatic Flow Decisions

In some situations, more information than the ExitStatus may be required to decide which step to execute next. In this case, a JobExecutionDecider can be used to assist in the decision, as the following example shows:

public class MyDecider implements JobExecutionDecider {
    public FlowExecutionStatus decide(JobExecution jobExecution, StepExecution stepExecution) {
        String status;
        if (someCondition()) {
            status = "FAILED";
        }
        else {
            status = "COMPLETED";
        }
        return new FlowExecutionStatus(status);
    }
}

In the following sample job configuration, a decision specifies the decider to use as well as all of the transitions:

XML Configuration
<job id="job">
    <step id="step1" parent="s1" next="decision" />

    <decision id="decision" decider="decider">
        <next on="FAILED" to="step2" />
        <next on="COMPLETED" to="step3" />
    </decision>

    <step id="step2" parent="s2" next="step3"/>
    <step id="step3" parent="s3" />
</job>

<beans:bean id="decider" class="com.MyDecider"/>

In the following example, a bean implementing the JobExecutionDecider is passed directly to the next call when using Java configuration:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
			.start(step1())
			.next(decider()).on("FAILED").to(step2())
			.from(decider()).on("COMPLETED").to(step3())
			.end()
			.build();
}

5.3.5. Split Flows

Every scenario described so far has involved a Job that executes its steps one at a time in a linear fashion. In addition to this typical style, Spring Batch also allows for a job to be configured with parallel flows.

The XML namespace lets you use the split element. As the following example shows, the split element contains one or more flow elements, where entire separate flows can be defined. A split element can also contain any of the previously discussed transition elements, such as the next attribute or the next, end, or fail elements.

<split id="split1" next="step4">
    <flow>
        <step id="step1" parent="s1" next="step2"/>
        <step id="step2" parent="s2"/>
    </flow>
    <flow>
        <step id="step3" parent="s3"/>
    </flow>
</split>
<step id="step4" parent="s4"/>

Java-based configuration lets you configure splits through the provided builders. As the following example shows, the split element contains one or more flow elements, where entire separate flows can be defined. A split element can also contain any of the previously discussed transition elements, such as the next attribute or the next, end, or fail elements.

@Bean
public Flow flow1() {
	return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("flow1")
			.start(step1())
			.next(step2())
			.build();
}

@Bean
public Flow flow2() {
	return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("flow2")
			.start(step3())
			.build();
}

@Bean
public Job job(Flow flow1, Flow flow2) {
	return this.jobBuilderFactory.get("job")
				.start(flow1)
				.split(new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor())
				.add(flow2)
				.next(step4())
				.end()
				.build();
}

5.3.6. Externalizing Flow Definitions and Dependencies Between Jobs

Part of the flow in a job can be externalized as a separate bean definition and then re-used. There are two ways to do so. The first is to declare the flow as a reference to one defined elsewhere.

The following XML example shows how to declare a flow as a reference to a flow defined elsewhere:

XML Configuration
<job id="job">
    <flow id="job1.flow1" parent="flow1" next="step3"/>
    <step id="step3" parent="s3"/>
</job>

<flow id="flow1">
    <step id="step1" parent="s1" next="step2"/>
    <step id="step2" parent="s2"/>
</flow>

The following Java example shows how to declare a flow as a reference to a flow defined elsewhere:

Java Confguration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(flow1())
				.next(step3())
				.end()
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Flow flow1() {
	return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("flow1")
			.start(step1())
			.next(step2())
			.build();
}

The effect of defining an external flow, as shown in the preceding example, is to insert the steps from the external flow into the job as if they had been declared inline. In this way, many jobs can refer to the same template flow and compose such templates into different logical flows. This is also a good way to separate the integration testing of the individual flows.

The other form of an externalized flow is to use a JobStep. A JobStep is similar to a FlowStep but actually creates and launches a separate job execution for the steps in the flow specified.

The following example hows an example of a JobStep in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="jobStepJob" restartable="true">
   <step id="jobStepJob.step1">
      <job ref="job" job-launcher="jobLauncher"
          job-parameters-extractor="jobParametersExtractor"/>
   </step>
</job>

<job id="job" restartable="true">...</job>

<bean id="jobParametersExtractor" class="org.spr...DefaultJobParametersExtractor">
   <property name="keys" value="input.file"/>
</bean>

The following example shows an example of a JobStep in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job jobStepJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("jobStepJob", jobRepository)
				.start(jobStepJobStep1(null))
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step jobStepJobStep1(JobLauncher jobLauncher, JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new StepBuilder("jobStepJobStep1", jobRepository)
				.job(job())
				.launcher(jobLauncher)
				.parametersExtractor(jobParametersExtractor())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public DefaultJobParametersExtractor jobParametersExtractor() {
	DefaultJobParametersExtractor extractor = new DefaultJobParametersExtractor();

	extractor.setKeys(new String[]{"input.file"});

	return extractor;
}

The job parameters extractor is a strategy that determines how the ExecutionContext for the Step is converted into JobParameters for the Job that is run. The JobStep is useful when you want to have some more granular options for monitoring and reporting on jobs and steps. Using JobStep is also often a good answer to the question: “How do I create dependencies between jobs?” It is a good way to break up a large system into smaller modules and control the flow of jobs.

5.4. Late Binding of Job and Step Attributes

Both the XML and flat file examples shown earlier use the Spring Resource abstraction to obtain a file. This works because Resource has a getFile method that returns a java.io.File. You can configure both XML and flat file resources by using standard Spring constructs:

The following example shows late binding in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource"
              value="file://outputs/file.txt" />
</bean>

The following example shows late binding in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader() {
	FlatFileItemReader<Foo> reader = new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource("file://outputs/file.txt"))
			...
}

The preceding Resource loads the file from the specified file system location. Note that absolute locations have to start with a double slash (//). In most Spring applications, this solution is good enough, because the names of these resources are known at compile time. However, in batch scenarios, the file name may need to be determined at runtime as a parameter to the job. This can be solved using -D parameters to read a system property.

The following example shows how to read a file name from a property in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource" value="${input.file.name}" />
</bean>

The following shows how to read a file name from a property in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("${input.file.name}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}

All that would be required for this solution to work would be a system argument (such as -Dinput.file.name="file://outputs/file.txt").

Although you can use a PropertyPlaceholderConfigurer here, it is not necessary if the system property is always set because the ResourceEditor in Spring already filters and does placeholder replacement on system properties.

Often, in a batch setting, it is preferable to parameterize the file name in the JobParameters of the job (instead of through system properties) and access them that way. To accomplish this, Spring Batch allows for the late binding of various Job and Step attributes.

The following example shows how to parameterize a file name in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader" scope="step"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource" value="#{jobParameters['input.file.name']}" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to parameterize a file name in Java:

Java Configuration
@StepScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobParameters['input.file.name']}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}

You can access both the JobExecution and StepExecution level ExecutionContext in the same way.

The following example shows how to access the ExecutionContext in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader" scope="step"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource" value="#{jobExecutionContext['input.file.name']}" />
</bean>
XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader" scope="step"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource" value="#{stepExecutionContext['input.file.name']}" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to access the ExecutionContext in Java:

Java Configuration
@StepScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobExecutionContext['input.file.name']}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}
Java Configuration
@StepScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{stepExecutionContext['input.file.name']}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}
Any bean that uses late binding must be declared with scope="step". See Step Scope for more information. A Step bean should not be step-scoped. If late binding is needed in a step definition, the components of that step (tasklet, item reader or writer, and so on) are the ones that should be scoped instead.
If you use Spring 3.0 (or above), the expressions in step-scoped beans are in the Spring Expression Language, a powerful general purpose language with many interesting features. To provide backward compatibility, if Spring Batch detects the presence of older versions of Spring, it uses a native expression language that is less powerful and that has slightly different parsing rules. The main difference is that the map keys in the example above do not need to be quoted with Spring 2.5, but the quotes are mandatory in Spring 3.0.

5.4.1. Step Scope

All of the late binding examples shown earlier have a scope of step declared on the bean definition.

The following example shows an example of binding to step scope in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="flatFileItemReader" scope="step"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
    <property name="resource" value="#{jobParameters[input.file.name]}" />
</bean>

The following example shows an example of binding to step scope in Java:

Java Configuration
@StepScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobParameters[input.file.name]}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}

Using a scope of Step is required to use late binding, because the bean cannot actually be instantiated until the Step starts, to let the attributes be found. Because it is not part of the Spring container by default, the scope must be added explicitly, by using the batch namespace, by including a bean definition explicitly for the StepScope, or by using the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation. Use only one of those methods. The following example uses the batch namespace:

<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
       xmlns:batch="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch"
       xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
       xsi:schemaLocation="...">
<batch:job .../>
...
</beans>

The following example includes the bean definition explicitly:

<bean class="org.springframework.batch.core.scope.StepScope" />

5.4.2. Job Scope

Job scope, introduced in Spring Batch 3.0, is similar to Step scope in configuration but is a scope for the Job context, so that there is only one instance of such a bean per running job. Additionally, support is provided for late binding of references accessible from the JobContext by using #{..} placeholders. Using this feature, you can pull bean properties from the job or job execution context and the job parameters.

The following example shows an example of binding to job scope in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="..." class="..." scope="job">
    <property name="name" value="#{jobParameters[input]}" />
</bean>
XML Configuration
<bean id="..." class="..." scope="job">
    <property name="name" value="#{jobExecutionContext['input.name']}.txt" />
</bean>

The following example shows an example of binding to job scope in Java:

Java Configuration
@JobScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobParameters[input]}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}
Java Configuration
@JobScope
@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobExecutionContext['input.name']}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			...
}

Because it is not part of the Spring container by default, the scope must be added explicitly, by using the batch namespace, by including a bean definition explicitly for the JobScope, or by using the @EnableBatchProcessing annotation (choose only one approach). The following example uses the batch namespace:

<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
		  xmlns:batch="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch"
		  xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
		  xsi:schemaLocation="...">

<batch:job .../>
...
</beans>

The following example includes a bean that explicitly defines the JobScope:

<bean class="org.springframework.batch.core.scope.JobScope" />
There are some practical limitations of using job-scoped beans in multi-threaded or partitioned steps. Spring Batch does not control the threads spawned in these use cases, so it is not possible to set them up correctly to use such beans. Hence, we do not recommend using job-scoped beans in multi-threaded or partitioned steps.

5.4.3. Scoping ItemStream components

When using the Java configuration style to define job or step scoped ItemStream beans, the return type of the bean definition method should be at least ItemStream. This is required so that Spring Batch correctly creates a proxy that implements this interface, and therefore honors its contract by calling open, update and close methods as expected.

It is recommended to make the bean definition method of such beans return the most specific known implementation, as shown in the following example:

Define a step-scoped bean with the most specific return type
@Bean
@StepScope
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader(@Value("#{jobParameters['input.file.name']}") String name) {
	return new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
			.resource(new FileSystemResource(name))
			// set other properties of the item reader
			.build();
}

6. ItemReaders and ItemWriters

All batch processing can be described in its most simple form as reading in large amounts of data, performing some type of calculation or transformation, and writing the result out. Spring Batch provides three key interfaces to help perform bulk reading and writing: ItemReader, ItemProcessor, and ItemWriter.

6.1. ItemReader

Although a simple concept, an ItemReader is the means for providing data from many different types of input. The most general examples include:

  • Flat File: Flat-file item readers read lines of data from a flat file that typically describes records with fields of data defined by fixed positions in the file or delimited by some special character (such as a comma).

  • XML: XML ItemReaders process XML independently of technologies used for parsing, mapping and validating objects. Input data allows for the validation of an XML file against an XSD schema.

  • Database: A database resource is accessed to return resultsets which can be mapped to objects for processing. The default SQL ItemReader implementations invoke a RowMapper to return objects, keep track of the current row if restart is required, store basic statistics, and provide some transaction enhancements that are explained later.

There are many more possibilities, but we focus on the basic ones for this chapter. A complete list of all available ItemReader implementations can be found in Appendix A.

ItemReader is a basic interface for generic input operations, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface ItemReader<T> {

    T read() throws Exception, UnexpectedInputException, ParseException, NonTransientResourceException;

}

The read method defines the most essential contract of the ItemReader. Calling it returns one item or null if no more items are left. An item might represent a line in a file, a row in a database, or an element in an XML file. It is generally expected that these are mapped to a usable domain object (such as Trade, Foo, or others), but there is no requirement in the contract to do so.

It is expected that implementations of the ItemReader interface are forward only. However, if the underlying resource is transactional (such as a JMS queue) then calling read may return the same logical item on subsequent calls in a rollback scenario. It is also worth noting that a lack of items to process by an ItemReader does not cause an exception to be thrown. For example, a database ItemReader that is configured with a query that returns 0 results returns null on the first invocation of read.

6.2. ItemWriter

ItemWriter is similar in functionality to an ItemReader but with inverse operations. Resources still need to be located, opened, and closed but they differ in that an ItemWriter writes out, rather than reading in. In the case of databases or queues, these operations may be inserts, updates, or sends. The format of the serialization of the output is specific to each batch job.

As with ItemReader, ItemWriter is a fairly generic interface, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface ItemWriter<T> {

    void write(Chunk<? extends T> items) throws Exception;

}

As with read on ItemReader, write provides the basic contract of ItemWriter. It attempts to write out the list of items passed in as long as it is open. Because it is generally expected that items are 'batched' together into a chunk and then output, the interface accepts a list of items, rather than an item by itself. After writing out the list, any flushing that may be necessary can be performed before returning from the write method. For example, if writing to a Hibernate DAO, multiple calls to write can be made, one for each item. The writer can then call flush on the hibernate session before returning.

6.3. ItemStream

Both ItemReaders and ItemWriters serve their individual purposes well, but there is a common concern among both of them that necessitates another interface. In general, as part of the scope of a batch job, readers and writers need to be opened, closed, and require a mechanism for persisting state. The ItemStream interface serves that purpose, as shown in the following example:

public interface ItemStream {

    void open(ExecutionContext executionContext) throws ItemStreamException;

    void update(ExecutionContext executionContext) throws ItemStreamException;

    void close() throws ItemStreamException;
}

Before describing each method, we should mention the ExecutionContext. Clients of an ItemReader that also implement ItemStream should call open before any calls to read, in order to open any resources such as files or to obtain connections. A similar restriction applies to an ItemWriter that implements ItemStream. As mentioned in Chapter 2, if expected data is found in the ExecutionContext, it may be used to start the ItemReader or ItemWriter at a location other than its initial state. Conversely, close is called to ensure that any resources allocated during open are released safely. update is called primarily to ensure that any state currently being held is loaded into the provided ExecutionContext. This method is called before committing, to ensure that the current state is persisted in the database before commit.

In the special case where the client of an ItemStream is a Step (from the Spring Batch Core), an ExecutionContext is created for each StepExecution to allow users to store the state of a particular execution, with the expectation that it is returned if the same JobInstance is started again. For those familiar with Quartz, the semantics are very similar to a Quartz JobDataMap.

6.4. The Delegate Pattern and Registering with the Step

Note that the CompositeItemWriter is an example of the delegation pattern, which is common in Spring Batch. The delegates themselves might implement callback interfaces, such as StepListener. If they do and if they are being used in conjunction with Spring Batch Core as part of a Step in a Job, then they almost certainly need to be registered manually with the Step. A reader, writer, or processor that is directly wired into the Step gets registered automatically if it implements ItemStream or a StepListener interface. However, because the delegates are not known to the Step, they need to be injected as listeners or streams (or both if appropriate).

The following example shows how to inject a delegate as a stream in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="ioSampleJob">
    <step name="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="fooReader" processor="fooProcessor" writer="compositeItemWriter"
                   commit-interval="2">
                <streams>
                    <stream ref="barWriter" />
                </streams>
            </chunk>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

<bean id="compositeItemWriter" class="...CustomCompositeItemWriter">
    <property name="delegate" ref="barWriter" />
</bean>

<bean id="barWriter" class="...BarWriter" />

The following example shows how to inject a delegate as a stream in XML:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job ioSampleJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("ioSampleJob", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(fooReader())
				.processor(fooProcessor())
				.writer(compositeItemWriter())
				.stream(barWriter())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public CustomCompositeItemWriter compositeItemWriter() {

	CustomCompositeItemWriter writer = new CustomCompositeItemWriter();

	writer.setDelegate(barWriter());

	return writer;
}

@Bean
public BarWriter barWriter() {
	return new BarWriter();
}

6.5. Flat Files

One of the most common mechanisms for interchanging bulk data has always been the flat file. Unlike XML, which has an agreed upon standard for defining how it is structured (XSD), anyone reading a flat file must understand ahead of time exactly how the file is structured. In general, all flat files fall into two types: delimited and fixed length. Delimited files are those in which fields are separated by a delimiter, such as a comma. Fixed Length files have fields that are a set length.

6.5.1. The FieldSet

When working with flat files in Spring Batch, regardless of whether it is for input or output, one of the most important classes is the FieldSet. Many architectures and libraries contain abstractions for helping you read in from a file, but they usually return a String or an array of String objects. This really only gets you halfway there. A FieldSet is Spring Batch’s abstraction for enabling the binding of fields from a file resource. It allows developers to work with file input in much the same way as they would work with database input. A FieldSet is conceptually similar to a JDBC ResultSet. A FieldSet requires only one argument: a String array of tokens. Optionally, you can also configure the names of the fields so that the fields may be accessed either by index or name as patterned after ResultSet, as shown in the following example:

String[] tokens = new String[]{"foo", "1", "true"};
FieldSet fs = new DefaultFieldSet(tokens);
String name = fs.readString(0);
int value = fs.readInt(1);
boolean booleanValue = fs.readBoolean(2);

There are many more options on the FieldSet interface, such as Date, long, BigDecimal, and so on. The biggest advantage of the FieldSet is that it provides consistent parsing of flat file input. Rather than each batch job parsing differently in potentially unexpected ways, it can be consistent, both when handling errors caused by a format exception, or when doing simple data conversions.

6.5.2. FlatFileItemReader

A flat file is any type of file that contains at most two-dimensional (tabular) data. Reading flat files in the Spring Batch framework is facilitated by the class called FlatFileItemReader, which provides basic functionality for reading and parsing flat files. The two most important required dependencies of FlatFileItemReader are Resource and LineMapper. The LineMapper interface is explored more in the next sections. The resource property represents a Spring Core Resource. Documentation explaining how to create beans of this type can be found in Spring Framework, Chapter 5. Resources. Therefore, this guide does not go into the details of creating Resource objects beyond showing the following simple example:

Resource resource = new FileSystemResource("resources/trades.csv");

In complex batch environments, the directory structures are often managed by the Enterprise Application Integration (EAI) infrastructure, where drop zones for external interfaces are established for moving files from FTP locations to batch processing locations and vice versa. File moving utilities are beyond the scope of the Spring Batch architecture, but it is not unusual for batch job streams to include file moving utilities as steps in the job stream. The batch architecture only needs to know how to locate the files to be processed. Spring Batch begins the process of feeding the data into the pipe from this starting point. However, Spring Integration provides many of these types of services.

The other properties in FlatFileItemReader let you further specify how your data is interpreted, as described in the following table:

Table 15. FlatFileItemReader Properties
Property Type Description

comments

String[]

Specifies line prefixes that indicate comment rows.

encoding

String

Specifies what text encoding to use. The default value is UTF-8.

lineMapper

LineMapper

Converts a String to an Object representing the item.

linesToSkip

int

Number of lines to ignore at the top of the file.

recordSeparatorPolicy

RecordSeparatorPolicy

Used to determine where the line endings are and do things like continue over a line ending if inside a quoted string.

resource

Resource

The resource from which to read.

skippedLinesCallback

LineCallbackHandler

Interface that passes the raw line content of the lines in the file to be skipped. If linesToSkip is set to 2, then this interface is called twice.

strict

boolean

In strict mode, the reader throws an exception on ExecutionContext if the input resource does not exist. Otherwise, it logs the problem and continues.

LineMapper

As with RowMapper, which takes a low-level construct such as ResultSet and returns an Object, flat file processing requires the same construct to convert a String line into an Object, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface LineMapper<T> {

    T mapLine(String line, int lineNumber) throws Exception;

}

The basic contract is that, given the current line and the line number with which it is associated, the mapper should return a resulting domain object. This is similar to RowMapper, in that each line is associated with its line number, just as each row in a ResultSet is tied to its row number. This allows the line number to be tied to the resulting domain object for identity comparison or for more informative logging. However, unlike RowMapper, the LineMapper is given a raw line which, as discussed above, only gets you halfway there. The line must be tokenized into a FieldSet, which can then be mapped to an object, as described later in this document.

LineTokenizer

An abstraction for turning a line of input into a FieldSet is necessary because there can be many formats of flat file data that need to be converted to a FieldSet. In Spring Batch, this interface is the LineTokenizer:

public interface LineTokenizer {

    FieldSet tokenize(String line);

}

The contract of a LineTokenizer is such that, given a line of input (in theory the String could encompass more than one line), a FieldSet representing the line is returned. This FieldSet can then be passed to a FieldSetMapper. Spring Batch contains the following LineTokenizer implementations:

  • DelimitedLineTokenizer: Used for files where fields in a record are separated by a delimiter. The most common delimiter is a comma, but pipes or semicolons are often used as well.

  • FixedLengthTokenizer: Used for files where fields in a record are each a "fixed width". The width of each field must be defined for each record type.

  • PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer: Determines which LineTokenizer among a list of tokenizers should be used on a particular line by checking against a pattern.

FieldSetMapper

The FieldSetMapper interface defines a single method, mapFieldSet, which takes a FieldSet object and maps its contents to an object. This object may be a custom DTO, a domain object, or an array, depending on the needs of the job. The FieldSetMapper is used in conjunction with the LineTokenizer to translate a line of data from a resource into an object of the desired type, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface FieldSetMapper<T> {

    T mapFieldSet(FieldSet fieldSet) throws BindException;

}

The pattern used is the same as the RowMapper used by JdbcTemplate.

DefaultLineMapper

Now that the basic interfaces for reading in flat files have been defined, it becomes clear that three basic steps are required:

  1. Read one line from the file.

  2. Pass the String line into the LineTokenizer#tokenize() method to retrieve a FieldSet.

  3. Pass the FieldSet returned from tokenizing to a FieldSetMapper, returning the result from the ItemReader#read() method.

The two interfaces described above represent two separate tasks: converting a line into a FieldSet and mapping a FieldSet to a domain object. Because the input of a LineTokenizer matches the input of the LineMapper (a line), and the output of a FieldSetMapper matches the output of the LineMapper, a default implementation that uses both a LineTokenizer and a FieldSetMapper is provided. The DefaultLineMapper, shown in the following class definition, represents the behavior most users need:

public class DefaultLineMapper<T> implements LineMapper<>, InitializingBean {

    private LineTokenizer tokenizer;

    private FieldSetMapper<T> fieldSetMapper;

    public T mapLine(String line, int lineNumber) throws Exception {
        return fieldSetMapper.mapFieldSet(tokenizer.tokenize(line));
    }

    public void setLineTokenizer(LineTokenizer tokenizer) {
        this.tokenizer = tokenizer;
    }

    public void setFieldSetMapper(FieldSetMapper<T> fieldSetMapper) {
        this.fieldSetMapper = fieldSetMapper;
    }
}

The above functionality is provided in a default implementation, rather than being built into the reader itself (as was done in previous versions of the framework) to allow users greater flexibility in controlling the parsing process, especially if access to the raw line is needed.

Simple Delimited File Reading Example

The following example illustrates how to read a flat file with an actual domain scenario. This particular batch job reads in football players from the following file:

ID,lastName,firstName,position,birthYear,debutYear
"AbduKa00,Abdul-Jabbar,Karim,rb,1974,1996",
"AbduRa00,Abdullah,Rabih,rb,1975,1999",
"AberWa00,Abercrombie,Walter,rb,1959,1982",
"AbraDa00,Abramowicz,Danny,wr,1945,1967",
"AdamBo00,Adams,Bob,te,1946,1969",
"AdamCh00,Adams,Charlie,wr,1979,2003"

The contents of this file are mapped to the following Player domain object:

public class Player implements Serializable {

    private String ID;
    private String lastName;
    private String firstName;
    private String position;
    private int birthYear;
    private int debutYear;

    public String toString() {
        return "PLAYER:ID=" + ID + ",Last Name=" + lastName +
            ",First Name=" + firstName + ",Position=" + position +
            ",Birth Year=" + birthYear + ",DebutYear=" +
            debutYear;
    }

    // setters and getters...
}

To map a FieldSet into a Player object, a FieldSetMapper that returns players needs to be defined, as shown in the following example:

protected static class PlayerFieldSetMapper implements FieldSetMapper<Player> {
    public Player mapFieldSet(FieldSet fieldSet) {
        Player player = new Player();

        player.setID(fieldSet.readString(0));
        player.setLastName(fieldSet.readString(1));
        player.setFirstName(fieldSet.readString(2));
        player.setPosition(fieldSet.readString(3));
        player.setBirthYear(fieldSet.readInt(4));
        player.setDebutYear(fieldSet.readInt(5));

        return player;
    }
}

The file can then be read by correctly constructing a FlatFileItemReader and calling read, as shown in the following example:

FlatFileItemReader<Player> itemReader = new FlatFileItemReader<>();
itemReader.setResource(new FileSystemResource("resources/players.csv"));
DefaultLineMapper<Player> lineMapper = new DefaultLineMapper<>();
//DelimitedLineTokenizer defaults to comma as its delimiter
lineMapper.setLineTokenizer(new DelimitedLineTokenizer());
lineMapper.setFieldSetMapper(new PlayerFieldSetMapper());
itemReader.setLineMapper(lineMapper);
itemReader.open(new ExecutionContext());
Player player = itemReader.read();

Each call to read returns a new Player object from each line in the file. When the end of the file is reached, null is returned.

Mapping Fields by Name

There is one additional piece of functionality that is allowed by both DelimitedLineTokenizer and FixedLengthTokenizer and that is similar in function to a JDBC ResultSet. The names of the fields can be injected into either of these LineTokenizer implementations to increase the readability of the mapping function. First, the column names of all fields in the flat file are injected into the tokenizer, as shown in the following example:

tokenizer.setNames(new String[] {"ID", "lastName", "firstName", "position", "birthYear", "debutYear"});

A FieldSetMapper can use this information as follows:

public class PlayerMapper implements FieldSetMapper<Player> {
    public Player mapFieldSet(FieldSet fs) {

       if (fs == null) {
           return null;
       }

       Player player = new Player();
       player.setID(fs.readString("ID"));
       player.setLastName(fs.readString("lastName"));
       player.setFirstName(fs.readString("firstName"));
       player.setPosition(fs.readString("position"));
       player.setDebutYear(fs.readInt("debutYear"));
       player.setBirthYear(fs.readInt("birthYear"));

       return player;
   }
}
Automapping FieldSets to Domain Objects

For many, having to write a specific FieldSetMapper is equally as cumbersome as writing a specific RowMapper for a JdbcTemplate. Spring Batch makes this easier by providing a FieldSetMapper that automatically maps fields by matching a field name with a setter on the object using the JavaBean specification.

Again using the football example, the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper configuration looks like the following snippet in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="fieldSetMapper"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.mapping.BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper">
    <property name="prototypeBeanName" value="player" />
</bean>

<bean id="player"
      class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.Player"
      scope="prototype" />

Again using the football example, the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper configuration looks like the following snippet in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FieldSetMapper fieldSetMapper() {
	BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper fieldSetMapper = new BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper();

	fieldSetMapper.setPrototypeBeanName("player");

	return fieldSetMapper;
}

@Bean
@Scope("prototype")
public Player player() {
	return new Player();
}

For each entry in the FieldSet, the mapper looks for a corresponding setter on a new instance of the Player object (for this reason, prototype scope is required) in the same way the Spring container looks for setters matching a property name. Each available field in the FieldSet is mapped, and the resultant Player object is returned, with no code required.

Fixed Length File Formats

So far, only delimited files have been discussed in much detail. However, they represent only half of the file reading picture. Many organizations that use flat files use fixed length formats. An example fixed length file follows:

UK21341EAH4121131.11customer1
UK21341EAH4221232.11customer2
UK21341EAH4321333.11customer3
UK21341EAH4421434.11customer4
UK21341EAH4521535.11customer5

While this looks like one large field, it actually represent 4 distinct fields:

  1. ISIN: Unique identifier for the item being ordered - 12 characters long.

  2. Quantity: Number of the item being ordered - 3 characters long.

  3. Price: Price of the item - 5 characters long.

  4. Customer: ID of the customer ordering the item - 9 characters long.

When configuring the FixedLengthLineTokenizer, each of these lengths must be provided in the form of ranges.

The following example shows how to define ranges for the FixedLengthLineTokenizer in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="fixedLengthLineTokenizer"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.transform.FixedLengthTokenizer">
    <property name="names" value="ISIN,Quantity,Price,Customer" />
    <property name="columns" value="1-12, 13-15, 16-20, 21-29" />
</bean>

Because the FixedLengthLineTokenizer uses the same LineTokenizer interface as discussed earlier, it returns the same FieldSet as if a delimiter had been used. This allows the same approaches to be used in handling its output, such as using the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper.

Supporting the preceding syntax for ranges requires that a specialized property editor, RangeArrayPropertyEditor, be configured in the ApplicationContext. However, this bean is automatically declared in an ApplicationContext where the batch namespace is used.

The following example shows how to define ranges for the FixedLengthLineTokenizer in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FixedLengthTokenizer fixedLengthTokenizer() {
	FixedLengthTokenizer tokenizer = new FixedLengthTokenizer();

	tokenizer.setNames("ISIN", "Quantity", "Price", "Customer");
	tokenizer.setColumns(new Range(1, 12),
						new Range(13, 15),
						new Range(16, 20),
						new Range(21, 29));

	return tokenizer;
}

Because the FixedLengthLineTokenizer uses the same LineTokenizer interface as discussed above, it returns the same FieldSet as if a delimiter had been used. This lets the same approaches be used in handling its output, such as using the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper.

Multiple Record Types within a Single File

All of the file reading examples up to this point have all made a key assumption for simplicity’s sake: all of the records in a file have the same format. However, this may not always be the case. It is very common that a file might have records with different formats that need to be tokenized differently and mapped to different objects. The following excerpt from a file illustrates this:

USER;Smith;Peter;;T;20014539;F
LINEA;1044391041ABC037.49G201XX1383.12H
LINEB;2134776319DEF422.99M005LI

In this file we have three types of records, "USER", "LINEA", and "LINEB". A "USER" line corresponds to a User object. "LINEA" and "LINEB" both correspond to Line objects, though a "LINEA" has more information than a "LINEB".

The ItemReader reads each line individually, but we must specify different LineTokenizer and FieldSetMapper objects so that the ItemWriter receives the correct items. The PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper makes this easy by allowing maps of patterns to LineTokenizers and patterns to FieldSetMappers to be configured.

The following example shows how to define ranges for the FixedLengthLineTokenizer in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="orderFileLineMapper"
      class="org.spr...PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper">
    <property name="tokenizers">
        <map>
            <entry key="USER*" value-ref="userTokenizer" />
            <entry key="LINEA*" value-ref="lineATokenizer" />
            <entry key="LINEB*" value-ref="lineBTokenizer" />
        </map>
    </property>
    <property name="fieldSetMappers">
        <map>
            <entry key="USER*" value-ref="userFieldSetMapper" />
            <entry key="LINE*" value-ref="lineFieldSetMapper" />
        </map>
    </property>
</bean>
Java Configuration
@Bean
public PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper orderFileLineMapper() {
	PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper lineMapper =
		new PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper();

	Map<String, LineTokenizer> tokenizers = new HashMap<>(3);
	tokenizers.put("USER*", userTokenizer());
	tokenizers.put("LINEA*", lineATokenizer());
	tokenizers.put("LINEB*", lineBTokenizer());

	lineMapper.setTokenizers(tokenizers);

	Map<String, FieldSetMapper> mappers = new HashMap<>(2);
	mappers.put("USER*", userFieldSetMapper());
	mappers.put("LINE*", lineFieldSetMapper());

	lineMapper.setFieldSetMappers(mappers);

	return lineMapper;
}

In this example, "LINEA" and "LINEB" have separate LineTokenizer instances, but they both use the same FieldSetMapper.

The PatternMatchingCompositeLineMapper uses the PatternMatcher#match method in order to select the correct delegate for each line. The PatternMatcher allows for two wildcard characters with special meaning: the question mark ("?") matches exactly one character, while the asterisk ("*") matches zero or more characters. Note that, in the preceding configuration, all patterns end with an asterisk, making them effectively prefixes to lines. The PatternMatcher always matches the most specific pattern possible, regardless of the order in the configuration. So if "LINE*" and "LINEA*" were both listed as patterns, "LINEA" would match pattern "LINEA*", while "LINEB" would match pattern "LINE*". Additionally, a single asterisk ("*") can serve as a default by matching any line not matched by any other pattern.

The following example shows how to match a line not matched by any other pattern in XML:

XML Configuration
<entry key="*" value-ref="defaultLineTokenizer" />

The following example shows how to match a line not matched by any other pattern in Java:

Java Configuration
...
tokenizers.put("*", defaultLineTokenizer());
...

There is also a PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer that can be used for tokenization alone.

It is also common for a flat file to contain records that each span multiple lines. To handle this situation, a more complex strategy is required. A demonstration of this common pattern can be found in the multiLineRecords sample.

Exception Handling in Flat Files

There are many scenarios when tokenizing a line may cause exceptions to be thrown. Many flat files are imperfect and contain incorrectly formatted records. Many users choose to skip these erroneous lines while logging the issue, the original line, and the line number. These logs can later be inspected manually or by another batch job. For this reason, Spring Batch provides a hierarchy of exceptions for handling parse exceptions: FlatFileParseException and FlatFileFormatException. FlatFileParseException is thrown by the FlatFileItemReader when any errors are encountered while trying to read a file. FlatFileFormatException is thrown by implementations of the LineTokenizer interface and indicates a more specific error encountered while tokenizing.

IncorrectTokenCountException

Both DelimitedLineTokenizer and FixedLengthLineTokenizer have the ability to specify column names that can be used for creating a FieldSet. However, if the number of column names does not match the number of columns found while tokenizing a line, the FieldSet cannot be created, and an IncorrectTokenCountException is thrown, which contains the number of tokens encountered, and the number expected, as shown in the following example:

tokenizer.setNames(new String[] {"A", "B", "C", "D"});

try {
    tokenizer.tokenize("a,b,c");
}
catch (IncorrectTokenCountException e) {
    assertEquals(4, e.getExpectedCount());
    assertEquals(3, e.getActualCount());
}

Because the tokenizer was configured with 4 column names but only 3 tokens were found in the file, an IncorrectTokenCountException was thrown.

IncorrectLineLengthException

Files formatted in a fixed-length format have additional requirements when parsing because, unlike a delimited format, each column must strictly adhere to its predefined width. If the total line length does not equal the widest value of this column, an exception is thrown, as shown in the following example:

tokenizer.setColumns(new Range[] { new Range(1, 5),
                                   new Range(6, 10),
                                   new Range(11, 15) });
try {
    tokenizer.tokenize("12345");
    fail("Expected IncorrectLineLengthException");
}
catch (IncorrectLineLengthException ex) {
    assertEquals(15, ex.getExpectedLength());
    assertEquals(5, ex.getActualLength());
}

The configured ranges for the tokenizer above are: 1-5, 6-10, and 11-15. Consequently, the total length of the line is 15. However, in the preceding example, a line of length 5 was passed in, causing an IncorrectLineLengthException to be thrown. Throwing an exception here rather than only mapping the first column allows the processing of the line to fail earlier and with more information than it would contain if it failed while trying to read in column 2 in a FieldSetMapper. However, there are scenarios where the length of the line is not always constant. For this reason, validation of line length can be turned off via the 'strict' property, as shown in the following example:

tokenizer.setColumns(new Range[] { new Range(1, 5), new Range(6, 10) });
tokenizer.setStrict(false);
FieldSet tokens = tokenizer.tokenize("12345");
assertEquals("12345", tokens.readString(0));
assertEquals("", tokens.readString(1));

The preceding example is almost identical to the one before it, except that tokenizer.setStrict(false) was called. This setting tells the tokenizer to not enforce line lengths when tokenizing the line. A FieldSet is now correctly created and returned. However, it contains only empty tokens for the remaining values.

6.5.3. FlatFileItemWriter

Writing out to flat files has the same problems and issues that reading in from a file must overcome. A step must be able to write either delimited or fixed length formats in a transactional manner.

LineAggregator

Just as the LineTokenizer interface is necessary to take an item and turn it into a String, file writing must have a way to aggregate multiple fields into a single string for writing to a file. In Spring Batch, this is the LineAggregator, shown in the following interface definition:

public interface LineAggregator<T> {

    public String aggregate(T item);

}

The LineAggregator is the logical opposite of LineTokenizer. LineTokenizer takes a String and returns a FieldSet, whereas LineAggregator takes an item and returns a String.

PassThroughLineAggregator

The most basic implementation of the LineAggregator interface is the PassThroughLineAggregator, which assumes that the object is already a string or that its string representation is acceptable for writing, as shown in the following code:

public class PassThroughLineAggregator<T> implements LineAggregator<T> {

    public String aggregate(T item) {
        return item.toString();
    }
}

The preceding implementation is useful if direct control of creating the string is required but the advantages of a FlatFileItemWriter, such as transaction and restart support, are necessary.

Simplified File Writing Example

Now that the LineAggregator interface and its most basic implementation, PassThroughLineAggregator, have been defined, the basic flow of writing can be explained:

  1. The object to be written is passed to the LineAggregator in order to obtain a String.

  2. The returned String is written to the configured file.

The following excerpt from the FlatFileItemWriter expresses this in code:

public void write(T item) throws Exception {
    write(lineAggregator.aggregate(item) + LINE_SEPARATOR);
}

In XML, a simple example of configuration might look like the following:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.spr...FlatFileItemWriter">
    <property name="resource" value="file:target/test-outputs/output.txt" />
    <property name="lineAggregator">
        <bean class="org.spr...PassThroughLineAggregator"/>
    </property>
</bean>

In Java, a simple example of configuration might look like the following:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter itemWriter() {
	return  new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<Foo>()
           			.name("itemWriter")
           			.resource(new FileSystemResource("target/test-outputs/output.txt"))
           			.lineAggregator(new PassThroughLineAggregator<>())
           			.build();
}
FieldExtractor

The preceding example may be useful for the most basic uses of a writing to a file. However, most users of the FlatFileItemWriter have a domain object that needs to be written out and, thus, must be converted into a line. In file reading, the following was required:

  1. Read one line from the file.

  2. Pass the line into the LineTokenizer#tokenize() method, in order to retrieve a FieldSet.

  3. Pass the FieldSet returned from tokenizing to a FieldSetMapper, returning the result from the ItemReader#read() method.

File writing has similar but inverse steps:

  1. Pass the item to be written to the writer.

  2. Convert the fields on the item into an array.

  3. Aggregate the resulting array into a line.

Because there is no way for the framework to know which fields from the object need to be written out, a FieldExtractor must be written to accomplish the task of turning the item into an array, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface FieldExtractor<T> {

    Object[] extract(T item);

}

Implementations of the FieldExtractor interface should create an array from the fields of the provided object, which can then be written out with a delimiter between the elements or as part of a fixed-width line.

PassThroughFieldExtractor

There are many cases where a collection, such as an array, Collection, or FieldSet, needs to be written out. "Extracting" an array from one of these collection types is very straightforward. To do so, convert the collection to an array. Therefore, the PassThroughFieldExtractor should be used in this scenario. It should be noted that, if the object passed in is not a type of collection, then the PassThroughFieldExtractor returns an array containing solely the item to be extracted.

BeanWrapperFieldExtractor

As with the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper described in the file reading section, it is often preferable to configure how to convert a domain object to an object array, rather than writing the conversion yourself. The BeanWrapperFieldExtractor provides this functionality, as shown in the following example:

BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<Name> extractor = new BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<>();
extractor.setNames(new String[] { "first", "last", "born" });

String first = "Alan";
String last = "Turing";
int born = 1912;

Name n = new Name(first, last, born);
Object[] values = extractor.extract(n);

assertEquals(first, values[0]);
assertEquals(last, values[1]);
assertEquals(born, values[2]);

This extractor implementation has only one required property: the names of the fields to map. Just as the BeanWrapperFieldSetMapper needs field names to map fields on the FieldSet to setters on the provided object, the BeanWrapperFieldExtractor needs names to map to getters for creating an object array. It is worth noting that the order of the names determines the order of the fields within the array.

Delimited File Writing Example

The most basic flat file format is one in which all fields are separated by a delimiter. This can be accomplished using a DelimitedLineAggregator. The following example writes out a simple domain object that represents a credit to a customer account:

public class CustomerCredit {

    private int id;
    private String name;
    private BigDecimal credit;

    //getters and setters removed for clarity
}

Because a domain object is being used, an implementation of the FieldExtractor interface must be provided, along with the delimiter to use.

The following example shows how to use the FieldExtractor with a delimiter in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemWriter">
    <property name="resource" ref="outputResource" />
    <property name="lineAggregator">
        <bean class="org.spr...DelimitedLineAggregator">
            <property name="delimiter" value=","/>
            <property name="fieldExtractor">
                <bean class="org.spr...BeanWrapperFieldExtractor">
                    <property name="names" value="name,credit"/>
                </bean>
            </property>
        </bean>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to use the FieldExtractor with a delimiter in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<CustomerCredit> itemWriter(Resource outputResource) throws Exception {
	BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<CustomerCredit> fieldExtractor = new BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<>();
	fieldExtractor.setNames(new String[] {"name", "credit"});
	fieldExtractor.afterPropertiesSet();

	DelimitedLineAggregator<CustomerCredit> lineAggregator = new DelimitedLineAggregator<>();
	lineAggregator.setDelimiter(",");
	lineAggregator.setFieldExtractor(fieldExtractor);

	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
				.name("customerCreditWriter")
				.resource(outputResource)
				.lineAggregator(lineAggregator)
				.build();
}

In the previous example, the BeanWrapperFieldExtractor described earlier in this chapter is used to turn the name and credit fields within CustomerCredit into an object array, which is then written out with commas between each field.

It is also possible to use the FlatFileItemWriterBuilder.DelimitedBuilder to automatically create the BeanWrapperFieldExtractor and DelimitedLineAggregator as shown in the following example:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<CustomerCredit> itemWriter(Resource outputResource) throws Exception {
	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
				.name("customerCreditWriter")
				.resource(outputResource)
				.delimited()
				.delimiter("|")
				.names(new String[] {"name", "credit"})
				.build();
}
Fixed Width File Writing Example

Delimited is not the only type of flat file format. Many prefer to use a set width for each column to delineate between fields, which is usually referred to as 'fixed width'. Spring Batch supports this in file writing with the FormatterLineAggregator.

Using the same CustomerCredit domain object described above, it can be configured as follows in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemWriter">
    <property name="resource" ref="outputResource" />
    <property name="lineAggregator">
        <bean class="org.spr...FormatterLineAggregator">
            <property name="fieldExtractor">
                <bean class="org.spr...BeanWrapperFieldExtractor">
                    <property name="names" value="name,credit" />
                </bean>
            </property>
            <property name="format" value="%-9s%-2.0f" />
        </bean>
    </property>
</bean>

Using the same CustomerCredit domain object described above, it can be configured as follows in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<CustomerCredit> itemWriter(Resource outputResource) throws Exception {
	BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<CustomerCredit> fieldExtractor = new BeanWrapperFieldExtractor<>();
	fieldExtractor.setNames(new String[] {"name", "credit"});
	fieldExtractor.afterPropertiesSet();

	FormatterLineAggregator<CustomerCredit> lineAggregator = new FormatterLineAggregator<>();
	lineAggregator.setFormat("%-9s%-2.0f");
	lineAggregator.setFieldExtractor(fieldExtractor);

	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
				.name("customerCreditWriter")
				.resource(outputResource)
				.lineAggregator(lineAggregator)
				.build();
}

Most of the preceding example should look familiar. However, the value of the format property is new.

The following example shows the format property in XML:

<property name="format" value="%-9s%-2.0f" />

The following example shows the format property in Java:

...
FormatterLineAggregator<CustomerCredit> lineAggregator = new FormatterLineAggregator<>();
lineAggregator.setFormat("%-9s%-2.0f");
...

The underlying implementation is built using the same Formatter added as part of Java 5. The Java Formatter is based on the printf functionality of the C programming language. Most details on how to configure a formatter can be found in the Javadoc of Formatter.

It is also possible to use the FlatFileItemWriterBuilder.FormattedBuilder to automatically create the BeanWrapperFieldExtractor and FormatterLineAggregator as shown in following example:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<CustomerCredit> itemWriter(Resource outputResource) throws Exception {
	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
				.name("customerCreditWriter")
				.resource(outputResource)
				.formatted()
				.format("%-9s%-2.0f")
				.names(new String[] {"name", "credit"})
				.build();
}
Handling File Creation

FlatFileItemReader has a very simple relationship with file resources. When the reader is initialized, it opens the file (if it exists), and throws an exception if it does not. File writing isn’t quite so simple. At first glance, it seems like a similar straightforward contract should exist for FlatFileItemWriter: If the file already exists, throw an exception, and, if it does not, create it and start writing. However, potentially restarting a Job can cause issues. In normal restart scenarios, the contract is reversed: If the file exists, start writing to it from the last known good position, and, if it does not, throw an exception. However, what happens if the file name for this job is always the same? In this case, you would want to delete the file if it exists, unless it’s a restart. Because of this possibility, the FlatFileItemWriter contains the property, shouldDeleteIfExists. Setting this property to true causes an existing file with the same name to be deleted when the writer is opened.

6.6. XML Item Readers and Writers

Spring Batch provides transactional infrastructure for both reading XML records and mapping them to Java objects as well as writing Java objects as XML records.

Constraints on streaming XML

The StAX API is used for I/O, as other standard XML parsing APIs do not fit batch processing requirements (DOM loads the whole input into memory at once and SAX controls the parsing process by allowing the user to provide only callbacks).

We need to consider how XML input and output works in Spring Batch. First, there are a few concepts that vary from file reading and writing but are common across Spring Batch XML processing. With XML processing, instead of lines of records (FieldSet instances) that need to be tokenized, it is assumed an XML resource is a collection of 'fragments' corresponding to individual records, as shown in the following image:

XML Input
Figure 18. XML Input

The 'trade' tag is defined as the 'root element' in the scenario above. Everything between '<trade>' and '</trade>' is considered one 'fragment'. Spring Batch uses Object/XML Mapping (OXM) to bind fragments to objects. However, Spring Batch is not tied to any particular XML binding technology. Typical use is to delegate to Spring OXM, which provides uniform abstraction for the most popular OXM technologies. The dependency on Spring OXM is optional and you can choose to implement Spring Batch specific interfaces if desired. The relationship to the technologies that OXM supports is shown in the following image:

OXM Binding
Figure 19. OXM Binding

With an introduction to OXM and how one can use XML fragments to represent records, we can now more closely examine readers and writers.

6.6.1. StaxEventItemReader

The StaxEventItemReader configuration provides a typical setup for the processing of records from an XML input stream. First, consider the following set of XML records that the StaxEventItemReader can process:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<records>
    <trade xmlns="https://springframework.org/batch/sample/io/oxm/domain">
        <isin>XYZ0001</isin>
        <quantity>5</quantity>
        <price>11.39</price>
        <customer>Customer1</customer>
    </trade>
    <trade xmlns="https://springframework.org/batch/sample/io/oxm/domain">
        <isin>XYZ0002</isin>
        <quantity>2</quantity>
        <price>72.99</price>
        <customer>Customer2c</customer>
    </trade>
    <trade xmlns="https://springframework.org/batch/sample/io/oxm/domain">
        <isin>XYZ0003</isin>
        <quantity>9</quantity>
        <price>99.99</price>
        <customer>Customer3</customer>
    </trade>
</records>

To be able to process the XML records, the following is needed:

  • Root Element Name: The name of the root element of the fragment that constitutes the object to be mapped. The example configuration demonstrates this with the value of trade.

  • Resource: A Spring Resource that represents the file to read.

  • Unmarshaller: An unmarshalling facility provided by Spring OXM for mapping the XML fragment to an object.

The following example shows how to define a StaxEventItemReader that works with a root element named trade, a resource of data/iosample/input/input.xml, and an unmarshaller called tradeMarshaller in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.springframework.batch.item.xml.StaxEventItemReader">
    <property name="fragmentRootElementName" value="trade" />
    <property name="resource" value="org/springframework/batch/item/xml/domain/trades.xml" />
    <property name="unmarshaller" ref="tradeMarshaller" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to define a StaxEventItemReader that works with a root element named trade, a resource of data/iosample/input/input.xml, and an unmarshaller called tradeMarshaller in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StaxEventItemReader itemReader() {
	return new StaxEventItemReaderBuilder<Trade>()
			.name("itemReader")
			.resource(new FileSystemResource("org/springframework/batch/item/xml/domain/trades.xml"))
			.addFragmentRootElements("trade")
			.unmarshaller(tradeMarshaller())
			.build();

}

Note that, in this example, we have chosen to use an XStreamMarshaller, which accepts an alias passed in as a map with the first key and value being the name of the fragment (that is, a root element) and the object type to bind. Then, similar to a FieldSet, the names of the other elements that map to fields within the object type are described as key/value pairs in the map. In the configuration file, we can use a Spring configuration utility to describe the required alias.

The following example shows how to describe the alias in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="tradeMarshaller"
      class="org.springframework.oxm.xstream.XStreamMarshaller">
    <property name="aliases">
        <util:map id="aliases">
            <entry key="trade"
                   value="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.trade.Trade" />
            <entry key="price" value="java.math.BigDecimal" />
            <entry key="isin" value="java.lang.String" />
            <entry key="customer" value="java.lang.String" />
            <entry key="quantity" value="java.lang.Long" />
        </util:map>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to describe the alias in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public XStreamMarshaller tradeMarshaller() {
	Map<String, Class> aliases = new HashMap<>();
	aliases.put("trade", Trade.class);
	aliases.put("price", BigDecimal.class);
	aliases.put("isin", String.class);
	aliases.put("customer", String.class);
	aliases.put("quantity", Long.class);

	XStreamMarshaller marshaller = new XStreamMarshaller();

	marshaller.setAliases(aliases);

	return marshaller;
}

On input, the reader reads the XML resource until it recognizes that a new fragment is about to start. By default, the reader matches the element name to recognize that a new fragment is about to start. The reader creates a standalone XML document from the fragment and passes the document to a deserializer (typically a wrapper around a Spring OXM Unmarshaller) to map the XML to a Java object.

In summary, this procedure is analogous to the following Java code, which uses the injection provided by the Spring configuration:

StaxEventItemReader<Trade> xmlStaxEventItemReader = new StaxEventItemReader<>();
Resource resource = new ByteArrayResource(xmlResource.getBytes());

Map aliases = new HashMap();
aliases.put("trade","org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.trade.Trade");
aliases.put("price","java.math.BigDecimal");
aliases.put("customer","java.lang.String");
aliases.put("isin","java.lang.String");
aliases.put("quantity","java.lang.Long");
XStreamMarshaller unmarshaller = new XStreamMarshaller();
unmarshaller.setAliases(aliases);
xmlStaxEventItemReader.setUnmarshaller(unmarshaller);
xmlStaxEventItemReader.setResource(resource);
xmlStaxEventItemReader.setFragmentRootElementName("trade");
xmlStaxEventItemReader.open(new ExecutionContext());

boolean hasNext = true;

Trade trade = null;

while (hasNext) {
    trade = xmlStaxEventItemReader.read();
    if (trade == null) {
        hasNext = false;
    }
    else {
        System.out.println(trade);
    }
}

6.6.2. StaxEventItemWriter

Output works symmetrically to input. The StaxEventItemWriter needs a Resource, a marshaller, and a rootTagName. A Java object is passed to a marshaller (typically a standard Spring OXM Marshaller) which writes to a Resource by using a custom event writer that filters the StartDocument and EndDocument events produced for each fragment by the OXM tools.

The following XML example uses the MarshallingEventWriterSerializer:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.springframework.batch.item.xml.StaxEventItemWriter">
    <property name="resource" ref="outputResource" />
    <property name="marshaller" ref="tradeMarshaller" />
    <property name="rootTagName" value="trade" />
    <property name="overwriteOutput" value="true" />
</bean>

The following Java example uses the MarshallingEventWriterSerializer:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StaxEventItemWriter itemWriter(Resource outputResource) {
	return new StaxEventItemWriterBuilder<Trade>()
			.name("tradesWriter")
			.marshaller(tradeMarshaller())
			.resource(outputResource)
			.rootTagName("trade")
			.overwriteOutput(true)
			.build();

}

The preceding configuration sets up the three required properties and sets the optional overwriteOutput=true attrbute, mentioned earlier in this chapter for specifying whether an existing file can be overwritten.

The following XML example uses the same marshaller as the one used in the reading example shown earlier in the chapter:

XML Configuration
<bean id="customerCreditMarshaller"
      class="org.springframework.oxm.xstream.XStreamMarshaller">
    <property name="aliases">
        <util:map id="aliases">
            <entry key="customer"
                   value="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.trade.Trade" />
            <entry key="price" value="java.math.BigDecimal" />
            <entry key="isin" value="java.lang.String" />
            <entry key="customer" value="java.lang.String" />
            <entry key="quantity" value="java.lang.Long" />
        </util:map>
    </property>
</bean>

The following Java example uses the same marshaller as the one used in the reading example shown earlier in the chapter:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public XStreamMarshaller customerCreditMarshaller() {
	XStreamMarshaller marshaller = new XStreamMarshaller();

	Map<String, Class> aliases = new HashMap<>();
	aliases.put("trade", Trade.class);
	aliases.put("price", BigDecimal.class);
	aliases.put("isin", String.class);
	aliases.put("customer", String.class);
	aliases.put("quantity", Long.class);

	marshaller.setAliases(aliases);

	return marshaller;
}

To summarize with a Java example, the following code illustrates all of the points discussed, demonstrating the programmatic setup of the required properties:

FileSystemResource resource = new FileSystemResource("data/outputFile.xml")

Map aliases = new HashMap();
aliases.put("trade","org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.trade.Trade");
aliases.put("price","java.math.BigDecimal");
aliases.put("customer","java.lang.String");
aliases.put("isin","java.lang.String");
aliases.put("quantity","java.lang.Long");
Marshaller marshaller = new XStreamMarshaller();
marshaller.setAliases(aliases);

StaxEventItemWriter staxItemWriter =
	new StaxEventItemWriterBuilder<Trade>()
				.name("tradesWriter")
				.marshaller(marshaller)
				.resource(resource)
				.rootTagName("trade")
				.overwriteOutput(true)
				.build();

staxItemWriter.afterPropertiesSet();

ExecutionContext executionContext = new ExecutionContext();
staxItemWriter.open(executionContext);
Trade trade = new Trade();
trade.setPrice(11.39);
trade.setIsin("XYZ0001");
trade.setQuantity(5L);
trade.setCustomer("Customer1");
staxItemWriter.write(trade);

6.7. JSON Item Readers And Writers

Spring Batch provides support for reading and Writing JSON resources in the following format:

[
  {
    "isin": "123",
    "quantity": 1,
    "price": 1.2,
    "customer": "foo"
  },
  {
    "isin": "456",
    "quantity": 2,
    "price": 1.4,
    "customer": "bar"
  }
]

It is assumed that the JSON resource is an array of JSON objects corresponding to individual items. Spring Batch is not tied to any particular JSON library.

6.7.1. JsonItemReader

The JsonItemReader delegates JSON parsing and binding to implementations of the org.springframework.batch.item.json.JsonObjectReader interface. This interface is intended to be implemented by using a streaming API to read JSON objects in chunks. Two implementations are currently provided:

  • Jackson through the org.springframework.batch.item.json.JacksonJsonObjectReader

  • Gson through the org.springframework.batch.item.json.GsonJsonObjectReader

To be able to process JSON records, the following is needed:

  • Resource: A Spring Resource that represents the JSON file to read.

  • JsonObjectReader: A JSON object reader to parse and bind JSON objects to items

The following example shows how to define a JsonItemReader that works with the previous JSON resource org/springframework/batch/item/json/trades.json and a JsonObjectReader based on Jackson:

@Bean
public JsonItemReader<Trade> jsonItemReader() {
   return new JsonItemReaderBuilder<Trade>()
                 .jsonObjectReader(new JacksonJsonObjectReader<>(Trade.class))
                 .resource(new ClassPathResource("trades.json"))
                 .name("tradeJsonItemReader")
                 .build();
}

6.7.2. JsonFileItemWriter

The JsonFileItemWriter delegates the marshalling of items to the org.springframework.batch.item.json.JsonObjectMarshaller interface. The contract of this interface is to take an object and marshall it to a JSON String. Two implementations are currently provided:

  • Jackson through the org.springframework.batch.item.json.JacksonJsonObjectMarshaller

  • Gson through the org.springframework.batch.item.json.GsonJsonObjectMarshaller

To be able to write JSON records, the following is needed:

  • Resource: A Spring Resource that represents the JSON file to write

  • JsonObjectMarshaller: A JSON object marshaller to marshall objects to JSON format

The following example shows how to define a JsonFileItemWriter:

@Bean
public JsonFileItemWriter<Trade> jsonFileItemWriter() {
   return new JsonFileItemWriterBuilder<Trade>()
                 .jsonObjectMarshaller(new JacksonJsonObjectMarshaller<>())
                 .resource(new ClassPathResource("trades.json"))
                 .name("tradeJsonFileItemWriter")
                 .build();
}

6.8. Multi-File Input

It is a common requirement to process multiple files within a single Step. Assuming the files all have the same formatting, the MultiResourceItemReader supports this type of input for both XML and flat file processing. Consider the following files in a directory:

file-1.txt  file-2.txt  ignored.txt

file-1.txt and file-2.txt are formatted the same and, for business reasons, should be processed together. The MultiResourceItemReader can be used to read in both files by using wildcards.

The following example shows how to read files with wildcards in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="multiResourceReader" class="org.spr...MultiResourceItemReader">
    <property name="resources" value="classpath:data/input/file-*.txt" />
    <property name="delegate" ref="flatFileItemReader" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to read files with wildcards in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public MultiResourceItemReader multiResourceReader() {
	return new MultiResourceItemReaderBuilder<Foo>()
					.delegate(flatFileItemReader())
					.resources(resources())
					.build();
}

The referenced delegate is a simple FlatFileItemReader. The above configuration reads input from both files, handling rollback and restart scenarios. It should be noted that, as with any ItemReader, adding extra input (in this case a file) could cause potential issues when restarting. It is recommended that batch jobs work with their own individual directories until completed successfully.

Input resources are ordered by using MultiResourceItemReader#setComparator(Comparator) to make sure resource ordering is preserved between job runs in restart scenario.

6.9. Database

Like most enterprise application styles, a database is the central storage mechanism for batch. However, batch differs from other application styles due to the sheer size of the datasets with which the system must work. If a SQL statement returns 1 million rows, the result set probably holds all returned results in memory until all rows have been read. Spring Batch provides two types of solutions for this problem:

6.9.1. Cursor-based ItemReader Implementations

Using a database cursor is generally the default approach of most batch developers, because it is the database’s solution to the problem of 'streaming' relational data. The Java ResultSet class is essentially an object oriented mechanism for manipulating a cursor. A ResultSet maintains a cursor to the current row of data. Calling next on a ResultSet moves this cursor to the next row. The Spring Batch cursor-based ItemReader implementation opens a cursor on initialization and moves the cursor forward one row for every call to read, returning a mapped object that can be used for processing. The close method is then called to ensure all resources are freed up. The Spring core JdbcTemplate gets around this problem by using the callback pattern to completely map all rows in a ResultSet and close before returning control back to the method caller. However, in batch, this must wait until the step is complete. The following image shows a generic diagram of how a cursor-based ItemReader works. Note that, while the example uses SQL (because SQL is so widely known), any technology could implement the basic approach.

Cursor Example
Figure 20. Cursor Example

This example illustrates the basic pattern. Given a 'FOO' table, which has three columns: ID, NAME, and BAR, select all rows with an ID greater than 1 but less than 7. This puts the beginning of the cursor (row 1) on ID 2. The result of this row should be a completely mapped Foo object. Calling read() again moves the cursor to the next row, which is the Foo with an ID of 3. The results of these reads are written out after each read, allowing the objects to be garbage collected (assuming no instance variables are maintaining references to them).

JdbcCursorItemReader

JdbcCursorItemReader is the JDBC implementation of the cursor-based technique. It works directly with a ResultSet and requires an SQL statement to run against a connection obtained from a DataSource. The following database schema is used as an example:

CREATE TABLE CUSTOMER (
   ID BIGINT IDENTITY PRIMARY KEY,
   NAME VARCHAR(45),
   CREDIT FLOAT
);

Many people prefer to use a domain object for each row, so the following example uses an implementation of the RowMapper interface to map a CustomerCredit object:

public class CustomerCreditRowMapper implements RowMapper<CustomerCredit> {

    public static final String ID_COLUMN = "id";
    public static final String NAME_COLUMN = "name";
    public static final String CREDIT_COLUMN = "credit";

    public CustomerCredit mapRow(ResultSet rs, int rowNum) throws SQLException {
        CustomerCredit customerCredit = new CustomerCredit();

        customerCredit.setId(rs.getInt(ID_COLUMN));
        customerCredit.setName(rs.getString(NAME_COLUMN));
        customerCredit.setCredit(rs.getBigDecimal(CREDIT_COLUMN));

        return customerCredit;
    }
}

Because JdbcCursorItemReader shares key interfaces with JdbcTemplate, it is useful to see an example of how to read in this data with JdbcTemplate, in order to contrast it with the ItemReader. For the purposes of this example, assume there are 1,000 rows in the CUSTOMER database. The first example uses JdbcTemplate:

//For simplicity sake, assume a dataSource has already been obtained
JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
List customerCredits = jdbcTemplate.query("SELECT ID, NAME, CREDIT from CUSTOMER",
                                          new CustomerCreditRowMapper());

After running the preceding code snippet, the customerCredits list contains 1,000 CustomerCredit objects. In the query method, a connection is obtained from the DataSource, the provided SQL is run against it, and the mapRow method is called for each row in the ResultSet. Contrast this with the approach of the JdbcCursorItemReader, shown in the following example:

JdbcCursorItemReader itemReader = new JdbcCursorItemReader();
itemReader.setDataSource(dataSource);
itemReader.setSql("SELECT ID, NAME, CREDIT from CUSTOMER");
itemReader.setRowMapper(new CustomerCreditRowMapper());
int counter = 0;
ExecutionContext executionContext = new ExecutionContext();
itemReader.open(executionContext);
Object customerCredit = new Object();
while(customerCredit != null){
    customerCredit = itemReader.read();
    counter++;
}
itemReader.close();

After running the preceding code snippet, the counter equals 1,000. If the code above had put the returned customerCredit into a list, the result would have been exactly the same as with the JdbcTemplate example. However, the big advantage of the ItemReader is that it allows items to be 'streamed'. The read method can be called once, the item can be written out by an ItemWriter, and then the next item can be obtained with read. This allows item reading and writing to be done in 'chunks' and committed periodically, which is the essence of high performance batch processing. Furthermore, it is easily configured for injection into a Spring Batch Step.

The following example shows how to inject an ItemReader into a Step in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.spr...JdbcCursorItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="sql" value="select ID, NAME, CREDIT from CUSTOMER"/>
    <property name="rowMapper">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.CustomerCreditRowMapper"/>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to inject an ItemReader into a Step in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JdbcCursorItemReader<CustomerCredit> itemReader() {
	return new JdbcCursorItemReaderBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
			.dataSource(this.dataSource)
			.name("creditReader")
			.sql("select ID, NAME, CREDIT from CUSTOMER")
			.rowMapper(new CustomerCreditRowMapper())
			.build();

}
Additional Properties

Because there are so many varying options for opening a cursor in Java, there are many properties on the JdbcCursorItemReader that can be set, as described in the following table:

Table 16. JdbcCursorItemReader Properties

ignoreWarnings

Determines whether or not SQLWarnings are logged or cause an exception. The default is true (meaning that warnings are logged).

fetchSize

Gives the JDBC driver a hint as to the number of rows that should be fetched from the database when more rows are needed by the ResultSet object used by the ItemReader. By default, no hint is given.

maxRows

Sets the limit for the maximum number of rows the underlying ResultSet can hold at any one time.

queryTimeout

Sets the number of seconds the driver waits for a Statement object to run. If the limit is exceeded, a DataAccessException is thrown. (Consult your driver vendor documentation for details).

verifyCursorPosition

Because the same ResultSet held by the ItemReader is passed to the RowMapper, it is possible for users to call ResultSet.next() themselves, which could cause issues with the reader’s internal count. Setting this value to true causes an exception to be thrown if the cursor position is not the same after the RowMapper call as it was before.

saveState

Indicates whether or not the reader’s state should be saved in the ExecutionContext provided by ItemStream#update(ExecutionContext). The default is true.

driverSupportsAbsolute

Indicates whether the JDBC driver supports setting the absolute row on a ResultSet. It is recommended that this is set to true for JDBC drivers that support ResultSet.absolute(), as it may improve performance, especially if a step fails while working with a large data set. Defaults to false.

setUseSharedExtendedConnection

Indicates whether the connection used for the cursor should be used by all other processing, thus sharing the same transaction. If this is set to false, then the cursor is opened with its own connection and does not participate in any transactions started for the rest of the step processing. If you set this flag to true then you must wrap the DataSource in an ExtendedConnectionDataSourceProxy to prevent the connection from being closed and released after each commit. When you set this option to true, the statement used to open the cursor is created with both 'READ_ONLY' and 'HOLD_CURSORS_OVER_COMMIT' options. This allows holding the cursor open over transaction start and commits performed in the step processing. To use this feature, you need a database that supports this and a JDBC driver supporting JDBC 3.0 or later. Defaults to false.

HibernateCursorItemReader

Just as normal Spring users make important decisions about whether or not to use ORM solutions, which affect whether or not they use a JdbcTemplate or a HibernateTemplate, Spring Batch users have the same options. HibernateCursorItemReader is the Hibernate implementation of the cursor technique. Hibernate’s usage in batch has been fairly controversial. This has largely been because Hibernate was originally developed to support online application styles. However, that does not mean it cannot be used for batch processing. The easiest approach for solving this problem is to use a StatelessSession rather than a standard session. This removes all of the caching and dirty checking Hibernate employs and that can cause issues in a batch scenario. For more information on the differences between stateless and normal hibernate sessions, refer to the documentation of your specific hibernate release. The HibernateCursorItemReader lets you declare an HQL statement and pass in a SessionFactory, which will pass back one item per call to read in the same basic fashion as the JdbcCursorItemReader. The following example configuration uses the same 'customer credit' example as the JDBC reader:

HibernateCursorItemReader itemReader = new HibernateCursorItemReader();
itemReader.setQueryString("from CustomerCredit");
//For simplicity sake, assume sessionFactory already obtained.
itemReader.setSessionFactory(sessionFactory);
itemReader.setUseStatelessSession(true);
int counter = 0;
ExecutionContext executionContext = new ExecutionContext();
itemReader.open(executionContext);
Object customerCredit = new Object();
while(customerCredit != null){
    customerCredit = itemReader.read();
    counter++;
}
itemReader.close();

This configured ItemReader returns CustomerCredit objects in the exact same manner as described by the JdbcCursorItemReader, assuming hibernate mapping files have been created correctly for the Customer table. The 'useStatelessSession' property defaults to true but has been added here to draw attention to the ability to switch it on or off. It is also worth noting that the fetch size of the underlying cursor can be set with the setFetchSize property. As with JdbcCursorItemReader, configuration is straightforward.

The following example shows how to inject a Hibernate ItemReader in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.database.HibernateCursorItemReader">
    <property name="sessionFactory" ref="sessionFactory" />
    <property name="queryString" value="from CustomerCredit" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to inject a Hibernate ItemReader in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public HibernateCursorItemReader itemReader(SessionFactory sessionFactory) {
	return new HibernateCursorItemReaderBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
			.name("creditReader")
			.sessionFactory(sessionFactory)
			.queryString("from CustomerCredit")
			.build();
}
StoredProcedureItemReader

Sometimes it is necessary to obtain the cursor data by using a stored procedure. The StoredProcedureItemReader works like the JdbcCursorItemReader, except that, instead of running a query to obtain a cursor, it runs a stored procedure that returns a cursor. The stored procedure can return the cursor in three different ways:

  • As a returned ResultSet (used by SQL Server, Sybase, DB2, Derby, and MySQL).

  • As a ref-cursor returned as an out parameter (used by Oracle and PostgreSQL).

  • As the return value of a stored function call.

The following XML example configuration uses the same 'customer credit' example as earlier examples:

XML Configuration
<bean id="reader" class="o.s.batch.item.database.StoredProcedureItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="procedureName" value="sp_customer_credit"/>
    <property name="rowMapper">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.CustomerCreditRowMapper"/>
    </property>
</bean>

The following Java example configuration uses the same 'customer credit' example as earlier examples:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StoredProcedureItemReader reader(DataSource dataSource) {
	StoredProcedureItemReader reader = new StoredProcedureItemReader();

	reader.setDataSource(dataSource);
	reader.setProcedureName("sp_customer_credit");
	reader.setRowMapper(new CustomerCreditRowMapper());

	return reader;
}

The preceding example relies on the stored procedure to provide a ResultSet as a returned result (option 1 from earlier).

If the stored procedure returned a ref-cursor (option 2), then we would need to provide the position of the out parameter that is the returned ref-cursor.

The following example shows how to work with the first parameter being a ref-cursor in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="reader" class="o.s.batch.item.database.StoredProcedureItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="procedureName" value="sp_customer_credit"/>
    <property name="refCursorPosition" value="1"/>
    <property name="rowMapper">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.CustomerCreditRowMapper"/>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to work with the first parameter being a ref-cursor in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StoredProcedureItemReader reader(DataSource dataSource) {
	StoredProcedureItemReader reader = new StoredProcedureItemReader();

	reader.setDataSource(dataSource);
	reader.setProcedureName("sp_customer_credit");
	reader.setRowMapper(new CustomerCreditRowMapper());
	reader.setRefCursorPosition(1);

	return reader;
}

If the cursor was returned from a stored function (option 3), we would need to set the property "function" to true. It defaults to false.

The following example shows property to true in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="reader" class="o.s.batch.item.database.StoredProcedureItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="procedureName" value="sp_customer_credit"/>
    <property name="function" value="true"/>
    <property name="rowMapper">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.CustomerCreditRowMapper"/>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows property to true in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StoredProcedureItemReader reader(DataSource dataSource) {
	StoredProcedureItemReader reader = new StoredProcedureItemReader();

	reader.setDataSource(dataSource);
	reader.setProcedureName("sp_customer_credit");
	reader.setRowMapper(new CustomerCreditRowMapper());
	reader.setFunction(true);

	return reader;
}

In all of these cases, we need to define a RowMapper as well as a DataSource and the actual procedure name.

If the stored procedure or function takes in parameters, then they must be declared and set by using the parameters property. The following example, for Oracle, declares three parameters. The first one is the out parameter that returns the ref-cursor, and the second and third are in parameters that takes a value of type INTEGER.

The following example shows how to work with parameters in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="reader" class="o.s.batch.item.database.StoredProcedureItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="procedureName" value="spring.cursor_func"/>
    <property name="parameters">
        <list>
            <bean class="org.springframework.jdbc.core.SqlOutParameter">
                <constructor-arg index="0" value="newid"/>
                <constructor-arg index="1">
                    <util:constant static-field="oracle.jdbc.OracleTypes.CURSOR"/>
                </constructor-arg>
            </bean>
            <bean class="org.springframework.jdbc.core.SqlParameter">
                <constructor-arg index="0" value="amount"/>
                <constructor-arg index="1">
                    <util:constant static-field="java.sql.Types.INTEGER"/>
                </constructor-arg>
            </bean>
            <bean class="org.springframework.jdbc.core.SqlParameter">
                <constructor-arg index="0" value="custid"/>
                <constructor-arg index="1">
                    <util:constant static-field="java.sql.Types.INTEGER"/>
                </constructor-arg>
            </bean>
        </list>
    </property>
    <property name="refCursorPosition" value="1"/>
    <property name="rowMapper" ref="rowMapper"/>
    <property name="preparedStatementSetter" ref="parameterSetter"/>
</bean>

The following example shows how to work with parameters in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public StoredProcedureItemReader reader(DataSource dataSource) {
	List<SqlParameter> parameters = new ArrayList<>();
	parameters.add(new SqlOutParameter("newId", OracleTypes.CURSOR));
	parameters.add(new SqlParameter("amount", Types.INTEGER);
	parameters.add(new SqlParameter("custId", Types.INTEGER);

	StoredProcedureItemReader reader = new StoredProcedureItemReader();

	reader.setDataSource(dataSource);
	reader.setProcedureName("spring.cursor_func");
	reader.setParameters(parameters);
	reader.setRefCursorPosition(1);
	reader.setRowMapper(rowMapper());
	reader.setPreparedStatementSetter(parameterSetter());

	return reader;
}

In addition to the parameter declarations, we need to specify a PreparedStatementSetter implementation that sets the parameter values for the call. This works the same as for the JdbcCursorItemReader above. All the additional properties listed in Additional Properties apply to the StoredProcedureItemReader as well.

6.9.2. Paging ItemReader Implementations

An alternative to using a database cursor is running multiple queries where each query fetches a portion of the results. We refer to this portion as a page. Each query must specify the starting row number and the number of rows that we want returned in the page.

JdbcPagingItemReader

One implementation of a paging ItemReader is the JdbcPagingItemReader. The JdbcPagingItemReader needs a PagingQueryProvider responsible for providing the SQL queries used to retrieve the rows making up a page. Since each database has its own strategy for providing paging support, we need to use a different PagingQueryProvider for each supported database type. There is also the SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean that auto-detects the database that is being used and determine the appropriate PagingQueryProvider implementation. This simplifies the configuration and is the recommended best practice.

The SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean requires that you specify a select clause and a from clause. You can also provide an optional where clause. These clauses and the required sortKey are used to build an SQL statement.

It is important to have a unique key constraint on the sortKey to guarantee that no data is lost between executions.

After the reader has been opened, it passes back one item per call to read in the same basic fashion as any other ItemReader. The paging happens behind the scenes when additional rows are needed.

The following XML example configuration uses a similar 'customer credit' example as the cursor-based ItemReaders shown previously:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.spr...JdbcPagingItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource"/>
    <property name="queryProvider">
        <bean class="org.spr...SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean">
            <property name="selectClause" value="select id, name, credit"/>
            <property name="fromClause" value="from customer"/>
            <property name="whereClause" value="where status=:status"/>
            <property name="sortKey" value="id"/>
        </bean>
    </property>
    <property name="parameterValues">
        <map>
            <entry key="status" value="NEW"/>
        </map>
    </property>
    <property name="pageSize" value="1000"/>
    <property name="rowMapper" ref="customerMapper"/>
</bean>

The following Java example configuration uses a similar 'customer credit' example as the cursor-based ItemReaders shown previously:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JdbcPagingItemReader itemReader(DataSource dataSource, PagingQueryProvider queryProvider) {
	Map<String, Object> parameterValues = new HashMap<>();
	parameterValues.put("status", "NEW");

	return new JdbcPagingItemReaderBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
           				.name("creditReader")
           				.dataSource(dataSource)
           				.queryProvider(queryProvider)
           				.parameterValues(parameterValues)
           				.rowMapper(customerCreditMapper())
           				.pageSize(1000)
           				.build();
}

@Bean
public SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean queryProvider() {
	SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean provider = new SqlPagingQueryProviderFactoryBean();

	provider.setSelectClause("select id, name, credit");
	provider.setFromClause("from customer");
	provider.setWhereClause("where status=:status");
	provider.setSortKey("id");

	return provider;
}

This configured ItemReader returns CustomerCredit objects using the RowMapper, which must be specified. The 'pageSize' property determines the number of entities read from the database for each query run.

The 'parameterValues' property can be used to specify a Map of parameter values for the query. If you use named parameters in the where clause, the key for each entry should match the name of the named parameter. If you use a traditional '?' placeholder, then the key for each entry should be the number of the placeholder, starting with 1.

JpaPagingItemReader

Another implementation of a paging ItemReader is the JpaPagingItemReader. JPA does not have a concept similar to the Hibernate StatelessSession, so we have to use other features provided by the JPA specification. Since JPA supports paging, this is a natural choice when it comes to using JPA for batch processing. After each page is read, the entities become detached and the persistence context is cleared, to allow the entities to be garbage collected once the page is processed.

The JpaPagingItemReader lets you declare a JPQL statement and pass in a EntityManagerFactory. It then passes back one item per call to read in the same basic fashion as any other ItemReader. The paging happens behind the scenes when additional entities are needed.

The following XML example configuration uses the same 'customer credit' example as the JDBC reader shown previously:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.spr...JpaPagingItemReader">
    <property name="entityManagerFactory" ref="entityManagerFactory"/>
    <property name="queryString" value="select c from CustomerCredit c"/>
    <property name="pageSize" value="1000"/>
</bean>

The following Java example configuration uses the same 'customer credit' example as the JDBC reader shown previously:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JpaPagingItemReader itemReader() {
	return new JpaPagingItemReaderBuilder<CustomerCredit>()
           				.name("creditReader")
           				.entityManagerFactory(entityManagerFactory())
           				.queryString("select c from CustomerCredit c")
           				.pageSize(1000)
           				.build();
}

This configured ItemReader returns CustomerCredit objects in the exact same manner as described for the JdbcPagingItemReader above, assuming the CustomerCredit object has the correct JPA annotations or ORM mapping file. The 'pageSize' property determines the number of entities read from the database for each query execution.

6.9.3. Database ItemWriters

While both flat files and XML files have a specific ItemWriter instance, there is no exact equivalent in the database world. This is because transactions provide all the needed functionality. ItemWriter implementations are necessary for files because they must act as if they’re transactional, keeping track of written items and flushing or clearing at the appropriate times. Databases have no need for this functionality, since the write is already contained in a transaction. Users can create their own DAOs that implement the ItemWriter interface or use one from a custom ItemWriter that’s written for generic processing concerns. Either way, they should work without any issues. One thing to look out for is the performance and error handling capabilities that are provided by batching the outputs. This is most common when using hibernate as an ItemWriter but could have the same issues when using JDBC batch mode. Batching database output does not have any inherent flaws, assuming we are careful to flush and there are no errors in the data. However, any errors while writing can cause confusion, because there is no way to know which individual item caused an exception or even if any individual item was responsible, as illustrated in the following image:

Error On Flush
Figure 21. Error On Flush

If items are buffered before being written, any errors are not thrown until the buffer is flushed just before a commit. For example, assume that 20 items are written per chunk, and the 15th item throws a DataIntegrityViolationException. As far as the Step is concerned, all 20 item are written successfully, since there is no way to know that an error occurs until they are actually written. Once Session#flush() is called, the buffer is emptied and the exception is hit. At this point, there is nothing the Step can do. The transaction must be rolled back. Normally, this exception might cause the item to be skipped (depending upon the skip/retry policies), and then it is not written again. However, in the batched scenario, there is no way to know which item caused the issue. The whole buffer was being written when the failure happened. The only way to solve this issue is to flush after each item, as shown in the following image:

Error On Write
Figure 22. Error On Write

This is a common use case, especially when using Hibernate, and the simple guideline for implementations of ItemWriter is to flush on each call to write(). Doing so allows for items to be skipped reliably, with Spring Batch internally taking care of the granularity of the calls to ItemWriter after an error.

6.10. Reusing Existing Services

Batch systems are often used in conjunction with other application styles. The most common is an online system, but it may also support integration or even a thick client application by moving necessary bulk data that each application style uses. For this reason, it is common that many users want to reuse existing DAOs or other services within their batch jobs. The Spring container itself makes this fairly easy by allowing any necessary class to be injected. However, there may be cases where the existing service needs to act as an ItemReader or ItemWriter, either to satisfy the dependency of another Spring Batch class or because it truly is the main ItemReader for a step. It is fairly trivial to write an adapter class for each service that needs wrapping, but because it is such a common concern, Spring Batch provides implementations: ItemReaderAdapter and ItemWriterAdapter. Both classes implement the standard Spring method by invoking the delegate pattern and are fairly simple to set up.

The following XML example uses the ItemReaderAdapter:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.springframework.batch.item.adapter.ItemReaderAdapter">
    <property name="targetObject" ref="fooService" />
    <property name="targetMethod" value="generateFoo" />
</bean>

<bean id="fooService" class="org.springframework.batch.item.sample.FooService" />

The following Java example uses the ItemReaderAdapter:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public ItemReaderAdapter itemReader() {
	ItemReaderAdapter reader = new ItemReaderAdapter();

	reader.setTargetObject(fooService());
	reader.setTargetMethod("generateFoo");

	return reader;
}

@Bean
public FooService fooService() {
	return new FooService();
}

One important point to note is that the contract of the targetMethod must be the same as the contract for read: When exhausted, it returns null. Otherwise, it returns an Object. Anything else prevents the framework from knowing when processing should end, either causing an infinite loop or incorrect failure, depending upon the implementation of the ItemWriter.

The following XML example uses the ItemWriterAdapter:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.springframework.batch.item.adapter.ItemWriterAdapter">
    <property name="targetObject" ref="fooService" />
    <property name="targetMethod" value="processFoo" />
</bean>

<bean id="fooService" class="org.springframework.batch.item.sample.FooService" />

The following Java example uses the ItemWriterAdapter:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public ItemWriterAdapter itemWriter() {
	ItemWriterAdapter writer = new ItemWriterAdapter();

	writer.setTargetObject(fooService());
	writer.setTargetMethod("processFoo");

	return writer;
}

@Bean
public FooService fooService() {
	return new FooService();
}

6.11. Preventing State Persistence

By default, all of the ItemReader and ItemWriter implementations store their current state in the ExecutionContext before it is committed. However, this may not always be the desired behavior. For example, many developers choose to make their database readers 'rerunnable' by using a process indicator. An extra column is added to the input data to indicate whether or not it has been processed. When a particular record is being read (or written) the processed flag is flipped from false to true. The SQL statement can then contain an extra statement in the where clause, such as where PROCESSED_IND = false, thereby ensuring that only unprocessed records are returned in the case of a restart. In this scenario, it is preferable to not store any state, such as the current row number, since it is irrelevant upon restart. For this reason, all readers and writers include the 'saveState' property.

The following bean definition shows how to prevent state persistence in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="playerSummarizationSource" class="org.spr...JdbcCursorItemReader">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" />
    <property name="rowMapper">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.PlayerSummaryMapper" />
    </property>
    <property name="saveState" value="false" />
    <property name="sql">
        <value>
            SELECT games.player_id, games.year_no, SUM(COMPLETES),
            SUM(ATTEMPTS), SUM(PASSING_YARDS), SUM(PASSING_TD),
            SUM(INTERCEPTIONS), SUM(RUSHES), SUM(RUSH_YARDS),
            SUM(RECEPTIONS), SUM(RECEPTIONS_YARDS), SUM(TOTAL_TD)
            from games, players where players.player_id =
            games.player_id group by games.player_id, games.year_no
        </value>
    </property>
</bean>

The following bean definition shows how to prevent state persistence in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public JdbcCursorItemReader playerSummarizationSource(DataSource dataSource) {
	return new JdbcCursorItemReaderBuilder<PlayerSummary>()
				.dataSource(dataSource)
				.rowMapper(new PlayerSummaryMapper())
				.saveState(false)
				.sql("SELECT games.player_id, games.year_no, SUM(COMPLETES),"
				  + "SUM(ATTEMPTS), SUM(PASSING_YARDS), SUM(PASSING_TD),"
				  + "SUM(INTERCEPTIONS), SUM(RUSHES), SUM(RUSH_YARDS),"
				  + "SUM(RECEPTIONS), SUM(RECEPTIONS_YARDS), SUM(TOTAL_TD)"
				  + "from games, players where players.player_id ="
				  + "games.player_id group by games.player_id, games.year_no")
				.build();

}

The ItemReader configured above does not make any entries in the ExecutionContext for any executions in which it participates.

6.12. Creating Custom ItemReaders and ItemWriters

So far, this chapter has discussed the basic contracts of reading and writing in Spring Batch and some common implementations for doing so. However, these are all fairly generic, and there are many potential scenarios that may not be covered by out-of-the-box implementations. This section shows, by using a simple example, how to create a custom ItemReader and ItemWriter implementation and implement their contracts correctly. The ItemReader also implements ItemStream, in order to illustrate how to make a reader or writer restartable.

6.12.1. Custom ItemReader Example

For the purpose of this example, we create a simple ItemReader implementation that reads from a provided list. We start by implementing the most basic contract of ItemReader, the read method, as shown in the following code:

public class CustomItemReader<T> implements ItemReader<T> {

    List<T> items;

    public CustomItemReader(List<T> items) {
        this.items = items;
    }

    public T read() throws Exception, UnexpectedInputException,
       NonTransientResourceException, ParseException {

        if (!items.isEmpty()) {
            return items.remove(0);
        }
        return null;
    }
}

The preceding class takes a list of items and returns them one at a time, removing each from the list. When the list is empty, it returns null, thus satisfying the most basic requirements of an ItemReader, as illustrated in the following test code:

List<String> items = new ArrayList<>();
items.add("1");
items.add("2");
items.add("3");

ItemReader itemReader = new CustomItemReader<>(items);
assertEquals("1", itemReader.read());
assertEquals("2", itemReader.read());
assertEquals("3", itemReader.read());
assertNull(itemReader.read());
Making the ItemReader Restartable

The final challenge is to make the ItemReader restartable. Currently, if processing is interrupted and begins again, the ItemReader must start at the beginning. This is actually valid in many scenarios, but it is sometimes preferable that a batch job restarts where it left off. The key discriminant is often whether the reader is stateful or stateless. A stateless reader does not need to worry about restartability, but a stateful one has to try to reconstitute its last known state on restart. For this reason, we recommend that you keep custom readers stateless if possible, so you need not worry about restartability.

If you do need to store state, then the ItemStream interface should be used:

public class CustomItemReader<T> implements ItemReader<T>, ItemStream {

    List<T> items;
    int currentIndex = 0;
    private static final String CURRENT_INDEX = "current.index";

    public CustomItemReader(List<T> items) {
        this.items = items;
    }

    public T read() throws Exception, UnexpectedInputException,
        ParseException, NonTransientResourceException {

        if (currentIndex < items.size()) {
            return items.get(currentIndex++);
        }

        return null;
    }

    public void open(ExecutionContext executionContext) throws ItemStreamException {
        if (executionContext.containsKey(CURRENT_INDEX)) {
            currentIndex = new Long(executionContext.getLong(CURRENT_INDEX)).intValue();
        }
        else {
            currentIndex = 0;
        }
    }

    public void update(ExecutionContext executionContext) throws ItemStreamException {
        executionContext.putLong(CURRENT_INDEX, new Long(currentIndex).longValue());
    }

    public void close() throws ItemStreamException {}
}

On each call to the ItemStream update method, the current index of the ItemReader is stored in the provided ExecutionContext with a key of 'current.index'. When the ItemStream open method is called, the ExecutionContext is checked to see if it contains an entry with that key. If the key is found, then the current index is moved to that location. This is a fairly trivial example, but it still meets the general contract:

ExecutionContext executionContext = new ExecutionContext();
((ItemStream)itemReader).open(executionContext);
assertEquals("1", itemReader.read());
((ItemStream)itemReader).update(executionContext);

List<String> items = new ArrayList<>();
items.add("1");
items.add("2");
items.add("3");
itemReader = new CustomItemReader<>(items);

((ItemStream)itemReader).open(executionContext);
assertEquals("2", itemReader.read());

Most ItemReaders have much more sophisticated restart logic. The JdbcCursorItemReader, for example, stores the row ID of the last processed row in the cursor.

It is also worth noting that the key used within the ExecutionContext should not be trivial. That is because the same ExecutionContext is used for all ItemStreams within a Step. In most cases, simply prepending the key with the class name should be enough to guarantee uniqueness. However, in the rare cases where two of the same type of ItemStream are used in the same step (which can happen if two files are needed for output), a more unique name is needed. For this reason, many of the Spring Batch ItemReader and ItemWriter implementations have a setName() property that lets this key name be overridden.

6.12.2. Custom ItemWriter Example

Implementing a Custom ItemWriter is similar in many ways to the ItemReader example above but differs in enough ways as to warrant its own example. However, adding restartability is essentially the same, so it is not covered in this example. As with the ItemReader example, a List is used in order to keep the example as simple as possible:

public class CustomItemWriter<T> implements ItemWriter<T> {

    List<T> output = TransactionAwareProxyFactory.createTransactionalList();

    public void write(Chunk<? extends T> items) throws Exception {
        output.addAll(items);
    }

    public List<T> getOutput() {
        return output;
    }
}
Making the ItemWriter Restartable

To make the ItemWriter restartable, we would follow the same process as for the ItemReader, adding and implementing the ItemStream interface to synchronize the execution context. In the example, we might have to count the number of items processed and add that as a footer record. If we needed to do that, we could implement ItemStream in our ItemWriter so that the counter was reconstituted from the execution context if the stream was re-opened.

In many realistic cases, custom ItemWriters also delegate to another writer that itself is restartable (for example, when writing to a file), or else it writes to a transactional resource and so does not need to be restartable, because it is stateless. When you have a stateful writer you should probably be sure to implement ItemStream as well as ItemWriter. Remember also that the client of the writer needs to be aware of the ItemStream, so you may need to register it as a stream in the configuration.

6.13. Item Reader and Writer Implementations

In this section, we will introduce you to readers and writers that have not already been discussed in the previous sections.

6.13.1. Decorators

In some cases, a user needs specialized behavior to be appended to a pre-existing ItemReader. Spring Batch offers some out of the box decorators that can add additional behavior to to your ItemReader and ItemWriter implementations.

Spring Batch includes the following decorators:

SynchronizedItemStreamReader

When using an ItemReader that is not thread safe, Spring Batch offers the SynchronizedItemStreamReader decorator, which can be used to make the ItemReader thread safe. Spring Batch provides a SynchronizedItemStreamReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the SynchronizedItemStreamReader.

For example, the FlatFileItemReader is not thread-safe and cannot be used in a multi-threaded step. This reader can be decorated with a SynchronizedItemStreamReader in order to use it safely in a multi-threaded step. Here is an example of how to decorate such a reader:

@Bean
public SynchronizedItemStreamReader<Person> itemReader() {
	FlatFileItemReader<Person> flatFileItemReader = new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<Person>()
			// set reader properties
			.build();

	return new SynchronizedItemStreamReaderBuilder<Person>()
			.delegate(flatFileItemReader)
			.build();
}
SingleItemPeekableItemReader

Spring Batch includes a decorator that adds a peek method to an ItemReader. This peek method lets the user peek one item ahead. Repeated calls to the peek returns the same item, and this is the next item returned from the read method. Spring Batch provides a SingleItemPeekableItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the SingleItemPeekableItemReader.

SingleItemPeekableItemReader’s peek method is not thread-safe, because it would not be possible to honor the peek in multiple threads. Only one of the threads that peeked would get that item in the next call to read.
SynchronizedItemStreamWriter

When using an ItemWriter that is not thread safe, Spring Batch offers the SynchronizedItemStreamWriter decorator, which can be used to make the ItemWriter thread safe. Spring Batch provides a SynchronizedItemStreamWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the SynchronizedItemStreamWriter.

For example, the FlatFileItemWriter is not thread-safe and cannot be used in a multi-threaded step. This writer can be decorated with a SynchronizedItemStreamWriter in order to use it safely in a multi-threaded step. Here is an example of how to decorate such a writer:

@Bean
public SynchronizedItemStreamWriter<Person> itemWriter() {
	FlatFileItemWriter<Person> flatFileItemWriter = new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<Person>()
			// set writer properties
			.build();

	return new SynchronizedItemStreamWriterBuilder<Person>()
			.delegate(flatFileItemWriter)
			.build();
}
MultiResourceItemWriter

The MultiResourceItemWriter wraps a ResourceAwareItemWriterItemStream and creates a new output resource when the count of items written in the current resource exceeds the itemCountLimitPerResource. Spring Batch provides a MultiResourceItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the MultiResourceItemWriter.

ClassifierCompositeItemWriter

The ClassifierCompositeItemWriter calls one of a collection of ItemWriter implementations for each item, based on a router pattern implemented through the provided Classifier. The implementation is thread-safe if all delegates are thread-safe. Spring Batch provides a ClassifierCompositeItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the ClassifierCompositeItemWriter.

ClassifierCompositeItemProcessor

The ClassifierCompositeItemProcessor is an ItemProcessor that calls one of a collection of ItemProcessor implementations, based on a router pattern implemented through the provided Classifier. Spring Batch provides a ClassifierCompositeItemProcessorBuilder to construct an instance of the ClassifierCompositeItemProcessor.

6.13.2. Messaging Readers And Writers

Spring Batch offers the following readers and writers for commonly used messaging systems:

AmqpItemReader

The AmqpItemReader is an ItemReader that uses an AmqpTemplate to receive or convert messages from an exchange. Spring Batch provides a AmqpItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the AmqpItemReader.

AmqpItemWriter

The AmqpItemWriter is an ItemWriter that uses an AmqpTemplate to send messages to an AMQP exchange. Messages are sent to the nameless exchange if the name not specified in the provided AmqpTemplate. Spring Batch provides an AmqpItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the AmqpItemWriter.

JmsItemReader

The JmsItemReader is an ItemReader for JMS that uses a JmsTemplate. The template should have a default destination, which is used to provide items for the read() method. Spring Batch provides a JmsItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the JmsItemReader.

JmsItemWriter

The JmsItemWriter is an ItemWriter for JMS that uses a JmsTemplate. The template should have a default destination, which is used to send items in write(List). Spring Batch provides a JmsItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the JmsItemWriter.

KafkaItemReader

The KafkaItemReader is an ItemReader for an Apache Kafka topic. It can be configured to read messages from multiple partitions of the same topic. It stores message offsets in the execution context to support restart capabilities. Spring Batch provides a KafkaItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the KafkaItemReader.

KafkaItemWriter

The KafkaItemWriter is an ItemWriter for Apache Kafka that uses a KafkaTemplate to send events to a default topic. Spring Batch provides a KafkaItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the KafkaItemWriter.

6.13.3. Database Readers

Spring Batch offers the following database readers:

Neo4jItemReader

The Neo4jItemReader is an ItemReader that reads objects from the graph database Neo4j by using a paging technique. Spring Batch provides a Neo4jItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the Neo4jItemReader.

MongoItemReader

The MongoItemReader is an ItemReader that reads documents from MongoDB by using a paging technique. Spring Batch provides a MongoItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the MongoItemReader.

HibernateCursorItemReader

The HibernateCursorItemReader is an ItemStreamReader for reading database records built on top of Hibernate. It executes the HQL query and then, when initialized, iterates over the result set as the read() method is called, successively returning an object corresponding to the current row. Spring Batch provides a HibernateCursorItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the HibernateCursorItemReader.

HibernatePagingItemReader

The HibernatePagingItemReader is an ItemReader for reading database records built on top of Hibernate and reading only up to a fixed number of items at a time. Spring Batch provides a HibernatePagingItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the HibernatePagingItemReader.

RepositoryItemReader

The RepositoryItemReader is an ItemReader that reads records by using a PagingAndSortingRepository. Spring Batch provides a RepositoryItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the RepositoryItemReader.

6.13.4. Database Writers

Spring Batch offers the following database writers:

Neo4jItemWriter

The Neo4jItemWriter is an ItemWriter implementation that writes to a Neo4j database. Spring Batch provides a Neo4jItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the Neo4jItemWriter.

MongoItemWriter

The MongoItemWriter is an ItemWriter implementation that writes to a MongoDB store using an implementation of Spring Data’s MongoOperations. Spring Batch provides a MongoItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the MongoItemWriter.

RepositoryItemWriter

The RepositoryItemWriter is an ItemWriter wrapper for a CrudRepository from Spring Data. Spring Batch provides a RepositoryItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the RepositoryItemWriter.

HibernateItemWriter

The HibernateItemWriter is an ItemWriter that uses a Hibernate session to save or update entities that are not part of the current Hibernate session. Spring Batch provides a HibernateItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the HibernateItemWriter.

JdbcBatchItemWriter

The JdbcBatchItemWriter is an ItemWriter that uses the batching features from NamedParameterJdbcTemplate to execute a batch of statements for all items provided. Spring Batch provides a JdbcBatchItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the JdbcBatchItemWriter.

JpaItemWriter

The JpaItemWriter is an ItemWriter that uses a JPA EntityManagerFactory to merge any entities that are not part of the persistence context. Spring Batch provides a JpaItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the JpaItemWriter.

6.13.5. Specialized Readers

Spring Batch offers the following specialized readers:

LdifReader

The LdifReader reads LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) records from a Resource, parses them, and returns a LdapAttribute object for each read executed. Spring Batch provides a LdifReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the LdifReader.

MappingLdifReader

The MappingLdifReader reads LDIF (LDAP Data Interchange Format) records from a Resource, parses them then maps each LDIF record to a POJO (Plain Old Java Object). Each read returns a POJO. Spring Batch provides a MappingLdifReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the MappingLdifReader.

AvroItemReader

The AvroItemReader reads serialized Avro data from a Resource. Each read returns an instance of the type specified by a Java class or Avro Schema. The reader may be optionally configured for input that embeds an Avro schema or not. Spring Batch provides an AvroItemReaderBuilder to construct an instance of the AvroItemReader.

6.13.6. Specialized Writers

Spring Batch offers the following specialized writers:

SimpleMailMessageItemWriter

The SimpleMailMessageItemWriter is an ItemWriter that can send mail messages. It delegates the actual sending of messages to an instance of MailSender. Spring Batch provides a SimpleMailMessageItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the SimpleMailMessageItemWriter.

AvroItemWriter

The AvroItemWrite serializes Java objects to a WriteableResource according to the given type or Schema. The writer may be optionally configured to embed an Avro schema in the output or not. Spring Batch provides an AvroItemWriterBuilder to construct an instance of the AvroItemWriter.

6.13.7. Specialized Processors

Spring Batch offers the following specialized processors:

ScriptItemProcessor

The ScriptItemProcessor is an ItemProcessor that passes the current item to process to the provided script and the result of the script is returned by the processor. Spring Batch provides a ScriptItemProcessorBuilder to construct an instance of the ScriptItemProcessor.

7. Item processing

The ItemReader and ItemWriter interfaces are both very useful for their specific tasks, but what if you want to insert business logic before writing? One option for both reading and writing is to use the composite pattern: Create an ItemWriter that contains another ItemWriter or an ItemReader that contains another ItemReader. The following code shows an example:

public class CompositeItemWriter<T> implements ItemWriter<T> {

    ItemWriter<T> itemWriter;

    public CompositeItemWriter(ItemWriter<T> itemWriter) {
        this.itemWriter = itemWriter;
    }

    public void write(Chunk<? extends T> items) throws Exception {
        //Add business logic here
       itemWriter.write(items);
    }

    public void setDelegate(ItemWriter<T> itemWriter){
        this.itemWriter = itemWriter;
    }
}

The preceding class contains another ItemWriter to which it delegates after having provided some business logic. This pattern could easily be used for an ItemReader as well, perhaps to obtain more reference data based on the input that was provided by the main ItemReader. It is also useful if you need to control the call to write yourself. However, if you only want to “transform” the item passed in for writing before it is actually written, you need not write yourself. You can just modify the item. For this scenario, Spring Batch provides the ItemProcessor interface, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface ItemProcessor<I, O> {

    O process(I item) throws Exception;
}

An ItemProcessor is simple. Given one object, transform it and return another. The provided object may or may not be of the same type. The point is that business logic may be applied within the process, and it is completely up to the developer to create that logic. An ItemProcessor can be wired directly into a step. For example, assume an ItemReader provides a class of type Foo and that it needs to be converted to type Bar before being written out. The following example shows an ItemProcessor that performs the conversion:

public class Foo {}

public class Bar {
    public Bar(Foo foo) {}
}

public class FooProcessor implements ItemProcessor<Foo, Bar> {
    public Bar process(Foo foo) throws Exception {
        //Perform simple transformation, convert a Foo to a Bar
        return new Bar(foo);
    }
}

public class BarWriter implements ItemWriter<Bar> {
    public void write(Chunk<? extends Bar> bars) throws Exception {
        //write bars
    }
}

In the preceding example, there is a class named Foo, a class named Bar, and a class named FooProcessor that adheres to the ItemProcessor interface. The transformation is simple, but any type of transformation could be done here. The BarWriter writes Bar objects, throwing an exception if any other type is provided. Similarly, the FooProcessor throws an exception if anything but a Foo is provided. The FooProcessor can then be injected into a Step, as the following example shows:

XML Configuration
<job id="ioSampleJob">
    <step name="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="fooReader" processor="fooProcessor" writer="barWriter"
                   commit-interval="2"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>
Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job ioSampleJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("ioSampleJob", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<Foo, Bar>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(fooReader())
				.processor(fooProcessor())
				.writer(barWriter())
				.build();
}

A difference between ItemProcessor and ItemReader or ItemWriter is that an ItemProcessor is optional for a Step.

7.1. Chaining ItemProcessors

Performing a single transformation is useful in many scenarios, but what if you want to “chain” together multiple ItemProcessor implementations? You can do so by using the composite pattern mentioned previously. To update the previous, single transformation, example, Foo is transformed to Bar, which is transformed to Foobar and written out, as the following example shows:

public class Foo {}

public class Bar {
    public Bar(Foo foo) {}
}

public class Foobar {
    public Foobar(Bar bar) {}
}

public class FooProcessor implements ItemProcessor<Foo, Bar> {
    public Bar process(Foo foo) throws Exception {
        //Perform simple transformation, convert a Foo to a Bar
        return new Bar(foo);
    }
}

public class BarProcessor implements ItemProcessor<Bar, Foobar> {
    public Foobar process(Bar bar) throws Exception {
        return new Foobar(bar);
    }
}

public class FoobarWriter implements ItemWriter<Foobar>{
    public void write(Chunk<? extends Foobar> items) throws Exception {
        //write items
    }
}

A FooProcessor and a BarProcessor can be 'chained' together to give the resultant Foobar, as shown in the following example:

CompositeItemProcessor<Foo,Foobar> compositeProcessor =
                                      new CompositeItemProcessor<Foo,Foobar>();
List itemProcessors = new ArrayList();
itemProcessors.add(new FooProcessor());
itemProcessors.add(new BarProcessor());
compositeProcessor.setDelegates(itemProcessors);

Just as with the previous example, you can configure the composite processor into the Step:

XML Configuration
<job id="ioSampleJob">
    <step name="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="fooReader" processor="compositeItemProcessor" writer="foobarWriter"
                   commit-interval="2"/>
        </tasklet>
    </step>
</job>

<bean id="compositeItemProcessor"
      class="org.springframework.batch.item.support.CompositeItemProcessor">
    <property name="delegates">
        <list>
            <bean class="..FooProcessor" />
            <bean class="..BarProcessor" />
        </list>
    </property>
</bean>
Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job ioSampleJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("ioSampleJob", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<Foo, Foobar>chunk(2, transactionManager)
				.reader(fooReader())
				.processor(compositeProcessor())
				.writer(foobarWriter())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public CompositeItemProcessor compositeProcessor() {
	List<ItemProcessor> delegates = new ArrayList<>(2);
	delegates.add(new FooProcessor());
	delegates.add(new BarProcessor());

	CompositeItemProcessor processor = new CompositeItemProcessor();

	processor.setDelegates(delegates);

	return processor;
}

7.2. Filtering Records

One typical use for an item processor is to filter out records before they are passed to the ItemWriter. Filtering is an action distinct from skipping. Skipping indicates that a record is invalid, while filtering indicates that a record should not be written.

For example, consider a batch job that reads a file containing three different types of records: records to insert, records to update, and records to delete. If record deletion is not supported by the system, we would not want to send any deletable records to the ItemWriter. However, since these records are not actually bad records, we would want to filter them out rather than skip them. As a result, the ItemWriter would receive only insertable and updatable records.

To filter a record, you can return null from the ItemProcessor. The framework detects that the result is null and avoids adding that item to the list of records delivered to the ItemWriter. An exception thrown from the ItemProcessor results in a skip.

7.3. Validating Input

The ItemReaders and ItemWriters chapter discusses multiple approaches to parsing input. Each major implementation throws an exception if it is not “well formed.” The FixedLengthTokenizer throws an exception if a range of data is missing. Similarly, attempting to access an index in a RowMapper or FieldSetMapper that does not exist or is in a different format than the one expected causes an exception to be thrown. All of these types of exceptions are thrown before read returns. However, they do not address the issue of whether or not the returned item is valid. For example, if one of the fields is an age, it cannot be negative. It may parse correctly, because it exists and is a number, but it does not cause an exception. Since there are already a plethora of validation frameworks, Spring Batch does not attempt to provide yet another. Rather, it provides a simple interface, called Validator, that you can implement by any number of frameworks, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface Validator<T> {

    void validate(T value) throws ValidationException;

}

The contract is that the validate method throws an exception if the object is invalid and returns normally if it is valid. Spring Batch provides an ValidatingItemProcessor, as the following bean definition shows:

XML Configuration
<bean class="org.springframework.batch.item.validator.ValidatingItemProcessor">
    <property name="validator" ref="validator" />
</bean>

<bean id="validator" class="org.springframework.batch.item.validator.SpringValidator">
	<property name="validator">
		<bean class="org.springframework.batch.sample.domain.trade.internal.validator.TradeValidator"/>
	</property>
</bean>
Java Configuration
@Bean
public ValidatingItemProcessor itemProcessor() {
	ValidatingItemProcessor processor = new ValidatingItemProcessor();

	processor.setValidator(validator());

	return processor;
}

@Bean
public SpringValidator validator() {
	SpringValidator validator = new SpringValidator();

	validator.setValidator(new TradeValidator());

	return validator;
}

You can also use the BeanValidatingItemProcessor to validate items annotated with the Bean Validation API (JSR-303) annotations. For example, consider the following type Person:

class Person {

    @NotEmpty
    private String name;

    public Person(String name) {
     this.name = name;
    }

    public String getName() {
     return name;
    }

    public void setName(String name) {
     this.name = name;
    }

}

You can validate items by declaring a BeanValidatingItemProcessor bean in your application context and register it as a processor in your chunk-oriented step:

@Bean
public BeanValidatingItemProcessor<Person> beanValidatingItemProcessor() throws Exception {
    BeanValidatingItemProcessor<Person> beanValidatingItemProcessor = new BeanValidatingItemProcessor<>();
    beanValidatingItemProcessor.setFilter(true);

    return beanValidatingItemProcessor;
}

7.4. Fault Tolerance

When a chunk is rolled back, items that have been cached during reading may be reprocessed. If a step is configured to be fault-tolerant (typically by using skip or retry processing), any ItemProcessor used should be implemented in a way that is idempotent. Typically that would consist of performing no changes on the input item for the ItemProcessor and updating only the instance that is the result.

8. Scaling and Parallel Processing

Many batch processing problems can be solved with single-threaded, single-process jobs, so it is always a good idea to properly check if that meets your needs before thinking about more complex implementations. Measure the performance of a realistic job and see if the simplest implementation meets your needs first. You can read and write a file of several hundred megabytes in well under a minute, even with standard hardware.

When you are ready to start implementing a job with some parallel processing, Spring Batch offers a range of options, which are described in this chapter, although some features are covered elsewhere. At a high level, there are two modes of parallel processing:

  • Single-process, multi-threaded

  • Multi-process

These break down into categories as well, as follows:

  • Multi-threaded Step (single-process)

  • Parallel Steps (single-process)

  • Remote Chunking of Step (multi-process)

  • Partitioning a Step (single or multi-process)

First, we review the single-process options. Then we review the multi-process options.

8.1. Multi-threaded Step

The simplest way to start parallel processing is to add a TaskExecutor to your Step configuration.

For example, you might add an attribute TO the tasklet, as follows:

<step id="loading">
    <tasklet task-executor="taskExecutor">...</tasklet>
</step>

When using Java configuration, you can add a TaskExecutor to the step, as the following example shows:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public TaskExecutor taskExecutor() {
    return new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor("spring_batch");
}

@Bean
public Step sampleStep(TaskExecutor taskExecutor, JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("sampleStep", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.taskExecutor(taskExecutor)
				.build();
}

In this example, the taskExecutor is a reference to another bean definition that implements the TaskExecutor interface. TaskExecutor is a standard Spring interface, so consult the Spring User Guide for details of available implementations. The simplest multi-threaded TaskExecutor is a SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor.

The result of the preceding configuration is that the Step executes by reading, processing, and writing each chunk of items (each commit interval) in a separate thread of execution. Note that this means there is no fixed order for the items to be processed, and a chunk might contain items that are non-consecutive compared to the single-threaded case. In addition to any limits placed by the task executor (such as whether it is backed by a thread pool), the tasklet configuration has a throttle limit (default: 4). You may need to increase this limit to ensure that a thread pool is fully used.

For example, you might increase the throttle-limit, as follows:

<step id="loading"> <tasklet
    task-executor="taskExecutor"
    throttle-limit="20">...</tasklet>
</step>

When using Java configuration, the builders provide access to the throttle limit, as follows:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step sampleStep(TaskExecutor taskExecutor, JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("sampleStep", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.taskExecutor(taskExecutor)
				.throttleLimit(20)
				.build();
}

Note also that there may be limits placed on concurrency by any pooled resources used in your step, such as a DataSource. Be sure to make the pool in those resources at least as large as the desired number of concurrent threads in the step.

Throttle limit deprecation

As of v5.0, the throttle limit is deprecated with no replacement. If you want to replace the current throttling mechanism in the default TaskExecutorRepeatTemplate, you need to provide a custom RepeatOperations implementation (based on a TaskExecutor with a bounded task queue) and set it on the step with StepBuilder#stepOperations:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step sampleStep(RepeatOperations customRepeatOperations, JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("sampleStep", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(itemReader())
				.writer(itemWriter())
				.stepOperations(customRepeatOperations)
				.build();
}

There are some practical limitations of using multi-threaded Step implementations for some common batch use cases. Many participants in a Step (such as readers and writers) are stateful. If the state is not segregated by thread, those components are not usable in a multi-threaded Step. In particular, most of the readers and writers from Spring Batch are not designed for multi-threaded use. It is, however, possible to work with stateless or thread safe readers and writers, and there is a sample (called parallelJob) in the Spring Batch Samples that shows the use of a process indicator (see Preventing State Persistence) to keep track of items that have been processed in a database input table.

Spring Batch provides some implementations of ItemWriter and ItemReader. Usually, they say in the Javadoc if they are thread safe or not or what you have to do to avoid problems in a concurrent environment. If there is no information in the Javadoc, you can check the implementation to see if there is any state. If a reader is not thread safe, you can decorate it with the provided SynchronizedItemStreamReader or use it in your own synchronizing delegator. You can synchronize the call to read(), and, as long as the processing and writing is the most expensive part of the chunk, your step may still complete much more quickly than it would in a single-threaded configuration.

8.2. Parallel Steps

As long as the application logic that needs to be parallelized can be split into distinct responsibilities and assigned to individual steps, it can be parallelized in a single process. Parallel Step execution is easy to configure and use.

For example, executing steps (step1,step2) in parallel with step3 is straightforward, as follows:

<job id="job1">
    <split id="split1" task-executor="taskExecutor" next="step4">
        <flow>
            <step id="step1" parent="s1" next="step2"/>
            <step id="step2" parent="s2"/>
        </flow>
        <flow>
            <step id="step3" parent="s3"/>
        </flow>
    </split>
    <step id="step4" parent="s4"/>
</job>

<beans:bean id="taskExecutor" class="org.spr...SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor"/>

When using Java configuration, executing steps (step1,step2) in parallel with step3 is straightforward, as follows:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("job", jobRepository)
        .start(splitFlow())
        .next(step4())
        .build()        //builds FlowJobBuilder instance
        .build();       //builds Job instance
}

@Bean
public Flow splitFlow() {
    return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("splitFlow")
        .split(taskExecutor())
        .add(flow1(), flow2())
        .build();
}

@Bean
public Flow flow1() {
    return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("flow1")
        .start(step1())
        .next(step2())
        .build();
}

@Bean
public Flow flow2() {
    return new FlowBuilder<SimpleFlow>("flow2")
        .start(step3())
        .build();
}

@Bean
public TaskExecutor taskExecutor() {
    return new SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor("spring_batch");
}

The configurable task executor is used to specify which TaskExecutor implementation should execute the individual flows. The default is SyncTaskExecutor, but an asynchronous TaskExecutor is required to run the steps in parallel. Note that the job ensures that every flow in the split completes before aggregating the exit statuses and transitioning.

See the section on Split Flows for more detail.

8.3. Remote Chunking

In remote chunking, the Step processing is split across multiple processes, communicating with each other through some middleware. The following image shows the pattern:

Remote Chunking
Figure 23. Remote Chunking

The manager component is a single process, and the workers are multiple remote processes. This pattern works best if the manager is not a bottleneck, so the processing must be more expensive than the reading of items (as is often the case in practice).

The manager is an implementation of a Spring Batch Step with the ItemWriter replaced by a generic version that knows how to send chunks of items to the middleware as messages. The workers are standard listeners for whatever middleware is being used (for example, with JMS, they would be MesssageListener implementations), and their role is to process the chunks of items by using a standard ItemWriter or ItemProcessor plus an ItemWriter, through the ChunkProcessor interface. One of the advantages of using this pattern is that the reader, processor, and writer components are off-the-shelf (the same as would be used for a local execution of the step). The items are divided up dynamically, and work is shared through the middleware, so that, if the listeners are all eager consumers, load balancing is automatic.

The middleware has to be durable, with guaranteed delivery and a single consumer for each message. JMS is the obvious candidate, but other options (such as JavaSpaces) exist in the grid computing and shared memory product space.

See the section on Spring Batch Integration - Remote Chunking for more detail.

8.4. Partitioning

Spring Batch also provides an SPI for partitioning a Step execution and executing it remotely. In this case, the remote participants are Step instances that could just as easily have been configured and used for local processing. The following image shows the pattern:

Partitioning Overview
Figure 24. Partitioning

The Job runs on the left-hand side as a sequence of Step instances, and one of the Step instances is labeled as a manager. The workers in this picture are all identical instances of a Step, which could in fact take the place of the manager, resulting in the same outcome for the Job. The workers are typically going to be remote services but could also be local threads of execution. The messages sent by the manager to the workers in this pattern do not need to be durable or have guaranteed delivery. Spring Batch metadata in the JobRepository ensures that each worker is executed once and only once for each Job execution.

The SPI in Spring Batch consists of a special implementation of Step (called the PartitionStep) and two strategy interfaces that need to be implemented for the specific environment. The strategy interfaces are PartitionHandler and StepExecutionSplitter, and the following sequence diagram shows their role:

Partitioning SPI
Figure 25. Partitioning SPI

The Step on the right in this case is the “remote” worker, so, potentially, there are many objects and or processes playing this role, and the PartitionStep is shown driving the execution.

The following example shows the PartitionStep configuration when using XML configuration:

<step id="step1.manager">
    <partition step="step1" partitioner="partitioner">
        <handler grid-size="10" task-executor="taskExecutor"/>
    </partition>
</step>

Similar to the multi-threaded step’s throttle-limit attribute, the grid-size attribute prevents the task executor from being saturated with requests from a single step.

The following example shows the PartitionStep configuration when using Java configuration:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1Manager() {
    return stepBuilderFactory.get("step1.manager")
        .<String, String>partitioner("step1", partitioner())
        .step(step1())
        .gridSize(10)
        .taskExecutor(taskExecutor())
        .build();
}

Similar to the multi-threaded step’s throttleLimit method, the gridSize method prevents the task executor from being saturated with requests from a single step.

The unit test suite for Spring Batch Samples (see partition*Job.xml configuration) has a simple example that you can copy and extend.

Spring Batch creates step executions for the partition called step1:partition0 and so on. Many people prefer to call the manager step step1:manager for consistency. You can use an alias for the step (by specifying the name attribute instead of the id attribute).

8.4.1. PartitionHandler

PartitionHandler is the component that knows about the fabric of the remoting or grid environment. It is able to send StepExecution requests to the remote Step instances, wrapped in some fabric-specific format, like a DTO. It does not have to know how to split the input data or how to aggregate the result of multiple Step executions. Generally speaking, it probably also does not need to know about resilience or failover, since those are features of the fabric in many cases. In any case, Spring Batch always provides restartability independent of the fabric. A failed Job can always be restarted, and, in that case, only the failed Steps are re-executed.

The PartitionHandler interface can have specialized implementations for a variety of fabric types, including simple RMI remoting, EJB remoting, custom web service, JMS, Java Spaces, shared memory grids (such as Terracotta or Coherence), and grid execution fabrics (such as GridGain). Spring Batch does not contain implementations for any proprietary grid or remoting fabrics.

Spring Batch does, however, provide a useful implementation of PartitionHandler that executes Step instances locally in separate threads of execution, using the TaskExecutor strategy from Spring. The implementation is called TaskExecutorPartitionHandler.

The TaskExecutorPartitionHandler is the default for a step configured with the XML namespace shown previously. You can also configure it explicitly, as follows:

<step id="step1.manager">
    <partition step="step1" handler="handler"/>
</step>

<bean class="org.spr...TaskExecutorPartitionHandler">
    <property name="taskExecutor" ref="taskExecutor"/>
    <property name="step" ref="step1" />
    <property name="gridSize" value="10" />
</bean>

You can explicitly configure the TaskExecutorPartitionHandler with Java configuration, as follows:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step step1Manager() {
    return stepBuilderFactory.get("step1.manager")
        .partitioner("step1", partitioner())
        .partitionHandler(partitionHandler())
        .build();
}

@Bean
public PartitionHandler partitionHandler() {
    TaskExecutorPartitionHandler retVal = new TaskExecutorPartitionHandler();
    retVal.setTaskExecutor(taskExecutor());
    retVal.setStep(step1());
    retVal.setGridSize(10);
    return retVal;
}

The gridSize attribute determines the number of separate step executions to create, so it can be matched to the size of the thread pool in the TaskExecutor. Alternatively, it can be set to be larger than the number of threads available, which makes the blocks of work smaller.

The TaskExecutorPartitionHandler is useful for IO-intensive Step instances, such as copying large numbers of files or replicating filesystems into content management systems. It can also be used for remote execution by providing a Step implementation that is a proxy for a remote invocation (such as using Spring Remoting).

8.4.2. Partitioner

The Partitioner has a simpler responsibility: to generate execution contexts as input parameters for new step executions only (no need to worry about restarts). It has a single method, as the following interface definition shows:

public interface Partitioner {
    Map<String, ExecutionContext> partition(int gridSize);
}

The return value from this method associates a unique name for each step execution (the String) with input parameters in the form of an ExecutionContext. The names show up later in the Batch metadata as the step name in the partitioned StepExecutions. The ExecutionContext is just a bag of name-value pairs, so it might contain a range of primary keys, line numbers, or the location of an input file. The remote Step then normally binds to the context input by using #{…​} placeholders (late binding in step scope), as shown in the next section.

The names of the step executions (the keys in the Map returned by Partitioner) need to be unique amongst the step executions of a Job but do not have any other specific requirements. The easiest way to do this (and to make the names meaningful for users) is to use a prefix+suffix naming convention, where the prefix is the name of the step that is being executed (which itself is unique in the Job) and the suffix is just a counter. There is a SimplePartitioner in the framework that uses this convention.

You can use an optional interface called PartitionNameProvider to provide the partition names separately from the partitions themselves. If a Partitioner implements this interface, only the names are queried on a restart. If partitioning is expensive, this can be a useful optimization. The names provided by the PartitionNameProvider must match those provided by the Partitioner.

8.4.3. Binding Input Data to Steps

It is very efficient for the steps that are executed by the PartitionHandler to have identical configuration and for their input parameters to be bound at runtime from the ExecutionContext. This is easy to do with the StepScope feature of Spring Batch (covered in more detail in the section on Late Binding). For example, if the Partitioner creates ExecutionContext instances with an attribute key called fileName, pointing to a different file (or directory) for each step invocation, the Partitioner output might resemble the content of the following table:

Table 17. Example step execution name to execution context provided by Partitioner targeting directory processing

Step Execution Name (key)

ExecutionContext (value)

filecopy:partition0

fileName=/home/data/one

filecopy:partition1

fileName=/home/data/two

filecopy:partition2

fileName=/home/data/three

Then the file name can be bound to a step by using late binding to the execution context.

The following example shows how to define late binding in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" scope="step"
      class="org.spr...MultiResourceItemReader">
    <property name="resources" value="#{stepExecutionContext[fileName]}/*"/>
</bean>

The following example shows how to define late binding in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public MultiResourceItemReader itemReader(
	@Value("#{stepExecutionContext['fileName']}/*") Resource [] resources) {
	return new MultiResourceItemReaderBuilder<String>()
			.delegate(fileReader())
			.name("itemReader")
			.resources(resources)
			.build();
}

9. Repeat

9.1. RepeatTemplate

Batch processing is about repetitive actions, either as a simple optimization or as part of a job. To strategize and generalize the repetition and to provide what amounts to an iterator framework, Spring Batch has the RepeatOperations interface. The RepeatOperations interface has the following definition:

public interface RepeatOperations {

    RepeatStatus iterate(RepeatCallback callback) throws RepeatException;

}

The callback is an interface, shown in the following definition, that lets you insert some business logic to be repeated:

public interface RepeatCallback {

    RepeatStatus doInIteration(RepeatContext context) throws Exception;

}

The callback is executed repeatedly until the implementation determines that the iteration should end. The return value in these interfaces is an enumeration value that can be either RepeatStatus.CONTINUABLE or RepeatStatus.FINISHED. A RepeatStatus enumeration conveys information to the caller of the repeat operations about whether any work remains. Generally speaking, implementations of RepeatOperations should inspect RepeatStatus and use it as part of the decision to end the iteration. Any callback that wishes to signal to the caller that there is no work remains can return RepeatStatus.FINISHED.

The simplest general purpose implementation of RepeatOperations is RepeatTemplate:

RepeatTemplate template = new RepeatTemplate();

template.setCompletionPolicy(new SimpleCompletionPolicy(2));

template.iterate(new RepeatCallback() {

    public RepeatStatus doInIteration(RepeatContext context) {
        // Do stuff in batch...
        return RepeatStatus.CONTINUABLE;
    }

});

In the preceding example, we return RepeatStatus.CONTINUABLE, to show that there is more work to do. The callback can also return RepeatStatus.FINISHED, to signal to the caller that there is no work remains. Some iterations can be terminated by considerations intrinsic to the work being done in the callback. Others are effectively infinite loops (as far as the callback is concerned), and the completion decision is delegated to an external policy, as in the case shown in the preceding example.

9.1.1. RepeatContext

The method parameter for the RepeatCallback is a RepeatContext. Many callbacks ignore the context. However, if necessary, you can use it as an attribute bag to store transient data for the duration of the iteration. After the iterate method returns, the context no longer exists.

If there is a nested iteration in progress, a RepeatContext has a parent context. The parent context is occasionally useful for storing data that need to be shared between calls to iterate. This is the case, for instance, if you want to count the number of occurrences of an event in the iteration and remember it across subsequent calls.

9.1.2. RepeatStatus

RepeatStatus is an enumeration used by Spring Batch to indicate whether processing has finished. It has two possible RepeatStatus values:

Table 18. RepeatStatus Properties

Value

Description

CONTINUABLE

There is more work to do.

FINISHED

No more repetitions should take place.

You can combine RepeatStatus values with a logical AND operation by using the and() method in RepeatStatus. The effect of this is to do a logical AND on the continuable flag. In other words, if either status is FINISHED, the result is FINISHED.

9.2. Completion Policies

Inside a RepeatTemplate, the termination of the loop in the iterate method is determined by a CompletionPolicy, which is also a factory for the RepeatContext. The RepeatTemplate has the responsibility to use the current policy to create a RepeatContext and pass that in to the RepeatCallback at every stage in the iteration. After a callback completes its doInIteration, the RepeatTemplate has to make a call to the CompletionPolicy to ask it to update its state (which will be stored in the RepeatContext). Then it asks the policy if the iteration is complete.

Spring Batch provides some simple general purpose implementations of CompletionPolicy. SimpleCompletionPolicy allows execution up to a fixed number of times (with RepeatStatus.FINISHED forcing early completion at any time).

Users might need to implement their own completion policies for more complicated decisions. For example, a batch processing window that prevents batch jobs from executing once the online systems are in use would require a custom policy.

9.3. Exception Handling

If there is an exception thrown inside a RepeatCallback, the RepeatTemplate consults an ExceptionHandler, which can decide whether or not to re-throw the exception.

The following listing shows the ExceptionHandler interface definition:

public interface ExceptionHandler {

    void handleException(RepeatContext context, Throwable throwable)
        throws Throwable;

}

A common use case is to count the number of exceptions of a given type and fail when a limit is reached. For this purpose, Spring Batch provides the SimpleLimitExceptionHandler and a slightly more flexible RethrowOnThresholdExceptionHandler. The SimpleLimitExceptionHandler has a limit property and an exception type that should be compared with the current exception. All subclasses of the provided type are also counted. Exceptions of the given type are ignored until the limit is reached, and then they are rethrown. Exceptions of other types are always rethrown.

An important optional property of the SimpleLimitExceptionHandler is the boolean flag called useParent. It is false by default, so the limit is only accounted for in the current RepeatContext. When set to true, the limit is kept across sibling contexts in a nested iteration (such as a set of chunks inside a step).

9.4. Listeners

Often, it is useful to be able to receive additional callbacks for cross-cutting concerns across a number of different iterations. For this purpose, Spring Batch provides the RepeatListener interface. The RepeatTemplate lets users register RepeatListener implementations, and they are given callbacks with the RepeatContext and RepeatStatus where available during the iteration.

The RepeatListener interface has the following definition:

public interface RepeatListener {
    void before(RepeatContext context);
    void after(RepeatContext context, RepeatStatus result);
    void open(RepeatContext context);
    void onError(RepeatContext context, Throwable e);
    void close(RepeatContext context);
}

The open and close callbacks come before and after the entire iteration. before, after, and onError apply to the individual RepeatCallback calls.

Note that, when there is more than one listener, they are in a list, so there is an order. In this case, open and before are called in the same order while after, onError, and close are called in reverse order.

9.5. Parallel Processing

Implementations of RepeatOperations are not restricted to executing the callback sequentially. It is quite important that some implementations are able to execute their callbacks in parallel. To this end, Spring Batch provides the TaskExecutorRepeatTemplate, which uses the Spring TaskExecutor strategy to run the RepeatCallback. The default is to use a SynchronousTaskExecutor, which has the effect of executing the whole iteration in the same thread (the same as a normal RepeatTemplate).

9.6. Declarative Iteration

Sometimes, there is some business processing that you know you want to repeat every time it happens. The classic example of this is the optimization of a message pipeline. If a batch of messages arrives frequently, it is more efficient to process them than to bear the cost of a separate transaction for every message. Spring Batch provides an AOP interceptor that wraps a method call in a RepeatOperations object for this purpose. The RepeatOperationsInterceptor executes the intercepted method and repeats according to the CompletionPolicy in the provided RepeatTemplate.

The following example shows declarative iteration that uses the Spring AOP namespace to repeat a service call to a method called processMessage (for more detail on how to configure AOP interceptors, see the <<https://docs.spring.io/spring-framework/docs/current/reference/html/core.html#aop,Spring User Guide>>):

<aop:config>
    <aop:pointcut id="transactional"
        expression="execution(* com..*Service.processMessage(..))" />
    <aop:advisor pointcut-ref="transactional"
        advice-ref="retryAdvice" order="-1"/>
</aop:config>

<bean id="retryAdvice" class="org.spr...RepeatOperationsInterceptor"/>

The following example uses Java configuration to repeat a service call to a method called processMessage (for more detail on how to configure AOP interceptors, see the <<https://docs.spring.io/spring-framework/docs/current/reference/html/core.html#aop,Spring User Guide>>):

@Bean
public MyService myService() {
	ProxyFactory factory = new ProxyFactory(RepeatOperations.class.getClassLoader());
	factory.setInterfaces(MyService.class);
	factory.setTarget(new MyService());

	MyService service = (MyService) factory.getProxy();
	JdkRegexpMethodPointcut pointcut = new JdkRegexpMethodPointcut();
	pointcut.setPatterns(".*processMessage.*");

	RepeatOperationsInterceptor interceptor = new RepeatOperationsInterceptor();

	((Advised) service).addAdvisor(new DefaultPointcutAdvisor(pointcut, interceptor));

	return service;
}

The preceding example uses a default RepeatTemplate inside the interceptor. To change the policies, listeners, and other details, you can inject an instance of RepeatTemplate into the interceptor.

If the intercepted method returns void, the interceptor always returns RepeatStatus.CONTINUABLE (so there is a danger of an infinite loop if the CompletionPolicy does not have a finite end point). Otherwise, it returns RepeatStatus.CONTINUABLE until the return value from the intercepted method is null. At that point, it returns RepeatStatus.FINISHED. Consequently, the business logic inside the target method can signal that there is no more work to do by returning null or by throwing an exception that is rethrown by the ExceptionHandler in the provided RepeatTemplate.

10. Retry

To make processing more robust and less prone to failure, it sometimes helps to automatically retry a failed operation in case it might succeed on a subsequent attempt. Errors that are susceptible to intermittent failure are often transient in nature. Examples include remote calls to a web service that fails because of a network glitch or a DeadlockLoserDataAccessException in a database update.

As of version 2.2.0, the retry functionality was pulled out of Spring Batch. It is now part of a new library, Spring Retry. Spring Batch still relies on Spring Retry to automate retry operations within the framework. See the reference documentation of Spring Retry for details about key APIs and how to use them.

11. Unit Testing

As with other application styles, it is extremely important to unit test any code written as part of a batch job. The Spring core documentation covers how to unit and integration test with Spring in great detail, so it is not be repeated here. It is important, however, to think about how to “end to end” test a batch job, which is what this chapter covers. The spring-batch-test project includes classes that facilitate this end-to-end test approach.

11.1. Creating a Unit Test Class

For the unit test to run a batch job, the framework must load the job’s ApplicationContext. Two annotations are used to trigger this behavior:

  • @SpringJUnitConfig indicates that the class should use Spring’s JUnit facilities

  • @SpringBatchTest injects Spring Batch test utilities (such as the JobLauncherTestUtils and JobRepositoryTestUtils) in the test context

If the test context contains a single Job bean definition, this bean will be autowired in JobLauncherTestUtils. Otherwise, the job under test should be manually set on the JobLauncherTestUtils.

The following Java example shows the annotations in use:

Using Java Configuration
@SpringBatchTest
@SpringJUnitConfig(SkipSampleConfiguration.class)
public class SkipSampleFunctionalTests { ... }

The following XML example shows the annotations in use:

Using XML Configuration
@SpringBatchTest
@SpringJUnitConfig(locations = { "/simple-job-launcher-context.xml",
                                    "/jobs/skipSampleJob.xml" })
public class SkipSampleFunctionalTests { ... }

11.2. End-To-End Testing of Batch Jobs

“End To end” testing can be defined as testing the complete run of a batch job from beginning to end. This allows for a test that sets up a test condition, executes the job, and verifies the end result.

Consider an example of a batch job that reads from the database and writes to a flat file. The test method begins by setting up the database with test data. It clears the CUSTOMER table and then inserts 10 new records. The test then launches the Job by using the launchJob() method. The launchJob() method is provided by the JobLauncherTestUtils class. The JobLauncherTestUtils class also provides the launchJob(JobParameters) method, which lets the test give particular parameters. The launchJob() method returns the JobExecution object, which is useful for asserting particular information about the Job run. In the following case, the test verifies that the Job ended with a status of COMPLETED.

The following listing shows an example with JUnit 5 in XML configuration style:

XML Based Configuration
@SpringBatchTest
@SpringJUnitConfig(locations = { "/simple-job-launcher-context.xml",
                                    "/jobs/skipSampleJob.xml" })
public class SkipSampleFunctionalTests {

    @Autowired
    private JobLauncherTestUtils jobLauncherTestUtils;

    private JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;

    @Autowired
    public void setDataSource(DataSource dataSource) {
        this.jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
    }

    @Test
    public void testJob(@Autowired Job job) throws Exception {
        this.jobLauncherTestUtils.setJob(job);
        this.jdbcTemplate.update("delete from CUSTOMER");
        for (int i = 1; i <= 10; i++) {
            this.jdbcTemplate.update("insert into CUSTOMER values (?, 0, ?, 100000)",
                                      i, "customer" + i);
        }

        JobExecution jobExecution = jobLauncherTestUtils.launchJob();


        Assert.assertEquals("COMPLETED", jobExecution.getExitStatus().getExitCode());
    }
}

The following listing shows an example with JUnit 5 in Java configuration style:

Java Based Configuration
@SpringBatchTest
@SpringJUnitConfig(SkipSampleConfiguration.class)
public class SkipSampleFunctionalTests {

    @Autowired
    private JobLauncherTestUtils jobLauncherTestUtils;

    private JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;

    @Autowired
    public void setDataSource(DataSource dataSource) {
        this.jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
    }

    @Test
    public void testJob(@Autowired Job job) throws Exception {
        this.jobLauncherTestUtils.setJob(job);
        this.jdbcTemplate.update("delete from CUSTOMER");
        for (int i = 1; i <= 10; i++) {
            this.jdbcTemplate.update("insert into CUSTOMER values (?, 0, ?, 100000)",
                                      i, "customer" + i);
        }

        JobExecution jobExecution = jobLauncherTestUtils.launchJob();


        Assert.assertEquals("COMPLETED", jobExecution.getExitStatus().getExitCode());
    }
}

11.3. Testing Individual Steps

For complex batch jobs, test cases in the end-to-end testing approach may become unmanageable. It these cases, it may be more useful to have test cases to test individual steps on their own. The JobLauncherTestUtils class contains a method called launchStep, which takes a step name and runs just that particular Step. This approach allows for more targeted tests letting the test set up data for only that step and to validate its results directly. The following example shows how to use the launchStep method to load a Step by name:

JobExecution jobExecution = jobLauncherTestUtils.launchStep("loadFileStep");

11.4. Testing Step-Scoped Components

Often, the components that are configured for your steps at runtime use step scope and late binding to inject context from the step or job execution. These are tricky to test as standalone components, unless you have a way to set the context as if they were in a step execution. That is the goal of two components in Spring Batch: StepScopeTestExecutionListener and StepScopeTestUtils.

The listener is declared at the class level, and its job is to create a step execution context for each test method, as the following example shows:

@SpringJUnitConfig
@TestExecutionListeners( { DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener.class,
    StepScopeTestExecutionListener.class })
public class StepScopeTestExecutionListenerIntegrationTests {

    // This component is defined step-scoped, so it cannot be injected unless
    // a step is active...
    @Autowired
    private ItemReader<String> reader;

    public StepExecution getStepExecution() {
        StepExecution execution = MetaDataInstanceFactory.createStepExecution();
        execution.getExecutionContext().putString("input.data", "foo,bar,spam");
        return execution;
    }

    @Test
    public void testReader() {
        // The reader is initialized and bound to the input data
        assertNotNull(reader.read());
    }

}

There are two TestExecutionListeners. One is the regular Spring Test framework, which handles dependency injection from the configured application context to inject the reader. The other is the Spring Batch StepScopeTestExecutionListener. It works by looking for a factory method in the test case for a StepExecution, using that as the context for the test method, as if that execution were active in a Step at runtime. The factory method is detected by its signature (it must return a StepExecution). If a factory method is not provided, a default StepExecution is created.

Starting from v4.1, the StepScopeTestExecutionListener and JobScopeTestExecutionListener are imported as test execution listeners if the test class is annotated with @SpringBatchTest. The preceding test example can be configured as follows:

@SpringBatchTest
@SpringJUnitConfig
public class StepScopeTestExecutionListenerIntegrationTests {

    // This component is defined step-scoped, so it cannot be injected unless
    // a step is active...
    @Autowired
    private ItemReader<String> reader;

    public StepExecution getStepExecution() {
        StepExecution execution = MetaDataInstanceFactory.createStepExecution();
        execution.getExecutionContext().putString("input.data", "foo,bar,spam");
        return execution;
    }

    @Test
    public void testReader() {
        // The reader is initialized and bound to the input data
        assertNotNull(reader.read());
    }

}

The listener approach is convenient if you want the duration of the step scope to be the execution of the test method. For a more flexible but more invasive approach, you can use the StepScopeTestUtils. The following example counts the number of items available in the reader shown in the previous example:

int count = StepScopeTestUtils.doInStepScope(stepExecution,
    new Callable<Integer>() {
      public Integer call() throws Exception {

        int count = 0;

        while (reader.read() != null) {
           count++;
        }
        return count;
    }
});

11.5. Validating Output Files

When a batch job writes to the database, it is easy to query the database to verify that the output is as expected. However, if the batch job writes to a file, it is equally important that the output be verified. Spring Batch provides a class called AssertFile to facilitate the verification of output files. The method called assertFileEquals takes two File objects (or two Resource objects) and asserts, line by line, that the two files have the same content. Therefore, it is possible to create a file with the expected output and to compare it to the actual result, as the following example shows:

private static final String EXPECTED_FILE = "src/main/resources/data/input.txt";
private static final String OUTPUT_FILE = "target/test-outputs/output.txt";

AssertFile.assertFileEquals(new FileSystemResource(EXPECTED_FILE),
                            new FileSystemResource(OUTPUT_FILE));

11.6. Mocking Domain Objects

Another common issue encountered while writing unit and integration tests for Spring Batch components is how to mock domain objects. A good example is a StepExecutionListener, as the following code snippet shows:

public class NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener extends StepExecutionListenerSupport {

    public ExitStatus afterStep(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        if (stepExecution.getReadCount() == 0) {
            return ExitStatus.FAILED;
        }
        return null;
    }
}

The framework provides the preceding listener example and checks a StepExecution for an empty read count, thus signifying that no work was done. While this example is fairly simple, it serves to illustrate the types of problems that you may encounter when you try to unit test classes that implement interfaces requiring Spring Batch domain objects. Consider the following unit test for the listener’s in the preceding example:

private NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener tested = new NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener();

@Test
public void noWork() {
    StepExecution stepExecution = new StepExecution("NoProcessingStep",
                new JobExecution(new JobInstance(1L, new JobParameters(),
                                 "NoProcessingJob")));

    stepExecution.setExitStatus(ExitStatus.COMPLETED);
    stepExecution.setReadCount(0);

    ExitStatus exitStatus = tested.afterStep(stepExecution);
    assertEquals(ExitStatus.FAILED.getExitCode(), exitStatus.getExitCode());
}

Because the Spring Batch domain model follows good object-oriented principles, the StepExecution requires a JobExecution, which requires a JobInstance and JobParameters, to create a valid StepExecution. While this is good in a solid domain model, it does make creating stub objects for unit testing verbose. To address this issue, the Spring Batch test module includes a factory for creating domain objects: MetaDataInstanceFactory. Given this factory, the unit test can be updated to be more concise, as the following example shows:

private NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener tested = new NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener();

@Test
public void testAfterStep() {
    StepExecution stepExecution = MetaDataInstanceFactory.createStepExecution();

    stepExecution.setExitStatus(ExitStatus.COMPLETED);
    stepExecution.setReadCount(0);

    ExitStatus exitStatus = tested.afterStep(stepExecution);
    assertEquals(ExitStatus.FAILED.getExitCode(), exitStatus.getExitCode());
}

The preceding method for creating a simple StepExecution is only one convenience method available within the factory. You can find a full method listing in its Javadoc.

12. Common Batch Patterns

Some batch jobs can be assembled purely from off-the-shelf components in Spring Batch. For instance, the ItemReader and ItemWriter implementations can be configured to cover a wide range of scenarios. However, for the majority of cases, custom code must be written. The main API entry points for application developers are the Tasklet, the ItemReader, the ItemWriter, and the various listener interfaces. Most simple batch jobs can use off-the-shelf input from a Spring Batch ItemReader, but it is often the case that there are custom concerns in the processing and writing that require developers to implement an ItemWriter or ItemProcessor.

In this chapter, we provide a few examples of common patterns in custom business logic. These examples primarily feature the listener interfaces. It should be noted that an ItemReader or ItemWriter can implement a listener interface as well, if appropriate.

12.1. Logging Item Processing and Failures

A common use case is the need for special handling of errors in a step, item by item, perhaps logging to a special channel or inserting a record into a database. A chunk-oriented Step (created from the step factory beans) lets users implement this use case with a simple ItemReadListener for errors on read and an ItemWriteListener for errors on write. The following code snippet illustrates a listener that logs both read and write failures:

public class ItemFailureLoggerListener extends ItemListenerSupport {

    private static Log logger = LogFactory.getLog("item.error");

    public void onReadError(Exception ex) {
        logger.error("Encountered error on read", e);
    }

    public void onWriteError(Exception ex, List<? extends Object> items) {
        logger.error("Encountered error on write", ex);
    }
}

Having implemented this listener, it must be registered with a step.

The following example shows how to register a listener with a step in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="simpleStep">
...
<listeners>
    <listener>
        <bean class="org.example...ItemFailureLoggerListener"/>
    </listener>
</listeners>
</step>

The following example shows how to register a listener with a step Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step simpleStep(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new StepBuilder("simpleStep", jobRepository)
				...
				.listener(new ItemFailureLoggerListener())
				.build();
}
if your listener does anything in an onError() method, it must be inside a transaction that is going to be rolled back. If you need to use a transactional resource, such as a database, inside an onError() method, consider adding a declarative transaction to that method (see Spring Core Reference Guide for details), and giving its propagation attribute a value of REQUIRES_NEW.

12.2. Stopping a Job Manually for Business Reasons

Spring Batch provides a stop() method through the JobOperator interface, but this is really for use by the operator rather than the application programmer. Sometimes, it is more convenient or makes more sense to stop a job execution from within the business logic.

The simplest thing to do is to throw a RuntimeException (one that is neither retried indefinitely nor skipped). For example, a custom exception type could be used, as shown in the following example:

public class PoisonPillItemProcessor<T> implements ItemProcessor<T, T> {

    @Override
    public T process(T item) throws Exception {
        if (isPoisonPill(item)) {
            throw new PoisonPillException("Poison pill detected: " + item);
        }
        return item;
    }
}

Another simple way to stop a step from executing is to return null from the ItemReader, as shown in the following example:

public class EarlyCompletionItemReader implements ItemReader<T> {

    private ItemReader<T> delegate;

    public void setDelegate(ItemReader<T> delegate) { ... }

    public T read() throws Exception {
        T item = delegate.read();
        if (isEndItem(item)) {
            return null; // end the step here
        }
        return item;
    }

}

The previous example actually relies on the fact that there is a default implementation of the CompletionPolicy strategy that signals a complete batch when the item to be processed is null. A more sophisticated completion policy could be implemented and injected into the Step through the SimpleStepFactoryBean.

The following example shows how to inject a completion policy into a step in XML:

XML Configuration
<step id="simpleStep">
    <tasklet>
        <chunk reader="reader" writer="writer" commit-interval="10"
               chunk-completion-policy="completionPolicy"/>
    </tasklet>
</step>

<bean id="completionPolicy" class="org.example...SpecialCompletionPolicy"/>

The following example shows how to inject a completion policy into a step in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Step simpleStep(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("simpleStep", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(new SpecialCompletionPolicy(), transactionManager)
				.reader(reader())
				.writer(writer())
				.build();
}

An alternative is to set a flag in the StepExecution, which is checked by the Step implementations in the framework in between item processing. To implement this alternative, we need access to the current StepExecution, and this can be achieved by implementing a StepListener and registering it with the Step. The following example shows a listener that sets the flag:

public class CustomItemWriter extends ItemListenerSupport implements StepListener {

    private StepExecution stepExecution;

    public void beforeStep(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        this.stepExecution = stepExecution;
    }

    public void afterRead(Object item) {
        if (isPoisonPill(item)) {
            stepExecution.setTerminateOnly();
       }
    }

}

When the flag is set, the default behavior is for the step to throw a JobInterruptedException. This behavior can be controlled through the StepInterruptionPolicy. However, the only choice is to throw or not throw an exception, so this is always an abnormal ending to a job.

12.3. Adding a Footer Record

Often, when writing to flat files, a “footer” record must be appended to the end of the file, after all processing has be completed. This can be achieved using the FlatFileFooterCallback interface provided by Spring Batch. The FlatFileFooterCallback (and its counterpart, the FlatFileHeaderCallback) are optional properties of the FlatFileItemWriter and can be added to an item writer.

The following example shows how to use the FlatFileHeaderCallback and the FlatFileFooterCallback in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter" class="org.spr...FlatFileItemWriter">
    <property name="resource" ref="outputResource" />
    <property name="lineAggregator" ref="lineAggregator"/>
    <property name="headerCallback" ref="headerCallback" />
    <property name="footerCallback" ref="footerCallback" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to use the FlatFileHeaderCallback and the FlatFileFooterCallback in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<String> itemWriter(Resource outputResource) {
	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<String>()
			.name("itemWriter")
			.resource(outputResource)
			.lineAggregator(lineAggregator())
			.headerCallback(headerCallback())
			.footerCallback(footerCallback())
			.build();
}

The footer callback interface has just one method that is called when the footer must be written, as shown in the following interface definition:

public interface FlatFileFooterCallback {

    void writeFooter(Writer writer) throws IOException;

}

12.3.1. Writing a Summary Footer

A common requirement involving footer records is to aggregate information during the output process and to append this information to the end of the file. This footer often serves as a summarization of the file or provides a checksum.

For example, if a batch job is writing Trade records to a flat file, and there is a requirement that the total amount from all the Trades is placed in a footer, then the following ItemWriter implementation can be used:

public class TradeItemWriter implements ItemWriter<Trade>,
                                        FlatFileFooterCallback {

    private ItemWriter<Trade> delegate;

    private BigDecimal totalAmount = BigDecimal.ZERO;

    public void write(Chunk<? extends Trade> items) throws Exception {
        BigDecimal chunkTotal = BigDecimal.ZERO;
        for (Trade trade : items) {
            chunkTotal = chunkTotal.add(trade.getAmount());
        }

        delegate.write(items);

        // After successfully writing all items
        totalAmount = totalAmount.add(chunkTotal);
    }

    public void writeFooter(Writer writer) throws IOException {
        writer.write("Total Amount Processed: " + totalAmount);
    }

    public void setDelegate(ItemWriter delegate) {...}
}

This TradeItemWriter stores a totalAmount value that is increased with the amount from each Trade item written. After the last Trade is processed, the framework calls writeFooter, which puts the totalAmount into the file. Note that the write method makes use of a temporary variable, chunkTotal, that stores the total of the Trade amounts in the chunk. This is done to ensure that, if a skip occurs in the write method, the totalAmount is left unchanged. It is only at the end of the write method, once we are guaranteed that no exceptions are thrown, that we update the totalAmount.

In order for the writeFooter method to be called, the TradeItemWriter (which implements FlatFileFooterCallback) must be wired into the FlatFileItemWriter as the footerCallback.

The following example shows how to wire the TradeItemWriter in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="tradeItemWriter" class="..TradeItemWriter">
    <property name="delegate" ref="flatFileItemWriter" />
</bean>

<bean id="flatFileItemWriter" class="org.spr...FlatFileItemWriter">
   <property name="resource" ref="outputResource" />
   <property name="lineAggregator" ref="lineAggregator"/>
   <property name="footerCallback" ref="tradeItemWriter" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to wire the TradeItemWriter in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public TradeItemWriter tradeItemWriter() {
	TradeItemWriter itemWriter = new TradeItemWriter();

	itemWriter.setDelegate(flatFileItemWriter(null));

	return itemWriter;
}

@Bean
public FlatFileItemWriter<String> flatFileItemWriter(Resource outputResource) {
	return new FlatFileItemWriterBuilder<String>()
			.name("itemWriter")
			.resource(outputResource)
			.lineAggregator(lineAggregator())
			.footerCallback(tradeItemWriter())
			.build();
}

The way that the TradeItemWriter has been written so far functions correctly only if the Step is not restartable. This is because the class is stateful (since it stores the totalAmount), but the totalAmount is not persisted to the database. Therefore, it cannot be retrieved in the event of a restart. In order to make this class restartable, the ItemStream interface should be implemented along with the methods open and update, as shown in the following example:

public void open(ExecutionContext executionContext) {
    if (executionContext.containsKey("total.amount") {
        totalAmount = (BigDecimal) executionContext.get("total.amount");
    }
}

public void update(ExecutionContext executionContext) {
    executionContext.put("total.amount", totalAmount);
}

The update method stores the most current version of totalAmount to the ExecutionContext just before that object is persisted to the database. The open method retrieves any existing totalAmount from the ExecutionContext and uses it as the starting point for processing, allowing the TradeItemWriter to pick up on restart where it left off the previous time the Step was run.

12.4. Driving Query Based ItemReaders

In the chapter on readers and writers, database input using paging was discussed. Many database vendors, such as DB2, have extremely pessimistic locking strategies that can cause issues if the table being read also needs to be used by other portions of the online application. Furthermore, opening cursors over extremely large datasets can cause issues on databases from certain vendors. Therefore, many projects prefer to use a 'Driving Query' approach to reading in data. This approach works by iterating over keys, rather than the entire object that needs to be returned, as the following image illustrates:

Driving Query Job
Figure 26. Driving Query Job

As you can see, the example shown in the preceding image uses the same 'FOO' table as was used in the cursor-based example. However, rather than selecting the entire row, only the IDs were selected in the SQL statement. So, rather than a FOO object being returned from read, an Integer is returned. This number can then be used to query for the 'details', which is a complete Foo object, as shown in the following image:

Driving Query Example
Figure 27. Driving Query Example

An ItemProcessor should be used to transform the key obtained from the driving query into a full Foo object. An existing DAO can be used to query for the full object based on the key.

12.5. Multi-Line Records

While it is usually the case with flat files that each record is confined to a single line, it is common that a file might have records spanning multiple lines with multiple formats. The following excerpt from a file shows an example of such an arrangement:

HEA;0013100345;2007-02-15
NCU;Smith;Peter;;T;20014539;F
BAD;;Oak Street 31/A;;Small Town;00235;IL;US
FOT;2;2;267.34

Everything between the line starting with 'HEA' and the line starting with 'FOT' is considered one record. There are a few considerations that must be made in order to handle this situation correctly:

  • Instead of reading one record at a time, the ItemReader must read every line of the multi-line record as a group, so that it can be passed to the ItemWriter intact.

  • Each line type may need to be tokenized differently.

Because a single record spans multiple lines and because we may not know how many lines there are, the ItemReader must be careful to always read an entire record. In order to do this, a custom ItemReader should be implemented as a wrapper for the FlatFileItemReader.

The following example shows how to implement a custom ItemReader in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.spr...MultiLineTradeItemReader">
    <property name="delegate">
        <bean class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader">
            <property name="resource" value="data/iosample/input/multiLine.txt" />
            <property name="lineMapper">
                <bean class="org.spr...DefaultLineMapper">
                    <property name="lineTokenizer" ref="orderFileTokenizer"/>
                    <property name="fieldSetMapper" ref="orderFieldSetMapper"/>
                </bean>
            </property>
        </bean>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to implement a custom ItemReader in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public MultiLineTradeItemReader itemReader() {
	MultiLineTradeItemReader itemReader = new MultiLineTradeItemReader();

	itemReader.setDelegate(flatFileItemReader());

	return itemReader;
}

@Bean
public FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader() {
	FlatFileItemReader<Trade> reader = new FlatFileItemReaderBuilder<>()
			.name("flatFileItemReader")
			.resource(new ClassPathResource("data/iosample/input/multiLine.txt"))
			.lineTokenizer(orderFileTokenizer())
			.fieldSetMapper(orderFieldSetMapper())
			.build();
	return reader;
}

To ensure that each line is tokenized properly, which is especially important for fixed-length input, the PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer can be used on the delegate FlatFileItemReader. See FlatFileItemReader in the Readers and Writers chapter for more details. The delegate reader then uses a PassThroughFieldSetMapper to deliver a FieldSet for each line back to the wrapping ItemReader.

The following example shows how to ensure that each line is properly tokenized in XML:

XML Content
<bean id="orderFileTokenizer" class="org.spr...PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer">
    <property name="tokenizers">
        <map>
            <entry key="HEA*" value-ref="headerRecordTokenizer" />
            <entry key="FOT*" value-ref="footerRecordTokenizer" />
            <entry key="NCU*" value-ref="customerLineTokenizer" />
            <entry key="BAD*" value-ref="billingAddressLineTokenizer" />
        </map>
    </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to ensure that each line is properly tokenized in Java:

Java Content
@Bean
public PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer orderFileTokenizer() {
	PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer tokenizer =
			new PatternMatchingCompositeLineTokenizer();

	Map<String, LineTokenizer> tokenizers = new HashMap<>(4);

	tokenizers.put("HEA*", headerRecordTokenizer());
	tokenizers.put("FOT*", footerRecordTokenizer());
	tokenizers.put("NCU*", customerLineTokenizer());
	tokenizers.put("BAD*", billingAddressLineTokenizer());

	tokenizer.setTokenizers(tokenizers);

	return tokenizer;
}

This wrapper has to be able to recognize the end of a record so that it can continually call read() on its delegate until the end is reached. For each line that is read, the wrapper should build up the item to be returned. Once the footer is reached, the item can be returned for delivery to the ItemProcessor and ItemWriter, as shown in the following example:

private FlatFileItemReader<FieldSet> delegate;

public Trade read() throws Exception {
    Trade t = null;

    for (FieldSet line = null; (line = this.delegate.read()) != null;) {
        String prefix = line.readString(0);
        if (prefix.equals("HEA")) {
            t = new Trade(); // Record must start with header
        }
        else if (prefix.equals("NCU")) {
            Assert.notNull(t, "No header was found.");
            t.setLast(line.readString(1));
            t.setFirst(line.readString(2));
            ...
        }
        else if (prefix.equals("BAD")) {
            Assert.notNull(t, "No header was found.");
            t.setCity(line.readString(4));
            t.setState(line.readString(6));
          ...
        }
        else if (prefix.equals("FOT")) {
            return t; // Record must end with footer
        }
    }
    Assert.isNull(t, "No 'END' was found.");
    return null;
}

12.6. Executing System Commands

Many batch jobs require that an external command be called from within the batch job. Such a process could be kicked off separately by the scheduler, but the advantage of common metadata about the run would be lost. Furthermore, a multi-step job would also need to be split up into multiple jobs as well.

Because the need is so common, Spring Batch provides a Tasklet implementation for calling system commands.

The following example shows how to call an external command in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean class="org.springframework.batch.core.step.tasklet.SystemCommandTasklet">
    <property name="command" value="echo hello" />
    <!-- 5 second timeout for the command to complete -->
    <property name="timeout" value="5000" />
</bean>

The following example shows how to call an external command in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public SystemCommandTasklet tasklet() {
	SystemCommandTasklet tasklet = new SystemCommandTasklet();

	tasklet.setCommand("echo hello");
	tasklet.setTimeout(5000);

	return tasklet;
}

12.7. Handling Step Completion When No Input is Found

In many batch scenarios, finding no rows in a database or file to process is not exceptional. The Step is simply considered to have found no work and completes with 0 items read. All of the ItemReader implementations provided out of the box in Spring Batch default to this approach. This can lead to some confusion if nothing is written out even when input is present (which usually happens if a file was misnamed or some similar issue arises). For this reason, the metadata itself should be inspected to determine how much work the framework found to be processed. However, what if finding no input is considered exceptional? In this case, programmatically checking the metadata for no items processed and causing failure is the best solution. Because this is a common use case, Spring Batch provides a listener with exactly this functionality, as shown in the class definition for NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener:

public class NoWorkFoundStepExecutionListener extends StepExecutionListenerSupport {

    public ExitStatus afterStep(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        if (stepExecution.getReadCount() == 0) {
            return ExitStatus.FAILED;
        }
        return null;
    }

}

The preceding StepExecutionListener inspects the readCount property of the StepExecution during the 'afterStep' phase to determine if no items were read. If that is the case, an exit code FAILED is returned, indicating that the Step should fail. Otherwise, null is returned, which does not affect the status of the Step.

12.8. Passing Data to Future Steps

It is often useful to pass information from one step to another. This can be done through the ExecutionContext. The catch is that there are two ExecutionContexts: one at the Step level and one at the Job level. The Step ExecutionContext remains only as long as the step, while the Job ExecutionContext remains through the whole Job. On the other hand, the Step ExecutionContext is updated every time the Step commits a chunk, while the Job ExecutionContext is updated only at the end of each Step.

The consequence of this separation is that all data must be placed in the Step ExecutionContext while the Step is executing. Doing so ensures that the data is stored properly while the Step runs. If data is stored to the Job ExecutionContext, then it is not persisted during Step execution. If the Step fails, that data is lost.

public class SavingItemWriter implements ItemWriter<Object> {
    private StepExecution stepExecution;

    public void write(Chunk<? extends Object> items) throws Exception {
        // ...

        ExecutionContext stepContext = this.stepExecution.getExecutionContext();
        stepContext.put("someKey", someObject);
    }

    @BeforeStep
    public void saveStepExecution(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        this.stepExecution = stepExecution;
    }
}

To make the data available to future Steps, it must be “promoted” to the Job ExecutionContext after the step has finished. Spring Batch provides the ExecutionContextPromotionListener for this purpose. The listener must be configured with the keys related to the data in the ExecutionContext that must be promoted. It can also, optionally, be configured with a list of exit code patterns for which the promotion should occur (COMPLETED is the default). As with all listeners, it must be registered on the Step.

The following example shows how to promote a step to the Job ExecutionContext in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="job1">
    <step id="step1">
        <tasklet>
            <chunk reader="reader" writer="savingWriter" commit-interval="10"/>
        </tasklet>
        <listeners>
            <listener ref="promotionListener"/>
        </listeners>
    </step>

    <step id="step2">
       ...
    </step>
</job>

<beans:bean id="promotionListener" class="org.spr....ExecutionContextPromotionListener">
    <beans:property name="keys">
        <list>
            <value>someKey</value>
        </list>
    </beans:property>
</beans:bean>

The following example shows how to promote a step to the Job ExecutionContext in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public Job job1(JobRepository jobRepository) {
	return new JobBuilder("job1", jobRepository)
				.start(step1())
				.next(step1())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public Step step1(JobRepository jobRepository, PlatformTransactionManager transactionManager) {
	return new StepBuilder("step1", jobRepository)
				.<String, String>chunk(10, transactionManager)
				.reader(reader())
				.writer(savingWriter())
				.listener(promotionListener())
				.build();
}

@Bean
public ExecutionContextPromotionListener promotionListener() {
	ExecutionContextPromotionListener listener = new ExecutionContextPromotionListener();

	listener.setKeys(new String[] {"someKey"});

	return listener;
}

Finally, the saved values must be retrieved from the Job ExecutionContext, as shown in the following example:

public class RetrievingItemWriter implements ItemWriter<Object> {
    private Object someObject;

    public void write(Chunk<? extends Object> items) throws Exception {
        // ...
    }

    @BeforeStep
    public void retrieveInterstepData(StepExecution stepExecution) {
        JobExecution jobExecution = stepExecution.getJobExecution();
        ExecutionContext jobContext = jobExecution.getExecutionContext();
        this.someObject = jobContext.get("someKey");
    }
}

13. Spring Batch Integration

Many users of Spring Batch may encounter requirements that are outside the scope of Spring Batch but that may be efficiently and concisely implemented by using Spring Integration. Conversely, Spring Integration users may encounter Spring Batch requirements and need a way to efficiently integrate both frameworks. In this context, several patterns and use-cases emerge, and Spring Batch Integration addresses those requirements.

The line between Spring Batch and Spring Integration is not always clear, but two pieces of advice can help: Thinking about granularity and applying common patterns. Some of those common patterns are described in this section.

Adding messaging to a batch process enables automation of operations and also separation and strategizing of key concerns. For example, a message might trigger a job to execute, and then sending the message can be exposed in a variety of ways. Alternatively, when a job completes or fails, that event might trigger a message to be sent, and the consumers of those messages might have operational concerns that have nothing to do with the application itself. Messaging can also be embedded in a job (for example, reading or writing items for processing through channels). Remote partitioning and remote chunking provide methods to distribute workloads over a number of workers.

This section covers the following key concepts:

13.1. Namespace Support

Dedicated XML namespace support was added to Spring Batch Integration in version 1.3, with the aim to provide an easier configuration experience. To use the namespace, add the following namespace declarations to your Spring XML Application Context file:

<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
  xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
  xmlns:batch-int="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration"
  xsi:schemaLocation="
    http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration
    https://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration/spring-batch-integration.xsd">

    ...

</beans>

The following example shows a fully configured Spring XML application context file for Spring Batch Integration:

<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
  xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
  xmlns:int="http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration"
  xmlns:batch="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch"
  xmlns:batch-int="http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration"
  xsi:schemaLocation="
    http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration
    https://www.springframework.org/schema/batch-integration/spring-batch-integration.xsd
    http://www.springframework.org/schema/batch
    https://www.springframework.org/schema/batch/spring-batch.xsd
    http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
    https://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd
    http://www.springframework.org/schema/integration
    https://www.springframework.org/schema/integration/spring-integration.xsd">

    ...

</beans>

Appending version numbers to the referenced XSD file is also allowed. However, because a version-less declaration always uses the latest schema, we generally do not recommend appending the version number to the XSD name. Adding a version number could possibly create issues when updating the Spring Batch Integration dependencies, as they may require more recent versions of the XML schema.

13.2. Launching Batch Jobs through Messages

When starting batch jobs by using the core Spring Batch API, you basically have two options:

  • From the command line, with the CommandLineJobRunner

  • Programmatically, with either JobOperator.start() or JobLauncher.run()

For example, you may want to use the CommandLineJobRunner when invoking batch jobs by using a shell script. Alternatively, you can use the JobOperator directly (for example, when using Spring Batch as part of a web application). However, what about more complex use cases? Maybe you need to poll a remote (S)FTP server to retrieve the data for the Batch Job or your application has to support multiple different data sources simultaneously. For example, you may receive data files not only from the web but also from FTP and other sources. Maybe additional transformation of the input files is needed before invoking Spring Batch.

Therefore, it would be much more powerful to execute the batch job by using Spring Integration and its numerous adapters. For example, you can use a File Inbound Channel Adapter to monitor a directory in the file-system and start the batch job as soon as the input file arrives. Additionally, you can create Spring Integration flows that use multiple different adapters to easily ingest data for your batch jobs from multiple sources simultaneously by using only configuration. Implementing all these scenarios with Spring Integration is easy, as it allows for decoupled, event-driven execution of the JobLauncher.

Spring Batch Integration provides the JobLaunchingMessageHandler class that you can use to launch batch jobs. The input for the JobLaunchingMessageHandler is provided by a Spring Integration message, which has a payload of type JobLaunchRequest. This class is a wrapper around the Job to be launched and around the JobParameters that are necessary to launch the Batch job.

The following image shows the typical Spring Integration message flow that is needed to start a Batch job. The EIP (Enterprise Integration Patterns) website provides a full overview of messaging icons and their descriptions.

Launch Batch Job
Figure 28. Launch Batch Job

13.2.1. Transforming a File into a JobLaunchRequest

The following example transforms a file into a JobLaunchRequest:

package io.spring.sbi;

import org.springframework.batch.core.Job;
import org.springframework.batch.core.JobParametersBuilder;
import org.springframework.batch.integration.launch.JobLaunchRequest;
import org.springframework.integration.annotation.Transformer;
import org.springframework.messaging.Message;

import java.io.File;

public class FileMessageToJobRequest {
    private Job job;
    private String fileParameterName;

    public void setFileParameterName(String fileParameterName) {
        this.fileParameterName = fileParameterName;
    }

    public void setJob(Job job) {
        this.job = job;
    }

    @Transformer
    public JobLaunchRequest toRequest(Message<File> message) {
        JobParametersBuilder jobParametersBuilder =
            new JobParametersBuilder();

        jobParametersBuilder.addString(fileParameterName,
            message.getPayload().getAbsolutePath());

        return new JobLaunchRequest(job, jobParametersBuilder.toJobParameters());
    }
}

13.2.2. The JobExecution Response

When a batch job is being executed, a JobExecution instance is returned. You can use this instance to determine the status of an execution. If a JobExecution is able to be created successfully, it is always returned, regardless of whether or not the actual execution is successful.

The exact behavior on how the JobExecution instance is returned depends on the provided TaskExecutor. If a synchronous (single-threaded) TaskExecutor implementation is used, the JobExecution response is returned only after the job completes. When using an asynchronous TaskExecutor, the JobExecution instance is returned immediately. You can then take the id of JobExecution instance (with JobExecution.getJobId()) and query the JobRepository for the job’s updated status using the JobExplorer. For more information, see Querying the Repository.

13.2.3. Spring Batch Integration Configuration

Consider a case where someone needs to create a file inbound-channel-adapter to listen for CSV files in the provided directory, hand them off to a transformer (FileMessageToJobRequest), launch the job through the job launching gateway, and log the output of the JobExecution with the logging-channel-adapter.

The following example shows how that common case can be configured in XML: .XML Configuration

<int:channel id="inboundFileChannel"/>
<int:channel id="outboundJobRequestChannel"/>
<int:channel id="jobLaunchReplyChannel"/>

<int-file:inbound-channel-adapter id="filePoller"
    channel="inboundFileChannel"
    directory="file:/tmp/myfiles/"
    filename-pattern="*.csv">
  <int:poller fixed-rate="1000"/>
</int-file:inbound-channel-adapter>

<int:transformer input-channel="inboundFileChannel"
    output-channel="outboundJobRequestChannel">
  <bean class="io.spring.sbi.FileMessageToJobRequest">
    <property name="job" ref="personJob"/>
    <property name="fileParameterName" value="input.file.name"/>
  </bean>
</int:transformer>

<batch-int:job-launching-gateway request-channel="outboundJobRequestChannel"
    reply-channel="jobLaunchReplyChannel"/>

<int:logging-channel-adapter channel="jobLaunchReplyChannel"/>

The following example shows how that common case can be configured in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public FileMessageToJobRequest fileMessageToJobRequest() {
    FileMessageToJobRequest fileMessageToJobRequest = new FileMessageToJobRequest();
    fileMessageToJobRequest.setFileParameterName("input.file.name");
    fileMessageToJobRequest.setJob(personJob());
    return fileMessageToJobRequest;
}

@Bean
public JobLaunchingGateway jobLaunchingGateway() {
    TaskExecutorJobLauncher jobLauncher = new TaskExecutorJobLauncher();
    jobLauncher.setJobRepository(jobRepository);
    jobLauncher.setTaskExecutor(new SyncTaskExecutor());
    JobLaunchingGateway jobLaunchingGateway = new JobLaunchingGateway(jobLauncher);

    return jobLaunchingGateway;
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow integrationFlow(JobLaunchingGateway jobLaunchingGateway) {
    return IntegrationFlow.from(Files.inboundAdapter(new File("/tmp/myfiles")).
                    filter(new SimplePatternFileListFilter("*.csv")),
            c -> c.poller(Pollers.fixedRate(1000).maxMessagesPerPoll(1))).
            transform(fileMessageToJobRequest()).
            handle(jobLaunchingGateway).
            log(LoggingHandler.Level.WARN, "headers.id + ': ' + payload").
            get();
}

13.2.4. Example ItemReader Configuration

Now that we are polling for files and launching jobs, we need to configure our Spring Batch ItemReader (for example) to use the files found at the location defined by the job parameter called "input.file.name", as the following bean configuration shows:

The following XML example shows the necessary bean configuration:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemReader" class="org.springframework.batch.item.file.FlatFileItemReader"
    scope="step">
  <property name="resource" value="file://#{jobParameters['input.file.name']}"/>
    ...
</bean>

The following Java example shows the necessary bean configuration:

Java Configuration
@Bean
@StepScope
public ItemReader sampleReader(@Value("#{jobParameters[input.file.name]}") String resource) {
...
    FlatFileItemReader flatFileItemReader = new FlatFileItemReader();
    flatFileItemReader.setResource(new FileSystemResource(resource));
...
    return flatFileItemReader;
}

The main points of interest in the preceding example are injecting the value of #{jobParameters['input.file.name']} as the Resource property value and setting the ItemReader bean to have step scope. Setting the bean to have step scope takes advantage of the late binding support, which allows access to the jobParameters variable.

13.3. Available Attributes of the Job-Launching Gateway

The job-launching gateway has the following attributes that you can set to control a job:

  • id: Identifies the underlying Spring bean definition, which is an instance of either:

    • EventDrivenConsumer

    • PollingConsumer (The exact implementation depends on whether the component’s input channel is a SubscribableChannel or a PollableChannel.)

  • auto-startup: Boolean flag to indicate that the endpoint should start automatically on startup. The default is true.

  • request-channel: The input MessageChannel of this endpoint.

  • reply-channel: MessageChannel to which the resulting JobExecution payload is sent.

  • reply-timeout: Lets you specify how long (in milliseconds) this gateway waits for the reply message to be sent successfully to the reply channel before throwing an exception. This attribute applies only when the channel might block (for example, when using a bounded queue channel that is currently full). Also, keep in mind that, when sending to a DirectChannel, the invocation occurs in the sender’s thread. Therefore, the failing of the send operation may be caused by other components further downstream. The reply-timeout attribute maps to the sendTimeout property of the underlying MessagingTemplate instance. If not specified, the attribute defaults to -1, meaning that, by default, the Gateway waits indefinitely.

  • job-launcher: Optional. Accepts a custom JobLauncher bean reference. If not specified, the adapter re-uses the instance that is registered under the id of jobLauncher. If no default instance exists, an exception is thrown.

  • order: Specifies the order of invocation when this endpoint is connected as a subscriber to a SubscribableChannel.

13.4. Sub-elements

When this Gateway is receiving messages from a PollableChannel, you must either provide a global default Poller or provide a Poller sub-element to the Job Launching Gateway.

The following example shows how to provide a poller in XML:

XML Configuration
<batch-int:job-launching-gateway request-channel="queueChannel"
    reply-channel="replyChannel" job-launcher="jobLauncher">
  <int:poller fixed-rate="1000">
</batch-int:job-launching-gateway>

The following example shows how to provide a poller in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "queueChannel", poller = @Poller(fixedRate="1000"))
public JobLaunchingGateway sampleJobLaunchingGateway() {
    JobLaunchingGateway jobLaunchingGateway = new JobLaunchingGateway(jobLauncher());
    jobLaunchingGateway.setOutputChannel(replyChannel());
    return jobLaunchingGateway;
}

13.4.1. Providing Feedback with Informational Messages

As Spring Batch jobs can run for long times, providing progress information is often critical. For example, stakeholders may want to be notified if some or all parts of a batch job have failed. Spring Batch provides support for this information being gathered through:

  • Active polling

  • Event-driven listeners

When starting a Spring Batch job asynchronously (for example, by using the Job Launching Gateway), a JobExecution instance is returned. Thus, you can use JobExecution.getJobId() to continuously poll for status updates by retrieving updated instances of the JobExecution from the JobRepository by using the JobExplorer. However, this is considered sub-optimal, and an event-driven approach is preferred.

Therefore, Spring Batch provides listeners, including the three most commonly used listeners:

  • StepListener

  • ChunkListener

  • JobExecutionListener

In the example shown in the following image, a Spring Batch job has been configured with a StepExecutionListener. Thus, Spring Integration receives and processes any step before or after events. For example, you can inspect the received StepExecution by using a Router. Based on the results of that inspection, various things can occur (such as routing a message to a mail outbound channel adapter), so that an email notification can be sent out based on some condition.

Handling Informational Messages
Figure 29. Handling Informational Messages

The following two-part example shows how a listener is configured to send a message to a Gateway for a StepExecution events and log its output to a logging-channel-adapter.

First, create the notification integration beans.

The following example shows the how to create the notification integration beans in XML:

XML Configuration
<int:channel id="stepExecutionsChannel"/>

<int:gateway id="notificationExecutionsListener"
    service-interface="org.springframework.batch.core.StepExecutionListener"
    default-request-channel="stepExecutionsChannel"/>

<int:logging-channel-adapter channel="stepExecutionsChannel"/>

The following example shows the how to create the notification integration beans in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "stepExecutionsChannel")
public LoggingHandler loggingHandler() {
    LoggingHandler adapter = new LoggingHandler(LoggingHandler.Level.WARN);
    adapter.setLoggerName("TEST_LOGGER");
    adapter.setLogExpressionString("headers.id + ': ' + payload");
    return adapter;
}

@MessagingGateway(name = "notificationExecutionsListener", defaultRequestChannel = "stepExecutionsChannel")
public interface NotificationExecutionListener extends StepExecutionListener {}
You need to add the @IntegrationComponentScan annotation to your configuration.

Second, modify your job to add a step-level listener.

The following example shows the how to add a step-level listener in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="importPayments">
    <step id="step1">
        <tasklet ../>
            <chunk ../>
            <listeners>
                <listener ref="notificationExecutionsListener"/>
            </listeners>
        </tasklet>
        ...
    </step>
</job>

The following example shows the how to add a step-level listener in Java:

Java Configuration
public Job importPaymentsJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
    return new JobBuilder("importPayments", jobRepository)
        .start(stepBuilderFactory.get("step1")
                .chunk(200)
                .listener(notificationExecutionsListener())
                ...
              )
}

13.4.2. Asynchronous Processors

Asynchronous Processors help you scale the processing of items. In the asynchronous processor use case, an AsyncItemProcessor serves as a dispatcher, executing the logic of the ItemProcessor for an item on a new thread. Once the item completes, the Future is passed to the AsynchItemWriter to be written.

Therefore, you can increase performance by using asynchronous item processing, basically letting you implement fork-join scenarios. The AsyncItemWriter gathers the results and writes back the chunk as soon as all the results become available.

The following example shows how to configuration the AsyncItemProcessor in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="processor"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.async.AsyncItemProcessor">
  <property name="delegate">
    <bean class="your.ItemProcessor"/>
  </property>
  <property name="taskExecutor">
    <bean class="org.springframework.core.task.SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor"/>
  </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to configuration the AsyncItemProcessor in XML:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public AsyncItemProcessor processor(ItemProcessor itemProcessor, TaskExecutor taskExecutor) {
    AsyncItemProcessor asyncItemProcessor = new AsyncItemProcessor();
    asyncItemProcessor.setTaskExecutor(taskExecutor);
    asyncItemProcessor.setDelegate(itemProcessor);
    return asyncItemProcessor;
}

The delegate property refers to your ItemProcessor bean, and the taskExecutor property refers to the TaskExecutor of your choice.

The following example shows how to configure the AsyncItemWriter in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="itemWriter"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.async.AsyncItemWriter">
  <property name="delegate">
    <bean id="itemWriter" class="your.ItemWriter"/>
  </property>
</bean>

The following example shows how to configure the AsyncItemWriter in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public AsyncItemWriter writer(ItemWriter itemWriter) {
    AsyncItemWriter asyncItemWriter = new AsyncItemWriter();
    asyncItemWriter.setDelegate(itemWriter);
    return asyncItemWriter;
}

Again, the delegate property is actually a reference to your ItemWriter bean.

13.4.3. Externalizing Batch Process Execution

The integration approaches discussed so far suggest use cases where Spring Integration wraps Spring Batch like an outer shell. However, Spring Batch can also use Spring Integration internally. By using this approach, Spring Batch users can delegate the processing of items or even chunks to outside processes. This lets you offload complex processing. Spring Batch Integration provides dedicated support for:

  • Remote Chunking

  • Remote Partitioning

Remote Chunking

The following image shows one way that remote chunking works when you use Spring Batch together with Spring Integration:

Remote Chunking
Figure 30. Remote Chunking

Taking things one step further, you can also externalize the chunk processing by using the ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter (provided by Spring Batch Integration), which sends items out and collects the result. Once sent, Spring Batch continues the process of reading and grouping items, without waiting for the results. Rather, it is the responsibility of the ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter to gather the results and integrate them back into the Spring Batch process.

With Spring Integration, you have full control over the concurrency of your processes (for instance, by using a QueueChannel instead of a DirectChannel). Furthermore, by relying on Spring Integration’s rich collection of channel adapters (such as JMS and AMQP), you can distribute chunks of a batch job to external systems for processing.

A job with a step to be remotely chunked might have a configuration similar to the following in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="personJob">
  <step id="step1">
    <tasklet>
      <chunk reader="itemReader" writer="itemWriter" commit-interval="200"/>
    </tasklet>
    ...
  </step>
</job>

A job with a step to be remotely chunked might have a configuration similar to the following in Java:

Java Configuration
public Job chunkJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
     return new JobBuilder("personJob", jobRepository)
             .start(stepBuilderFactory.get("step1")
                     .<Person, Person>chunk(200)
                     .reader(itemReader())
                     .writer(itemWriter())
                     .build())
             .build();
 }

The ItemReader reference points to the bean you want to use for reading data on the manager. The ItemWriter reference points to a special ItemWriter (called ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter), as described earlier. The processor (if any) is left off the manager configuration, as it is configured on the worker. You should check any additional component properties, such as throttle limits and so on, when implementing your use case.

The following XML configuration provides a basic manager setup:

XML Configuration
<bean id="connectionFactory" class="org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory">
  <property name="brokerURL" value="tcp://localhost:61616"/>
</bean>

<int-jms:outbound-channel-adapter id="jmsRequests" destination-name="requests"/>

<bean id="messagingTemplate"
    class="org.springframework.integration.core.MessagingTemplate">
  <property name="defaultChannel" ref="requests"/>
  <property name="receiveTimeout" value="2000"/>
</bean>

<bean id="itemWriter"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.chunk.ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter"
    scope="step">
  <property name="messagingOperations" ref="messagingTemplate"/>
  <property name="replyChannel" ref="replies"/>
</bean>

<int:channel id="replies">
  <int:queue/>
</int:channel>

<int-jms:message-driven-channel-adapter id="jmsReplies"
    destination-name="replies"
    channel="replies"/>

The following Java configuration provides a basic manager setup:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory() {
    ActiveMQConnectionFactory factory = new ActiveMQConnectionFactory();
    factory.setBrokerURL("tcp://localhost:61616");
    return factory;
}

/*
 * Configure outbound flow (requests going to workers)
 */
@Bean
public DirectChannel requests() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow outboundFlow(ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(requests())
            .handle(Jms.outboundAdapter(connectionFactory).destination("requests"))
            .get();
}

/*
 * Configure inbound flow (replies coming from workers)
 */
@Bean
public QueueChannel replies() {
    return new QueueChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow inboundFlow(ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(Jms.messageDrivenChannelAdapter(connectionFactory).destination("replies"))
            .channel(replies())
            .get();
}

/*
 * Configure the ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter
 */
@Bean
public ItemWriter<Integer> itemWriter() {
    MessagingTemplate messagingTemplate = new MessagingTemplate();
    messagingTemplate.setDefaultChannel(requests());
    messagingTemplate.setReceiveTimeout(2000);
    ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter<Integer> chunkMessageChannelItemWriter
            = new ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter<>();
    chunkMessageChannelItemWriter.setMessagingOperations(messagingTemplate);
    chunkMessageChannelItemWriter.setReplyChannel(replies());
    return chunkMessageChannelItemWriter;
}

The preceding configuration provides us with a number of beans. We configure our messaging middleware by using ActiveMQ and the inbound and outbound JMS adapters provided by Spring Integration. As shown, our itemWriter bean, which is referenced by our job step, uses the ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter to write chunks over the configured middleware.

Now we can move on to the worker configuration, as the following example shows:

The following example shows the worker configuration in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="connectionFactory" class="org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory">
  <property name="brokerURL" value="tcp://localhost:61616"/>
</bean>

<int:channel id="requests"/>
<int:channel id="replies"/>

<int-jms:message-driven-channel-adapter id="incomingRequests"
    destination-name="requests"
    channel="requests"/>

<int-jms:outbound-channel-adapter id="outgoingReplies"
    destination-name="replies"
    channel="replies">
</int-jms:outbound-channel-adapter>

<int:service-activator id="serviceActivator"
    input-channel="requests"
    output-channel="replies"
    ref="chunkProcessorChunkHandler"
    method="handleChunk"/>

<bean id="chunkProcessorChunkHandler"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.chunk.ChunkProcessorChunkHandler">
  <property name="chunkProcessor">
    <bean class="org.springframework.batch.core.step.item.SimpleChunkProcessor">
      <property name="itemWriter">
        <bean class="io.spring.sbi.PersonItemWriter"/>
      </property>
      <property name="itemProcessor">
        <bean class="io.spring.sbi.PersonItemProcessor"/>
      </property>
    </bean>
  </property>
</bean>

The following example shows the worker configuration in Java:

Java Configuration
@Bean
public org.apache.activemq.ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory() {
    ActiveMQConnectionFactory factory = new ActiveMQConnectionFactory();
    factory.setBrokerURL("tcp://localhost:61616");
    return factory;
}

/*
 * Configure inbound flow (requests coming from the manager)
 */
@Bean
public DirectChannel requests() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow inboundFlow(ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(Jms.messageDrivenChannelAdapter(connectionFactory).destination("requests"))
            .channel(requests())
            .get();
}

/*
 * Configure outbound flow (replies going to the manager)
 */
@Bean
public DirectChannel replies() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow outboundFlow(ActiveMQConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(replies())
            .handle(Jms.outboundAdapter(connectionFactory).destination("replies"))
            .get();
}

/*
 * Configure the ChunkProcessorChunkHandler
 */
@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "requests", outputChannel = "replies")
public ChunkProcessorChunkHandler<Integer> chunkProcessorChunkHandler() {
    ChunkProcessor<Integer> chunkProcessor
            = new SimpleChunkProcessor<>(itemProcessor(), itemWriter());
    ChunkProcessorChunkHandler<Integer> chunkProcessorChunkHandler
            = new ChunkProcessorChunkHandler<>();
    chunkProcessorChunkHandler.setChunkProcessor(chunkProcessor);
    return chunkProcessorChunkHandler;
}

Most of these configuration items should look familiar from the manager configuration. Workers do not need access to the Spring Batch JobRepository nor to the actual job configuration file. The main bean of interest is the chunkProcessorChunkHandler. The chunkProcessor property of ChunkProcessorChunkHandler takes a configured SimpleChunkProcessor, which is where you would provide a reference to your ItemWriter (and, optionally, your ItemProcessor) that will run on the worker when it receives chunks from the manager.

For more information, see the section of the “Scalability” chapter on Remote Chunking.

Starting from version 4.1, Spring Batch Integration introduces the @EnableBatchIntegration annotation that can be used to simplify a remote chunking setup. This annotation provides two beans that you can autowire in your application context:

  • RemoteChunkingManagerStepBuilderFactory: Configures the manager step

  • RemoteChunkingWorkerBuilder: Configures the remote worker integration flow

These APIs take care of configuring a number of components, as the following diagram shows:

Remote Chunking Configuration
Figure 31. Remote Chunking Configuration

On the manager side, the RemoteChunkingManagerStepBuilderFactory lets you configure a manager step by declaring:

  • The item reader to read items and send them to workers

  • The output channel ("Outgoing requests") to send requests to workers

  • The input channel ("Incoming replies") to receive replies from workers

You need not explicitly configure ChunkMessageChannelItemWriter and the MessagingTemplate. (You can still explicitly configure them if find a reason to do so).

On the worker side, the RemoteChunkingWorkerBuilder lets you configure a worker to:

  • Listen to requests sent by the manager on the input channel (“Incoming requests”)

  • Call the handleChunk method of ChunkProcessorChunkHandler for each request with the configured ItemProcessor and ItemWriter

  • Send replies on the output channel (“Outgoing replies”) to the manager

You need not explicitly configure the SimpleChunkProcessor and the ChunkProcessorChunkHandler. (You can still explicitly configure them if you find a reason to do so).

The following example shows how to use these APIs:

@EnableBatchIntegration
@EnableBatchProcessing
public class RemoteChunkingJobConfiguration {

    @Configuration
    public static class ManagerConfiguration {

        @Autowired
        private RemoteChunkingManagerStepBuilderFactory managerStepBuilderFactory;

        @Bean
        public TaskletStep managerStep() {
            return this.managerStepBuilderFactory.get("managerStep")
                       .chunk(100)
                       .reader(itemReader())
                       .outputChannel(requests()) // requests sent to workers
                       .inputChannel(replies())   // replies received from workers
                       .build();
        }

        // Middleware beans setup omitted

    }

    @Configuration
    public static class WorkerConfiguration {

        @Autowired
        private RemoteChunkingWorkerBuilder workerBuilder;

        @Bean
        public IntegrationFlow workerFlow() {
            return this.workerBuilder
                       .itemProcessor(itemProcessor())
                       .itemWriter(itemWriter())
                       .inputChannel(requests()) // requests received from the manager
                       .outputChannel(replies()) // replies sent to the manager
                       .build();
        }

        // Middleware beans setup omitted

    }

}

You can find a complete example of a remote chunking job here.

Remote Partitioning

The following image shows a typical remote partitioning situation:

Remote Partitioning
Figure 32. Remote Partitioning

Remote Partitioning, on the other hand, is useful when it is not the processing of items but rather the associated I/O that causes the bottleneck. With remote partitioning, you can send work to workers that execute complete Spring Batch steps. Thus, each worker has its own ItemReader, ItemProcessor, and ItemWriter. For this purpose, Spring Batch Integration provides the MessageChannelPartitionHandler.

This implementation of the PartitionHandler interface uses MessageChannel instances to send instructions to remote workers and receive their responses. This provides a nice abstraction from the transports (such as JMS and AMQP) being used to communicate with the remote workers.

The section of the “Scalability” chapter that addresses remote partitioning provides an overview of the concepts and components needed to configure remote partitioning and shows an example of using the default TaskExecutorPartitionHandler to partition in separate local threads of execution. For remote partitioning to multiple JVMs, two additional components are required:

  • A remoting fabric or grid environment

  • A PartitionHandler implementation that supports the desired remoting fabric or grid environment

Similar to remote chunking, you can use JMS as the “remoting fabric”. In that case, use a MessageChannelPartitionHandler instance as the PartitionHandler implementation, as described earlier.

The following example assumes an existing partitioned job and focuses on the MessageChannelPartitionHandler and JMS configuration in XML:

XML Configuration
<bean id="partitionHandler"
   class="org.springframework.batch.integration.partition.MessageChannelPartitionHandler">
  <property name="stepName" value="step1"/>
  <property name="gridSize" value="3"/>
  <property name="replyChannel" ref="outbound-replies"/>
  <property name="messagingOperations">
    <bean class="org.springframework.integration.core.MessagingTemplate">
      <property name="defaultChannel" ref="outbound-requests"/>
      <property name="receiveTimeout" value="100000"/>
    </bean>
  </property>
</bean>

<int:channel id="outbound-requests"/>
<int-jms:outbound-channel-adapter destination="requestsQueue"
    channel="outbound-requests"/>

<int:channel id="inbound-requests"/>
<int-jms:message-driven-channel-adapter destination="requestsQueue"
    channel="inbound-requests"/>

<bean id="stepExecutionRequestHandler"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.partition.StepExecutionRequestHandler">
  <property name="jobExplorer" ref="jobExplorer"/>
  <property name="stepLocator" ref="stepLocator"/>
</bean>

<int:service-activator ref="stepExecutionRequestHandler" input-channel="inbound-requests"
    output-channel="outbound-staging"/>

<int:channel id="outbound-staging"/>
<int-jms:outbound-channel-adapter destination="stagingQueue"
    channel="outbound-staging"/>

<int:channel id="inbound-staging"/>
<int-jms:message-driven-channel-adapter destination="stagingQueue"
    channel="inbound-staging"/>

<int:aggregator ref="partitionHandler" input-channel="inbound-staging"
    output-channel="outbound-replies"/>

<int:channel id="outbound-replies">
  <int:queue/>
</int:channel>

<bean id="stepLocator"
    class="org.springframework.batch.integration.partition.BeanFactoryStepLocator" />

The following example assumes an existing partitioned job and focuses on the MessageChannelPartitionHandler and JMS configuration in Java:

Java Configuration
/*
 * Configuration of the manager side
 */
@Bean
public PartitionHandler partitionHandler() {
    MessageChannelPartitionHandler partitionHandler = new MessageChannelPartitionHandler();
    partitionHandler.setStepName("step1");
    partitionHandler.setGridSize(3);
    partitionHandler.setReplyChannel(outboundReplies());
    MessagingTemplate template = new MessagingTemplate();
    template.setDefaultChannel(outboundRequests());
    template.setReceiveTimeout(100000);
    partitionHandler.setMessagingOperations(template);
    return partitionHandler;
}

@Bean
public QueueChannel outboundReplies() {
    return new QueueChannel();
}

@Bean
public DirectChannel outboundRequests() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow outboundJmsRequests() {
    return IntegrationFlow.from("outboundRequests")
            .handle(Jms.outboundGateway(connectionFactory())
                    .requestDestination("requestsQueue"))
            .get();
}

@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "inboundStaging")
public AggregatorFactoryBean partitioningMessageHandler() throws Exception {
    AggregatorFactoryBean aggregatorFactoryBean = new AggregatorFactoryBean();
    aggregatorFactoryBean.setProcessorBean(partitionHandler());
    aggregatorFactoryBean.setOutputChannel(outboundReplies());
    // configure other propeties of the aggregatorFactoryBean
    return aggregatorFactoryBean;
}

@Bean
public DirectChannel inboundStaging() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow inboundJmsStaging() {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(Jms.messageDrivenChannelAdapter(connectionFactory())
                    .configureListenerContainer(c -> c.subscriptionDurable(false))
                    .destination("stagingQueue"))
            .channel(inboundStaging())
            .get();
}

/*
 * Configuration of the worker side
 */
@Bean
public StepExecutionRequestHandler stepExecutionRequestHandler() {
    StepExecutionRequestHandler stepExecutionRequestHandler = new StepExecutionRequestHandler();
    stepExecutionRequestHandler.setJobExplorer(jobExplorer);
    stepExecutionRequestHandler.setStepLocator(stepLocator());
    return stepExecutionRequestHandler;
}

@Bean
@ServiceActivator(inputChannel = "inboundRequests", outputChannel = "outboundStaging")
public StepExecutionRequestHandler serviceActivator() throws Exception {
    return stepExecutionRequestHandler();
}

@Bean
public DirectChannel inboundRequests() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

public IntegrationFlow inboundJmsRequests() {
    return IntegrationFlow
            .from(Jms.messageDrivenChannelAdapter(connectionFactory())
                    .configureListenerContainer(c -> c.subscriptionDurable(false))
                    .destination("requestsQueue"))
            .channel(inboundRequests())
            .get();
}

@Bean
public DirectChannel outboundStaging() {
    return new DirectChannel();
}

@Bean
public IntegrationFlow outboundJmsStaging() {
    return IntegrationFlow.from("outboundStaging")
            .handle(Jms.outboundGateway(connectionFactory())
                    .requestDestination("stagingQueue"))
            .get();
}

You must also ensure that the partition handler attribute maps to the partitionHandler bean.

The following example maps the partition handler attribute to the partitionHandler in XML:

XML Configuration
<job id="personJob">
  <step id="step1.manager">
    <partition partitioner="partitioner" handler="partitionHandler"/>
    ...
  </step>
</job>

The following example maps the partition handler attribute to the partitionHandler in Java:

Java Configuration
	public Job personJob(JobRepository jobRepository) {
		return new JobBuilder("personJob", jobRepository)
				.start(stepBuilderFactory.get("step1.manager")
						.partitioner("step1.worker", partitioner())
						.partitionHandler(partitionHandler())
						.build())
				.build();
	}

You can find a complete example of a remote partitioning job here.

You can use the @EnableBatchIntegration annotation to simplify a remote partitioning setup. This annotation provides two beans that are useful for remote partitioning:

  • RemotePartitioningManagerStepBuilderFactory: Configures the manager step

  • RemotePartitioningWorkerStepBuilderFactory: Configures the worker step

These APIs take care of configuring a number of components, as the following diagrams show:

Remote Partitioning Configuration (with job repository polling)
Figure 33. Remote Partitioning Configuration (with job repository polling)
Remote Partitioning Configuration (with replies aggregation)
Figure 34. Remote Partitioning Configuration (with replies aggregation)

On the manager side, the RemotePartitioningManagerStepBuilderFactory lets you configure a manager step by declaring:

  • The Partitioner used to partition data

  • The output channel (“Outgoing requests”) on which to send requests to workers

  • The input channel (“Incoming replies”) on which to receive replies from workers (when configuring replies aggregation)

  • The poll interval and timeout parameters (when configuring job repository polling)

You need not explicitly configure The MessageChannelPartitionHandler and the MessagingTemplate. (You can still explicitly configured them if you find a reason to do so).

On the worker side, the RemotePartitioningWorkerStepBuilderFactory lets you configure a worker to:

  • Listen to requests sent by the manager on the input channel (“Incoming requests”)

  • Call the handle method of StepExecutionRequestHandler for each request

  • Send replies on the output channel (“Outgoing replies”) to the manager

You need not explicitly configure the StepExecutionRequestHandler. (You can explicitly configure it if you find a reason to do so).

The following example shows how to use these APIs:

@Configuration
@EnableBatchProcessing
@EnableBatchIntegration
public class RemotePartitioningJobConfiguration {

    @Configuration
    public static class ManagerConfiguration {

        @Autowired
        private RemotePartitioningManagerStepBuilderFactory managerStepBuilderFactory;

        @Bean
        public Step managerStep() {
                 return this.managerStepBuilderFactory
                    .get("managerStep")
                    .partitioner("workerStep", partitioner())
                    .gridSize(10)
                    .outputChannel(outgoingRequestsToWorkers())
                    .inputChannel(incomingRepliesFromWorkers())
                    .build();
        }

        // Middleware beans setup omitted

    }

    @Configuration
    public static class WorkerConfiguration {

        @Autowired
        private RemotePartitioningWorkerStepBuilderFactory workerStepBuilderFactory;

        @Bean
        public Step workerStep() {
                 return this.workerStepBuilderFactory
                    .get("workerStep")
                    .inputChannel(incomingRequestsFromManager())
                    .outputChannel(outgoingRepliesToManager())
                    .chunk(100)
                    .reader(itemReader())
                    .processor(itemProcessor())
                    .writer(itemWriter())
                    .build();
        }

        // Middleware beans setup omitted

    }

}

14. Monitoring and metrics

Since version 4.2, Spring Batch provides support for batch monitoring and metrics based on Micrometer. This section describes which metrics are provided out-of-the-box and how to contribute custom metrics.

14.1. Built-in metrics

Metrics collection does not require any specific configuration. All metrics provided by the framework are registered in Micrometer’s global registry under the spring.batch prefix. The following table explains all the metrics in details:

Metric Name

Type

Description

Tags

spring.batch.job

TIMER

Duration of job execution

name, status

spring.batch.job.active

LONG_TASK_TIMER

Currently active jobs

name

spring.batch.step

TIMER

Duration of step execution

name, job.name, status

spring.batch.step.active

LONG_TASK_TIMER

Currently active step

name

spring.batch.item.read

TIMER

Duration of item reading

job.name, step.name, status

spring.batch.item.process

TIMER

Duration of item processing

job.name, step.name, status

spring.batch.chunk.write

TIMER

Duration of chunk writing

job.name, step.name, status

The status tag can be either SUCCESS or FAILURE.

14.2. Custom metrics

If you want to use your own metrics in your custom components, we recommend using Micrometer APIs directly. The following is an example of how to time a Tasklet:

import io.micrometer.core.instrument.Metrics;
import io.micrometer.core.instrument.Timer;

import org.springframework.batch.core.StepContribution;
import org.springframework.batch.core.scope.context.ChunkContext;
import org.springframework.batch.core.step.tasklet.Tasklet;
import org.springframework.batch.repeat.RepeatStatus;

public class MyTimedTasklet implements Tasklet {

	@Override
	public RepeatStatus execute(StepContribution contribution, ChunkContext chunkContext) {
		Timer.Sample sample = Timer.start(Metrics.globalRegistry);
		String status = "success";
		try {
			// do some work
		} catch (Exception e) {
			// handle exception
			status = "failure";
		} finally {
			sample.stop(Timer.builder("my.tasklet.timer")
					.description("Duration of MyTimedTasklet")
					.tag("status", status)
					.register(Metrics.globalRegistry));
		}
		return RepeatStatus.FINISHED;
	}
}

14.3. Disabling Metrics

Metrics collection is a concern similar to logging. Disabling logs is typically done by configuring the logging library, and this is no different for metrics. There is no feature in Spring Batch to disable Micrometer’s metrics. This should be done on Micrometer’s side. Since Spring Batch stores metrics in the global registry of Micrometer with the spring.batch prefix, you can configure micrometer to ignore or deny batch metrics with the following snippet:

Metrics.globalRegistry.config().meterFilter(MeterFilter.denyNameStartsWith("spring.batch"))

See Micrometer’s reference documentation for more details.

15. Tracing

As of version 5, Spring Batch provides tracing through Micrometer’s Observation API. By default, tracing is enabled when using @EnableBatchProcessing. Spring Batch will create a trace for each job execution and a span for each step execution.

If you do not use EnableBatchProcessing, you need to register a BatchObservabilityBeanPostProcessor in your application context, which will automatically setup Micrometer’s observability in your jobs and steps beans.

Appendix A: List of ItemReaders and ItemWriters

A.1. Item Readers

Table 19. Available Item Readers
Item Reader Description Thread-safe

AbstractItemStreamItemReader

Abstract base class that combines the ItemStream and ItemReader interfaces.

Yes

AbstractItemCountingItemStreamItemReader

Abstract base class that provides basic restart capabilities by counting the number of items returned from an ItemReader.

No

AbstractPagingItemReader

Abstract base class that provides basic paging features

No

AbstractPaginatedDataItemReader

Abstract base class that provides basic paging features based on Spring Data’s paginated facilities

No

AggregateItemReader

An ItemReader that delivers a list as its item, storing up objects from the injected ItemReader until they are ready to be packed out as a collection. This class must be used as a wrapper for a custom ItemReader that can identify the record boundaries. The custom reader should mark the beginning and end of records by returning an AggregateItem which responds true to its query methods (isHeader() and isFooter()). Note that this reader is not part of the library of readers provided by Spring Batch but given as a sample in spring-batch-samples.

Yes

AmqpItemReader

Given a Spring AmqpTemplate, it provides synchronous receive methods. The receiveAndConvert() method lets you receive POJO objects.

Yes

KafkaItemReader

An ItemReader that reads messages from an Apache Kafka topic. It can be configured to read messages from multiple partitions of the same topic. This reader stores message offsets in the execution context to support restart capabilities.

No

FlatFileItemReader

Reads from a flat file. Includes ItemStream and Skippable functionality. See “FlatFileItemReader”.

No

HibernateCursorItemReader

Reads from a cursor based on an HQL query. See Cursor-based ItemReaders.

No

HibernatePagingItemReader

Reads from a paginated HQL query.

Yes

ItemReaderAdapter

Adapts any class to the ItemReader interface.

Yes

JdbcCursorItemReader

Reads from a database cursor over JDBC. See “Cursor-based ItemReaders”.

No

JdbcPagingItemReader

Given an SQL statement, pages through the rows, such that large datasets can be read without running out of memory.

Yes

JmsItemReader

Given a Spring JmsOperations object and a JMS destination or destination name to which to send errors, provides items received through the injected JmsOperations#receive() method.

Yes

JpaCursorItemReader

Executes a JPQL query and iterates over the returned result set

No

JpaPagingItemReader

Given a JPQL query, pages through the rows, such that large datasets can be read without running out of memory.

Yes

ListItemReader

Provides the items from a list, one at a time.

No

MongoItemReader

Given a MongoOperations object and a JSON-based MongoDB query, provides items received from the MongoOperations#find() method.

Yes

Neo4jItemReader

Given a Neo4jOperations object and the components of a Cyhper query, items are returned as the result of the Neo4jOperations.query method.

Yes

RepositoryItemReader

Given a Spring Data PagingAndSortingRepository object, a Sort, and the name of method to execute, returns items provided by the Spring Data repository implementation.

Yes

StoredProcedureItemReader

Reads from a database cursor resulting from the execution of a database stored procedure. See StoredProcedureItemReader

No

StaxEventItemReader

Reads over StAX. see StaxEventItemReader.

No

JsonItemReader

Reads items from a Json document. see JsonItemReader.

No

AvroItemReader

Reads items from a resource containing serialized Avro objects.

No

LdifReader

Reads items from a LDIF resource and returns them as LdapAttributes

No

MappingLdifReader

Reads items from a LDIF resource and uses a RecordMapper to map them to domain objects

No

A.2. Item Writers

Table 20. Available Item Writers
Item Writer Description Thread-safe

AbstractItemStreamItemWriter

Abstract base class that combines the`ItemStream` and`ItemWriter` interfaces.

Yes

AmqpItemWriter

Given a Spring AmqpTemplate, provides for a synchronous send method. The convertAndSend(Object) method lets you send POJO objects.

Yes

CompositeItemWriter

Passes an item to the write method of each item in an injected List of ItemWriter objects.

Yes

FlatFileItemWriter

Writes to a flat file. Includes ItemStream and Skippable functionality. See “FlatFileItemWriter”.

No

HibernateItemWriter

This item writer is Hibernate-session aware and handles some transaction-related work that a non-“hibernate-aware” item writer would not need to know about and then delegates to another item writer to do the actual writing.

Yes

ItemWriterAdapter

Adapts any class to the ItemWriter interface.

Yes

JdbcBatchItemWriter

Uses batching features from a PreparedStatement, if available, and can take rudimentary steps to locate a failure during a flush.

Yes

JmsItemWriter

Using a JmsOperations object, items are written to the default queue through the JmsOperations#convertAndSend() method.

Yes

JpaItemWriter

This item writer is JPA EntityManager-aware and handles some transaction-related work that a non-“JPA-aware” ItemWriter would not need to know about and then delegates to another writer to do the actual writing.

Yes

KafkaItemWriter

Using a KafkaTemplate object, items are written to the default topic through the KafkaTemplate#sendDefault(Object, Object) method by using a Converter to map the key from the item. A delete flag can also be configured to send delete events to the topic.

No

MimeMessageItemWriter

Using Spring’s JavaMailSender, items of type MimeMessage are sent as mail messages.

Yes

MongoItemWriter

Given a MongoOperations object, items are written through the MongoOperations.save(Object) method. The actual write is delayed until the last possible moment before the transaction commits.

Yes

Neo4jItemWriter

Given a Neo4jOperations object, items are persisted through the save(Object) method or deleted through the delete(Object), as dictated by the ItemWriter’s configuration

Yes

PropertyExtractingDelegatingItemWriter

Extends AbstractMethodInvokingDelegator creating arguments on the fly. Arguments are created by retrieving the values from the fields in the item to be processed (through a SpringBeanWrapper), based on an injected array of field names.

Yes

RepositoryItemWriter

Given a Spring Data CrudRepository implementation, items are saved through the method specified in the configuration.

Yes

StaxEventItemWriter

Uses a Marshaller implementation to convert each item to XML and then writes it to an XML file by using StAX.

No

JsonFileItemWriter

Uses a JsonObjectMarshaller implementation to convert each item to Json and then writes it to a Json file.

No

AvroItemWriter

Serializes data to an WritableResource using Avro

No

ListItemWriter

Item writer that writes items to a List.

No

Appendix B: Meta-Data Schema

B.1. Overview

The Spring Batch Metadata tables closely match the domain objects that represent them in Java. For example, JobInstance, JobExecution, JobParameters, and StepExecution map to BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE, BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION, BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS, and BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION, respectively. ExecutionContext maps to both BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_CONTEXT and BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT. The JobRepository is responsible for saving and storing each Java object into its correct table. This appendix describes the metadata tables in detail, along with many of the design decisions that were made when creating them. When viewing the various table creation statements described later in this appendix, note that the data types used are as generic as possible. Spring Batch provides many schemas as examples. All of them have varying data types, due to variations in how individual database vendors handle data types. The following image shows an ERD model of all six tables and their relationships to one another:

Spring Batch Meta-Data ERD
Figure 35. Spring Batch Meta-Data ERD

B.1.1. Example DDL Scripts

The Spring Batch Core JAR file contains example scripts to create the relational tables for a number of database platforms (which are, in turn, auto-detected by the job repository factory bean or namespace equivalent). These scripts can be used as is or modified with additional indexes and constraints, as desired. The file names are in the form schema-*.sql, where * is the short name of the target database platform. The scripts are in the package org.springframework.batch.core.

B.1.2. Migration DDL Scripts

Spring Batch provides migration DDL scripts that you need to execute when you upgrade versions. These scripts can be found in the Core Jar file under org/springframework/batch/core/migration. Migration scripts are organized into folders corresponding to version numbers in which they were introduced:

  • 2.2: Contains scripts you need to migrate from a version before 2.2 to version 2.2

  • 4.1: Contains scripts you need to migrate from a version before 4.1 to version 4.1

B.1.3. Version

Many of the database tables discussed in this appendix contain a version column. This column is important, because Spring Batch employs an optimistic locking strategy when dealing with updates to the database. This means that each time a record is “touched” (updated), the value in the version column is incremented by one. When the repository goes back to save the value, if the version number has changed, it throws an OptimisticLockingFailureException, indicating that there has been an error with concurrent access. This check is necessary, since, even though different batch jobs may be running in different machines, they all use the same database tables.

B.1.4. Identity

BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE, BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION, and BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION each contain columns ending in _ID. These fields act as primary keys for their respective tables. However, they are not database generated keys. Rather, they are generated by separate sequences. This is necessary because, after inserting one of the domain objects into the database, the key it is given needs to be set on the actual object so that they can be uniquely identified in Java. Newer database drivers (JDBC 3.0 and up) support this feature with database-generated keys. However, rather than require that feature, sequences are used. Each variation of the schema contains some form of the following statements:

CREATE SEQUENCE BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_SEQ;
CREATE SEQUENCE BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_SEQ;
CREATE SEQUENCE BATCH_JOB_SEQ;

Many database vendors do not support sequences. In these cases, work-arounds are used, such as the following statements for MySQL:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_SEQ (ID BIGINT NOT NULL) type=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_SEQ values(0);
CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_SEQ (ID BIGINT NOT NULL) type=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_SEQ values(0);
CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_SEQ (ID BIGINT NOT NULL) type=InnoDB;
INSERT INTO BATCH_JOB_SEQ values(0);

In the preceding case, a table is used in place of each sequence. The Spring core class, MySQLMaxValueIncrementer, then increments the one column in this sequence to give similar functionality.

B.2. The BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE Table

The BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE table holds all information relevant to a JobInstance and serves as the top of the overall hierarchy. The following generic DDL statement is used to create it:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE  (
  JOB_INSTANCE_ID BIGINT  PRIMARY KEY ,
  VERSION BIGINT,
  JOB_NAME VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL ,
  JOB_KEY VARCHAR(32) NOT NULL
);

The following list describes each column in the table:

  • JOB_INSTANCE_ID: The unique ID that identifies the instance. It is also the primary key. The value of this column should be obtainable by calling the getId method on JobInstance.

  • VERSION: See Version.

  • JOB_NAME: Name of the job obtained from the Job object. Because it is required to identify the instance, it must not be null.

  • JOB_KEY: A serialization of the JobParameters that uniquely identifies separate instances of the same job from one another. (JobInstances with the same job name must have different JobParameters and, thus, different JOB_KEY values).

B.3. The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS Table

The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS table holds all information relevant to the JobParameters object. It contains 0 or more key/value pairs passed to a Job and serves as a record of the parameters with which a job was run. For each parameter that contributes to the generation of a job’s identity, the IDENTIFYING flag is set to true. Note that the table has been denormalized. Rather than creating a separate table for each type, there is one table with a column indicating the type, as the following listing shows:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_PARAMS  (
	JOB_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT NOT NULL ,
	PARAMETER_NAME VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL ,
	PARAMETER_TYPE VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL ,
	PARAMETER_VALUE VARCHAR(2500) ,
	IDENTIFYING CHAR(1) NOT NULL ,
	constraint JOB_EXEC_PARAMS_FK foreign key (JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
	references BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION(JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
);

The following list describes each column:

  • JOB_EXECUTION_ID: Foreign key from the BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION table that indicates the job execution to which the parameter entry belongs. Note that multiple rows (that is, key/value pairs) may exist for each execution.

  • PARAMETER_NAME: The parameter name.

  • PARAMETER_TYPE: The fully qualified name of the type of the parameter.

  • PARAMETER_VALUE: Parameter value

  • IDENTIFYING: Flag indicating whether the parameter contributed to the identity of the related JobInstance.

Note that there is no primary key for this table. This is because the framework has no use for one and, thus, does not require it. If need be, you can add a primary key with a database generated key without causing any issues to the framework itself.

B.4. The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION Table

The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION table holds all information relevant to the JobExecution object. Every time a Job is run, there is always a new called JobExecution and a new row in this table. The following listing shows the definition of the BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION table:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION  (
  JOB_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT  PRIMARY KEY ,
  VERSION BIGINT,
  JOB_INSTANCE_ID BIGINT NOT NULL,
  CREATE_TIME TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
  START_TIME TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NULL,
  END_TIME TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NULL,
  STATUS VARCHAR(10),
  EXIT_CODE VARCHAR(20),
  EXIT_MESSAGE VARCHAR(2500),
  LAST_UPDATED TIMESTAMP,
  constraint JOB_INSTANCE_EXECUTION_FK foreign key (JOB_INSTANCE_ID)
  references BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE(JOB_INSTANCE_ID)
) ;

The following list describes each column:

  • JOB_EXECUTION_ID: Primary key that uniquely identifies this execution. The value of this column is obtainable by calling the getId method of the JobExecution object.

  • VERSION: See Version.

  • JOB_INSTANCE_ID: Foreign key from the BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE table. It indicates the instance to which this execution belongs. There may be more than one execution per instance.

  • CREATE_TIME: Timestamp representing the time when the execution was created.

  • START_TIME: Timestamp representing the time when the execution was started.

  • END_TIME: Timestamp representing the time when the execution finished, regardless of success or failure. An empty value in this column when the job is not currently running indicates that there has been some type of error and the framework was unable to perform a last save before failing.

  • STATUS: Character string representing the status of the execution. This may be COMPLETED, STARTED, and others. The object representation of this column is the BatchStatus enumeration.

  • EXIT_CODE: Character string representing the exit code of the execution. In the case of a command-line job, this may be converted into a number.

  • EXIT_MESSAGE: Character string representing a more detailed description of how the job exited. In the case of failure, this might include as much of the stack trace as is possible.

  • LAST_UPDATED: Timestamp representing the last time this execution was persisted.

B.5. The BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION Table

The BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION table holds all information relevant to the StepExecution object. This table is similar in many ways to the BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION table, and there is always at least one entry per Step for each JobExecution created. The following listing shows the definition of the BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION table:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION  (
  STEP_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY ,
  VERSION BIGINT NOT NULL,
  STEP_NAME VARCHAR(100) NOT NULL,
  JOB_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT NOT NULL,
  CREATE_TIME TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
  START_TIME TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NULL ,
  END_TIME TIMESTAMP DEFAULT NULL,
  STATUS VARCHAR(10),
  COMMIT_COUNT BIGINT ,
  READ_COUNT BIGINT ,
  FILTER_COUNT BIGINT ,
  WRITE_COUNT BIGINT ,
  READ_SKIP_COUNT BIGINT ,
  WRITE_SKIP_COUNT BIGINT ,
  PROCESS_SKIP_COUNT BIGINT ,
  ROLLBACK_COUNT BIGINT ,
  EXIT_CODE VARCHAR(20) ,
  EXIT_MESSAGE VARCHAR(2500) ,
  LAST_UPDATED TIMESTAMP,
  constraint JOB_EXECUTION_STEP_FK foreign key (JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
  references BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION(JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
) ;

The following list describes each column:

  • STEP_EXECUTION_ID: Primary key that uniquely identifies this execution. The value of this column should be obtainable by calling the getId method of the StepExecution object.

  • VERSION: See Version.

  • STEP_NAME: The name of the step to which this execution belongs.

  • JOB_EXECUTION_ID: Foreign key from the BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION table. It indicates the JobExecution to which this StepExecution belongs. There may be only one StepExecution for a given JobExecution for a given Step name.

  • START_TIME: Timestamp representing the time when the execution was started.

  • END_TIME: Timestamp representing the time the when execution was finished, regardless of success or failure. An empty value in this column, even though the job is not currently running, indicates that there has been some type of error and the framework was unable to perform a last save before failing.

  • STATUS: Character string representing the status of the execution. This may be COMPLETED, STARTED, and others. The object representation of this column is the BatchStatus enumeration.

  • COMMIT_COUNT: The number of times in which the step has committed a transaction during this execution.

  • READ_COUNT: The number of items read during this execution.

  • FILTER_COUNT: The number of items filtered out of this execution.

  • WRITE_COUNT: The number of items written and committed during this execution.

  • READ_SKIP_COUNT: The number of items skipped on read during this execution.

  • WRITE_SKIP_COUNT: The number of items skipped on write during this execution.

  • PROCESS_SKIP_COUNT: The number of items skipped during processing during this execution.

  • ROLLBACK_COUNT: The number of rollbacks during this execution. Note that this count includes each time rollback occurs, including rollbacks for retry and those in the skip recovery procedure.

  • EXIT_CODE: Character string representing the exit code of the execution. In the case of a command-line job, this may be converted into a number.

  • EXIT_MESSAGE: Character string representing a more detailed description of how the job exited. In the case of failure, this might include as much of the stack trace as is possible.

  • LAST_UPDATED: Timestamp representing the last time this execution was persisted.

B.6. The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_CONTEXT Table

The BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_CONTEXT table holds all information relevant to the ExecutionContext of a Job. There is exactly one Job ExecutionContext for each JobExecution, and it contains all of the job-level data that is needed for a particular job execution. This data typically represents the state that must be retrieved after a failure, so that a JobInstance can “start where it left off”. The following listing shows the definition of the BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_CONTEXT table:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION_CONTEXT  (
  JOB_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT PRIMARY KEY,
  SHORT_CONTEXT VARCHAR(2500) NOT NULL,
  SERIALIZED_CONTEXT CLOB,
  constraint JOB_EXEC_CTX_FK foreign key (JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
  references BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION(JOB_EXECUTION_ID)
) ;

The following list describes each column:

  • JOB_EXECUTION_ID: Foreign key representing the JobExecution to which the context belongs. There may be more than one row associated with a given execution.

  • SHORT_CONTEXT: A string version of the SERIALIZED_CONTEXT.

  • SERIALIZED_CONTEXT: The entire context, serialized.

B.7. The BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT Table

The BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT table holds all information relevant to the ExecutionContext of a Step. There is exactly one ExecutionContext per StepExecution, and it contains all of the data that needs to be persisted for a particular step execution. This data typically represents the state that must be retrieved after a failure so that a JobInstance can “start where it left off”. The following listing shows the definition of the BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT table:

CREATE TABLE BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION_CONTEXT  (
  STEP_EXECUTION_ID BIGINT PRIMARY KEY,
  SHORT_CONTEXT VARCHAR(2500) NOT NULL,
  SERIALIZED_CONTEXT CLOB,
  constraint STEP_EXEC_CTX_FK foreign key (STEP_EXECUTION_ID)
  references BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION(STEP_EXECUTION_ID)
) ;

The following list describes each column:

  • STEP_EXECUTION_ID: Foreign key representing the StepExecution to which the context belongs. There may be more than one row associated with a given execution.

  • SHORT_CONTEXT: A string version of the SERIALIZED_CONTEXT.

  • SERIALIZED_CONTEXT: The entire context, serialized.

B.8. Archiving

Because there are entries in multiple tables every time a batch job is run, it is common to create an archive strategy for the metadata tables. The tables themselves are designed to show a record of what happened in the past and generally do not affect the run of any job, with a few notable exceptions pertaining to restart:

  • The framework uses the metadata tables to determine whether a particular JobInstance has been run before. If it has been run and if the job is not restartable, an exception is thrown.

  • If an entry for a JobInstance is removed without having completed successfully, the framework thinks that the job is new rather than a restart.

  • If a job is restarted, the framework uses any data that has been persisted to the ExecutionContext to restore the Job’s state. Therefore, removing any entries from this table for jobs that have not completed successfully prevents them from starting at the correct point if they are run again.

B.9. International and Multi-byte Characters

If you use multi-byte character sets (such as Chinese or Cyrillic) in your business processing, those characters might need to be persisted in the Spring Batch schema. Many users find that simply changing the schema to double the length of the VARCHAR columns is enough. Others prefer to configure the JobRepository with max-varchar-length half the value of the VARCHAR column length. Some users have also reported that they use NVARCHAR in place of VARCHAR in their schema definitions. The best result depends on the database platform and the way the database server has been configured locally.

B.10. Recommendations for Indexing Metadata Tables

Spring Batch provides DDL samples for the metadata tables in the core jar file for several common database platforms. Index declarations are not included in that DDL, because there are too many variations in how users may want to index, depending on their precise platform, local conventions, and the business requirements of how the jobs are operated. The following table provides some indication as to which columns are going to be used in a WHERE clause by the DAO implementations provided by Spring Batch and how frequently they might be used so that individual projects can make up their own minds about indexing:

Table 21. Where clauses in SQL statements (excluding primary keys) and their approximate frequency of use.

Default Table Name

Where Clause

Frequency

BATCH_JOB_INSTANCE

JOB_NAME = ? and JOB_KEY = ?

Every time a job is launched

BATCH_JOB_EXECUTION

JOB_INSTANCE_ID = ?

Every time a job is restarted

BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION

VERSION = ?

On commit interval, a.k.a. chunk (and at start and end of step)

BATCH_STEP_EXECUTION

STEP_NAME = ? and JOB_EXECUTION_ID = ?

Before each step execution

Appendix C: Batch Processing and Transactions

C.1. Simple Batching with No Retry

Consider the following simple example of a nested batch with no retries. It shows a common scenario for batch processing: An input source is processed until exhausted, and it commits periodically at the end of a “chunk” of processing.

1   |  REPEAT(until=exhausted) {
|
2   |    TX {
3   |      REPEAT(size=5) {
3.1 |        input;
3.2 |        output;
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

The input operation (3.1) could be a message-based receive (such as from JMS) or a file-based read, but to recover and continue processing with a chance of completing the whole job, it must be transactional. The same applies to the operation at 3.2. It must be either transactional or idempotent.

If the chunk at REPEAT (3) fails because of a database exception at 3.2, then TX (2) must roll back the whole chunk.

C.2. Simple Stateless Retry

It is also useful to use a retry for an operation which is not transactional, such as a call to a web-service or other remote resource, as the following example shows:

0   |  TX {
1   |    input;
1.1 |    output;
2   |    RETRY {
2.1 |      remote access;
|    }
|  }

This is actually one of the most useful applications of a retry, since a remote call is much more likely to fail and be retryable than a database update. As long as the remote access (2.1) eventually succeeds, the transaction, TX (0), commits. If the remote access (2.1) eventually fails, the transaction, TX (0), is guaranteed to roll back.

C.3. Typical Repeat-Retry Pattern

The most typical batch processing pattern is to add a retry to the inner block of the chunk, as the following example shows:

1   |  REPEAT(until=exhausted, exception=not critical) {
|
2   |    TX {
3   |      REPEAT(size=5) {
|
4   |        RETRY(stateful, exception=deadlock loser) {
4.1 |          input;
5   |        } PROCESS {
5.1 |          output;
6   |        } SKIP and RECOVER {
|          notify;
|        }
|
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

The inner RETRY (4) block is marked as “stateful”. See the typical use case for a description of a stateful retry. This means that, if the retry PROCESS (5) block fails, the behavior of the RETRY (4) is as follows:

  1. Throw an exception, rolling back the transaction, TX (2), at the chunk level, and allowing the item to be re-presented to the input queue.

  2. When the item re-appears, it might be retried, depending on the retry policy in place, and executing PROCESS (5) again. The second and subsequent attempts might fail again and re-throw the exception.

  3. Eventually, the item reappears for the final time. The retry policy disallows another attempt, so PROCESS (5) is never executed. In this case, we follow the RECOVER (6) path, effectively “skipping” the item that was received and is being processed.

Note that the notation used for the RETRY (4) in the plan explicitly shows that the input step (4.1) is part of the retry. It also makes clear that there are two alternate paths for processing: the normal case, as denoted by PROCESS (5), and the recovery path, as denoted in a separate block by RECOVER (6). The two alternate paths are completely distinct. Only one is ever taken in normal circumstances.

In special cases (such as a special TranscationValidException type), the retry policy might be able to determine that the RECOVER (6) path can be taken on the last attempt after PROCESS (5) has just failed, instead of waiting for the item to be re-presented. This is not the default behavior, because it requires detailed knowledge of what has happened inside the PROCESS (5) block, which is not usually available. For example, if the output included write access before the failure, the exception should be re-thrown to ensure transactional integrity.

The completion policy in the outer REPEAT (1) is crucial to the success of the plan. If the output (5.1) fails, it may throw an exception (it usually does, as described), in which case the transaction, TX (2), fails, and the exception could propagate up through the outer batch REPEAT (1). We do not want the whole batch to stop, because the RETRY (4) might still be successful if we try again, so we add exception=not critical to the outer REPEAT (1).

Note, however, that if the TX (2) fails and we do try again, by virtue of the outer completion policy, the item that is next processed in the inner REPEAT (3) is not guaranteed to be the one that just failed. It might be, but it depends on the implementation of the input (4.1). Thus, the output (5.1) might fail again on either a new item or the old one. The client of the batch should not assume that each RETRY (4) attempt is going to process the same items as the last one that failed. For example, if the termination policy for REPEAT (1) is to fail after 10 attempts, it fails after 10 consecutive attempts but not necessarily at the same item. This is consistent with the overall retry strategy. The inner RETRY (4) is aware of the history of each item and can decide whether or not to have another attempt at it.

C.4. Asynchronous Chunk Processing

The inner batches or chunks in the typical example can be executed concurrently by configuring the outer batch to use an AsyncTaskExecutor. The outer batch waits for all the chunks to complete before completing. The following example shows asynchronous chunk processing:

1   |  REPEAT(until=exhausted, concurrent, exception=not critical) {
|
2   |    TX {
3   |      REPEAT(size=5) {
|
4   |        RETRY(stateful, exception=deadlock loser) {
4.1 |          input;
5   |        } PROCESS {
|          output;
6   |        } RECOVER {
|          recover;
|        }
|
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

C.5. Asynchronous Item Processing

The individual items in chunks in the typical example can also, in principle, be processed concurrently. In this case, the transaction boundary has to move to the level of the individual item, so that each transaction is on a single thread, as the following example shows:

1   |  REPEAT(until=exhausted, exception=not critical) {
|
2   |    REPEAT(size=5, concurrent) {
|
3   |      TX {
4   |        RETRY(stateful, exception=deadlock loser) {
4.1 |          input;
5   |        } PROCESS {
|          output;
6   |        } RECOVER {
|          recover;
|        }
|      }
|
|    }
|
|  }

This plan sacrifices the optimization benefit, which the simple plan had, of having all the transactional resources chunked together. It is useful only if the cost of the processing (5) is much higher than the cost of transaction management (3).

C.6. Interactions Between Batching and Transaction Propagation

There is a tighter coupling between batch-retry and transaction management than we would ideally like. In particular, a stateless retry cannot be used to retry database operations with a transaction manager that does not support NESTED propagation.

The following example uses retry without repeat:

1   |  TX {
|
1.1 |    input;
2.2 |    database access;
2   |    RETRY {
3   |      TX {
3.1 |        database access;
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

Again, and for the same reason, the inner transaction, TX (3), can cause the outer transaction, TX (1), to fail, even if the RETRY (2) is eventually successful.

Unfortunately, the same effect percolates from the retry block up to the surrounding repeat batch if there is one, as the following example shows:

1   |  TX {
|
2   |    REPEAT(size=5) {
2.1 |      input;
2.2 |      database access;
3   |      RETRY {
4   |        TX {
4.1 |          database access;
|        }
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

Now, if TX (3) rolls back, it can pollute the whole batch at TX (1) and force it to roll back at the end.

What about non-default propagation?

  • In the preceding example, PROPAGATION_REQUIRES_NEW at TX (3) prevents the outer TX (1) from being polluted if both transactions are eventually successful. But if TX (3) commits and TX (1) rolls back, TX (3) stays committed, so we violate the transaction contract for TX (1). If TX (3) rolls back, TX (1) does not necessarily roll back (but it probably does in practice, because the retry throws a roll back exception).

  • PROPAGATION_NESTED at TX (3) works as we require in the retry case (and for a batch with skips): TX (3) can commit but subsequently be rolled back by the outer transaction, TX (1). If TX (3) rolls back, TX (1) rolls back in practice. This option is only available on some platforms, not including Hibernate or JTA, but it is the only one that consistently works.

Consequently, the NESTED pattern is best if the retry block contains any database access.

C.7. Special Case: Transactions with Orthogonal Resources

Default propagation is always OK for simple cases where there are no nested database transactions. Consider the following example, where the SESSION and TX are not global XA resources, so their resources are orthogonal:

0   |  SESSION {
1   |    input;
2   |    RETRY {
3   |      TX {
3.1 |        database access;
|      }
|    }
|  }

Here there is a transactional message, SESSION (0), but it does not participate in other transactions with PlatformTransactionManager, so it does not propagate when TX (3) starts. There is no database access outside the RETRY (2) block. If TX (3) fails and then eventually succeeds on a retry, SESSION (0) can commit (independently of a TX block). This is similar to the vanilla “best-efforts-one-phase-commit” scenario. The worst that can happen is a duplicate message when the RETRY (2) succeeds and the SESSION (0) cannot commit (for example, because the message system is unavailable).

C.8. Stateless Retry Cannot Recover

The distinction between a stateless and a stateful retry in the typical example shown earlier is important. It is actually ultimately a transactional constraint that forces the distinction, and this constraint also makes it obvious why the distinction exists.

We start with the observation that there is no way to skip an item that failed and successfully commit the rest of the chunk unless we wrap the item processing in a transaction. Consequently, we simplify the typical batch execution plan to be as follows:

0   |  REPEAT(until=exhausted) {
|
1   |    TX {
2   |      REPEAT(size=5) {
|
3   |        RETRY(stateless) {
4   |          TX {
4.1 |            input;
4.2 |            database access;
|          }
5   |        } RECOVER {
5.1 |          skip;
|        }
|
|      }
|    }
|
|  }

The preceding example shows a stateless RETRY (3) with a RECOVER (5) path that kicks in after the final attempt fails. The stateless label means that the block is repeated without re-throwing any exception up to some limit. This works only if the transaction, TX (4), has propagation nested.

If the inner TX (4) has default propagation properties and rolls back, it pollutes the outer TX (1). The inner transaction is assumed by the transaction manager to have corrupted the transactional resource, so it cannot be used again.

Support for nested propagation is sufficiently rare that we choose not to support recovery with stateless retries in the current versions of Spring Batch. The same effect can always be achieved (at the expense of repeating more processing) by using the typical pattern shown earlier.

Appendix D: Glossary

Spring Batch Glossary

Batch

An accumulation of business transactions over time.

Batch Application Style

Term used to designate batch as an application style in its own right, similar to online, Web, or SOA. It has standard elements of input, validation, transformation of information to business model, business processing, and output. In addition, it requires monitoring at a macro level.

Batch Processing

The handling of a batch of many business transactions that have accumulated over a period of time (such as an hour, a day, a week, a month, or a year). It is the application of a process or set of processes to many data entities or objects in a repetitive and predictable fashion with either no manual element or a separate manual element for error processing.

Batch Window

The time frame within which a batch job must complete. This can be constrained by other systems coming online, other dependent jobs needing to execute, or other factors specific to the batch environment.

Step

The main batch task or unit of work. It initializes the business logic and controls the transaction environment, based on the commit interval setting and other factors.

Tasklet

A component created by an application developer to process the business logic for a Step.

Batch Job Type

Job types describe application of jobs for particular types of processing. Common areas are interface processing (typically flat files), forms processing (either for online PDF generation or print formats), and report processing.

Driving Query

A driving query identifies the set of work for a job to do. The job then breaks that work into individual units of work. For instance, a driving query might be to identify all financial transactions that have a status of “pending transmission” and send them to a partner system. The driving query returns a set of record IDs to process. Each record ID then becomes a unit of work. A driving query may involve a join (if the criteria for selection falls across two or more tables) or it may work with a single table.

Item

An item represents the smallest amount of complete data for processing. In the simplest terms, this might be a line in a file, a row in a database table, or a particular element in an XML file.

Logicial Unit of Work (LUW)

A batch job iterates through a driving query (or other input source, such as a file) to perform the set of work that the job must accomplish. Each iteration of work performed is a unit of work.

Commit Interval

A set of LUWs processed within a single transaction.

Partitioning

Splitting a job into multiple threads where each thread is responsible for a subset of the overall data to be processed. The threads of execution may be within the same JVM or they may span JVMs in a clustered environment that supports workload balancing.

Staging Table

A table that holds temporary data while it is being processed.

Restartable

A job that can be executed again and assumes the same identity as when run initially. In other words, it has the same job instance ID.

Rerunnable

A job that is restartable and manages its own state in terms of the previous run’s record processing. An example of a re-runnable step is one based on a driving query. If the driving query can be formed so that it limits the processed rows when the job is restarted, then it is re-runnable. This is managed by the application logic. Often, a condition is added to the where statement to limit the rows returned by the driving query with logic resembling and processedFlag!= true.

Repeat

One of the most basic units of batch processing, it defines by repeatedly calling a portion of code until it is finished and while there is no error. Typically, a batch process would be repeatable as long as there is input.

Retry

Simplifies the execution of operations with retry semantics most frequently associated with handling transactional output exceptions. Retry is slightly different from repeat. Rather than continually calling a block of code, retry is stateful and continually calls the same block of code with the same input, until it either succeeds or some type of retry limit has been exceeded. It is generally useful only when a subsequent invocation of the operation might succeed because something in the environment has improved.

Recover

Recover operations handle an exception in such a way that a repeat process is able to continue.

Skip

Skip is a recovery strategy often used on file input sources as the strategy for ignoring bad input records that failed validation.