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@Target(value=TYPE) @Retention(value=RUNTIME) @Documented @Import(value=AsyncConfigurationSelector.class) public @interface EnableAsync
Enables Spring's asynchronous method execution capability, similar to functionality
found in Spring's <task:*>
XML namespace. To be used on @Configuration
classes as follows:
@Configuration @EnableAsync public class AppConfig { @Bean public MyAsyncBean asyncBean() { return new MyAsyncBean(); } }where
MyAsyncBean
is a user-defined type with one or methods annotated
with @Async
(or any custom annotation specified by the annotation()
attribute).
The mode()
attribute controls how advice is applied; if the mode is
AdviceMode.PROXY
(the default), then the other attributes control the behavior
of the proxying.
Note that if the mode() is set to AdviceMode.ASPECTJ
, then
the proxyTargetClass()
attribute is obsolete. Note also that in this case the
spring-aspects
module JAR must be present on the classpath.
By default, a SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor
will be used to process async method invocations. To
customize this behavior, implement AsyncConfigurer
and
provide your own Executor
through the
getExecutor()
method.
@Configuration @EnableAsync public class AppConfig implements AsyncConfigurer { @Bean public MyAsyncBean asyncBean() { return new MyAsyncBean(); } @Override public Executor getAsyncExecutor() { ThreadPoolTaskExecutor executor = new ThreadPoolTaskExecutor(); executor.setCorePoolSize(7); executor.setMaxPoolSize(42); executor.setQueueCapacity(11); executor.setThreadNamePrefix("MyExecutor-"); executor.initialize(); return executor; } }
For reference, the example above can be compared to the following Spring XML configuration:
<beans>
<task:annotation-config executor="myExecutor"/>
<task:executor id="myExecutor" pool-size="7-42" queue-capacity="11"/>
<bean id="asyncBean" class="com.foo.MyAsyncBean"/>
</beans>
the examples are equivalent save the setting of the thread name prefix of the
Executor; this is because the the task:
namespace executor
element does
not expose such an attribute. This demonstrates how the code-based approach allows for
maximum configurability through direct access to actual componentry.
Async
,
AsyncConfigurer
,
AsyncConfigurationSelector
Optional Element Summary | |
---|---|
Class<? extends Annotation> |
annotation
Indicate the 'async' annotation type to be detected at either class or method level. |
AdviceMode |
mode
Indicate how async advice should be applied. |
int |
order
Indicate the order in which the AsyncAnnotationBeanPostProcessor
should be applied. |
boolean |
proxyTargetClass
Indicate whether subclass-based (CGLIB) proxies are to be created as opposed to standard Java interface-based proxies. |
public abstract Class<? extends Annotation> annotation
Async
annotation and
the EJB 3.1 javax.ejb.Asynchronous
annotation will be
detected. This setter property exists so that developers can provide their own (non-Spring-specific) annotation type to indicate that a method (or all methods of a given class) should be invoked asynchronously.
public abstract boolean proxyTargetClass
false
.
Applicable only if mode()
is set to AdviceMode.PROXY
.
Note that setting this attribute to true
will affect all
Spring-managed beans requiring proxying, not just those marked with @Async
.
For example, other beans marked with Spring's @Transactional
annotation
will be upgraded to subclass proxying at the same time. This approach has no
negative impact in practice unless one is explicitly expecting one type of proxy
vs another, e.g. in tests.
public abstract AdviceMode mode
AdviceMode.PROXY
.
AdviceMode
public abstract int order
AsyncAnnotationBeanPostProcessor
should be applied. The default is Ordered.LOWEST_PRECEDENCE
in order to run
after all other post-processors, so that it can add an advisor to
existing proxies rather than double-proxy.
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