Annotation Interface EnableScheduling


Enables Spring's scheduled task execution capability, similar to functionality found in Spring's <task:*> XML namespace. To be used on @Configuration classes as follows:
 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 public class AppConfig {

     // various @Bean definitions
 }

This enables detection of @Scheduled annotations on any Spring-managed bean in the container. For example, given a class MyTask:

 package com.myco.tasks;

 public class MyTask {

     @Scheduled(fixedRate=1000)
     public void work() {
         // task execution logic
     }
 }

the following configuration would ensure that MyTask.work() is called once every 1000 ms:

 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 public class AppConfig {

     @Bean
     public MyTask task() {
         return new MyTask();
     }
 }

Alternatively, if MyTask were annotated with @Component, the following configuration would ensure that its @Scheduled method is invoked at the desired interval:

 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 @ComponentScan(basePackages="com.myco.tasks")
 public class AppConfig {
 }

Methods annotated with @Scheduled may even be declared directly within @Configuration classes:

 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 public class AppConfig {

     @Scheduled(fixedRate=1000)
     public void work() {
         // task execution logic
     }
 }

By default, Spring will search for an associated scheduler definition: either a unique TaskScheduler bean in the context, or a TaskScheduler bean named "taskScheduler" otherwise; the same lookup will also be performed for a ScheduledExecutorService bean. If neither of the two is resolvable, a local single-threaded default scheduler will be created and used within the registrar.

When more control is desired, a @Configuration class may implement SchedulingConfigurer. This allows access to the underlying ScheduledTaskRegistrar instance. For example, the following example demonstrates how to customize the Executor used to execute scheduled tasks:

 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 public class AppConfig implements SchedulingConfigurer {

     @Override
     public void configureTasks(ScheduledTaskRegistrar taskRegistrar) {
         taskRegistrar.setScheduler(taskExecutor());
     }

     @Bean(destroyMethod="shutdown")
     public Executor taskExecutor() {
         return Executors.newScheduledThreadPool(100);
     }
 }

Note in the example above the use of @Bean(destroyMethod="shutdown"). This ensures that the task executor is properly shut down when the Spring application context itself is closed.

Implementing SchedulingConfigurer also allows for fine-grained control over task registration via the ScheduledTaskRegistrar. For example, the following configures the execution of a particular bean method per a custom Trigger implementation:

 @Configuration
 @EnableScheduling
 public class AppConfig implements SchedulingConfigurer {

     @Override
     public void configureTasks(ScheduledTaskRegistrar taskRegistrar) {
         taskRegistrar.setScheduler(taskScheduler());
         taskRegistrar.addTriggerTask(
             () -> myTask().work(),
             new CustomTrigger()
         );
     }

     @Bean(destroyMethod="shutdown")
     public Executor taskScheduler() {
         return Executors.newScheduledThreadPool(42);
     }

     @Bean
     public MyTask myTask() {
         return new MyTask();
     }
 }

For reference, the example above can be compared to the following Spring XML configuration:

 <beans>

     <task:annotation-driven scheduler="taskScheduler"/>

     <task:scheduler id="taskScheduler" pool-size="42"/>

     <task:scheduled-tasks scheduler="taskScheduler">
         <task:scheduled ref="myTask" method="work" fixed-rate="1000"/>
     </task:scheduled-tasks>

     <bean id="myTask" class="com.foo.MyTask"/>

 </beans>
 

The examples are equivalent save that in XML a fixed-rate period is used instead of a custom Trigger implementation; this is because the task: namespace scheduled cannot easily expose such support. This is but one demonstration how the code-based approach allows for maximum configurability through direct access to the actual component.

Note: @EnableScheduling applies to its local application context only, allowing for selective scheduling of beans at different levels. Please redeclare @EnableScheduling in each individual context, for example, the common root web application context and any separate DispatcherServlet application contexts, if you need to apply its behavior at multiple levels.

Since:
3.1
Author:
Chris Beams, Juergen Hoeller
See Also: