Container Thread Naming
A TaskExecutor
is used to invoke the consumer and the listener.
You can provide a custom executor by setting the consumerExecutor
property of the container’s ContainerProperties
.
When using pooled executors, be sure that enough threads are available to handle the concurrency across all the containers in which they are used.
When using the ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer
, a thread from the executor is used for each consumer (concurrency
).
If you do not provide a consumer executor, a SimpleAsyncTaskExecutor
is used for each container.
This executor creates threads with names similar to <beanName>-C-<n>
.
For the ConcurrentMessageListenerContainer
, the <beanName>
part of the thread name becomes <beanName>-m
, where m
represents the consumer instance.
n
increments each time the container is started.
So, with a bean name of container
, threads in this container will be named container-0-C-1
, container-1-C-1
etc., after the container is started the first time; container-0-C-2
, container-1-C-2
etc., after a stop and subsequent start.
Starting with version 3.0.1
, you can now change the name of the thread, regardless of which executor is used.
Set the AbstractMessageListenerContainer.changeConsumerThreadName
property to true
and the AbstractMessageListenerContainer.threadNameSupplier
will be invoked to obtain the thread name.
This is a Function<MessageListenerContainer, String>
, with the default implementation returning container.getListenerId()
.