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A VFuture is a handle to the result of an asynchronous computation. It captures the effects of latency and failure: it is completed once the computation finishes (either successfully or with a failure). The implementation uses virtual threads for producing the future's result.

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A Virtual Future for Java

An instance of a VFuture is a handle to the result of an asynchronous computation. It captures the effects of latency and failure: it is completed once the computation finishes (either successfully or with a failure). Additionally, it succeeded or failed depending on the outcome of the computation. When completed, it provides access to the outcome of the computation.

Internally each VFuture instance is backed by a virtual thread that is responsible for producing the future's result.

Creation and Completion

A newly created VFuture might complete - either successfully or failed - at some future point in time. Once completed its result becomes available, either from a callback or from one of its accessors.

Use VFuture#succeeded(T) and VFuture#failed(Throwable) to create instances that are already completed, the first on successfully and the second one failed.

Use VFuture#future(Callable<T>) to create an instance that executes the passed Callable asynchronously and completes once the Callable finishes executing. If the Callable throws an exception the VFuture fails with that exception, otherwise it succeeds with the value returned from the Callable.

Pass a Promise<T> to VFuture#future(Callable<T>) to create a new instance that can be completed manually by either calling Promise#succeed(T) or Promise#fail(Throwable).

Register a callback with VFuture#onSuccess(Consumer<VFuture<T>>), VFuture#onComplete(Consumer<T>) or VFuture#onFail(Consumer<Throwable>) to get notified on completion.

Use one of the polling methods VFuture#get() or VFuture#get(Duration) to retrieve the result of a VFuture. These methods block either until completion or a timeout expired.

Use VFuture#isCompleted(), VFuture#isSucceeded() or VFuture#isFailed() to determine the completion status of a VFuture.

Transforming, Sequencing and Recovering

VFuture offers various ways to lift functions into the future and for sequencing multiple futures.

Use VFuture#map(Function<T, R>) to convert a VFuture<T> into a VFuture<R>. E.g. lift Integer#parseInt into a VFuture<String> to convert it into a VFuture<Integer>:

VFuture<String> future = ...
VFuture>Integer> intFuture = future.map(Integer::parseInt);

Use VFuture#andThen(Function<T, VFuture<R>>) to sequence multiple VFutures one after each other, where the next one depends on the result of the previous one. E.g. to retrieve a product and then a rating for that product to create a product review:

VFuture<String> productReview = VFuture.future(
    API::getProduct)
        .andThen(product -> VFuture.future(() ->
    API.getRating(product))
        .map(rating ->
    newProductReview(product, rating)));

Use VFuture#andAlso(VFuture<Function<T, R>>) or VFuture#andAlso(VFuture<S>, BiFunction<T, S, R>) when a VFuture instance does not depend on the result of previous ones. This allows parallel execution of the asynchronous tasks. E.g. to calculate the speed from the result of two futures, one for a speed and the other a duration:

VFuture<Integer> duration = VFuture.future(
    API::getSpeed)
        .andAlso(VFuture.future(
    API::getDistance)
        .map(distance -> speed ->
    distance / speed));

or with the andAlso overload taking a BiFunction for combining the individual results:

VFuture<Integer> duration = VFuture.future(
    API::getSpeed)
        .andAlso(VFuture.future(
    API::getDistance),
        (distance, speed) ->
    distance / speed);

Use one of the VFuture#recover...() methods to recover a failed future into a succeeded one:

  • recover(Function<Throwable,T>) corresponds to VFuture#map(Function<T, R>) for the failure case.
  • VFuture#recover(T) is a shortcut for future.recover(ignore --> t).
  • VFuture#recoverWith(Function<Throwable, VFuture<T>>) corresponds to VFuture#andThen(Function<T, VFuture<R>>) for the failure case.

Combining, Reducing, Folding and Collecting

Use VFuture#first(Stream<VFuture<T>>) to find the first completing instance in a stream of VFutures.

Use VFuture#collect(Stream<VFuture<T>>) to collect a stream of VFutures into a blocking queue, ordered by the order of completion of the individual instances on the stream.

Use VFuture#reduce(Stream<VFuture<T>>) to reduce a stream of VFutures into a VFuture<Stream<T>>. Reduction runs in parallel and returned VFuture fails immediately once one of the instances in the stream fail and succeeds otherwise.

Use VFuture#foldLeft(Stream<VFuture<T>>, VFuture<R>, BiFunction<R, T, R>) to fold a stream of VFutures into a single VFuture by repeatedly applying a BiFunction to the individual futures.

About

A VFuture is a handle to the result of an asynchronous computation. It captures the effects of latency and failure: it is completed once the computation finishes (either successfully or with a failure). The implementation uses virtual threads for producing the future's result.

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