playcommunity / play-utils   0.2.1

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Play-Utils is a set of utilities for developing with Play Framework for Scala.

Scala versions: 2.12 2.11

Welcome!

For chinese introduction, please refer to README-CN.md.

Introduction

Play-Utils is a set of utilities for developing with Play Framework, including the following features:

  • Retry retry request automatically with different strategies

1 Retry

Retry utility is used to retry request automatically with different strategies, and finally return the success result or the last retried result.

1.1 Get started

Add the following dependency to your build.sbt:

libraryDependencies += "cn.playscala" %% "play-utils" % "0.2.1"

FixedDelayRetry is the simplest retry strategy, it retries the next request with the same delay. Before coding, the instance of Retry should be injected where is needed:

class ExternalService @Inject()(retry: Retry)

The following codes retry every second and 3 times at most:

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withFixedDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.stopWhen(_ == 10)

stopWhen is used to set the stop condition, that means, it will return a successful result when the result value is 10 otherwise continue to retry. You can also use retryWhen method to set retry condition:

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withFixedDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(_ != 10)

Notice that, it will retry automatically when an exception is thrown.

In addition to injected instance, you can also use the singleton object Retry directly with two implicit objects in current scope:

implicit val ec: ExecutionContext = ...
implicit val scheduler: Scheduler = ...

Retry.withFixedDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds).apply { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(s => s != 10)

Unless stated, the following codes use the injected instance which is named retry.

You can set the customized execution context and scheduler with withExecutionContext and withScheduler methods:

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withFixedDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.withExecutionContext(ec)
 .withScheduler(s)
 .retryWhen(_ != 10)

You can set a name for this retry task for better logs with withTaskName method. The logging is enabled default, if you want you can disabled it with withLoggingEnabled method.

1.2 Retry Strategies

In some scenarios, fixed-time retry may impact remote services. So there are several useful candidate strategies.

1.2.1 BackoffRetry

BackoffRetry contains 2 parameters, delay parameter is for setting the initial delay, factor parameter is a product factor, used for adjusting the next delay time.

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withBackoffDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds, 2.0) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(_ != 10)

The retry delay times are: 1 seconds, 2 seconds and 4 seconds.

1.2.2 JitterRetry

JitterRetry contains 2 parameters, minDelay parameter sets the lower bound, and maxDelay parameter sets the upper bound. The retry delay time will fluctuate between these two values:

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withJitterDelay[Int](3, 1 seconds, 1 hours) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(_ != 10)

1.2.3 FibonacciRetry

FibonacciRetry calculates the delay time based on Fibonacci algorithm.

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withFibonacciDelay[Int](4, 1 seconds) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(_ != 10)

The retry delay times are: 0 seconds, 1 seconds, 1 seconds and 2 seconds

Notice that, you can adjust the baseDelay parameter to control the interval between each delay:

import scala.concurrent.duration._

retry.withFibonacciDelay[Int](4, 2 seconds) { () =>
  Future.successful(0)
}.retryWhen(_ != 10)

The retry delay times are: 0 seconds, 2 seconds, 2 seconds and 4 seconds.