Book Image

Akka Cookbook

By : Vivek Mishra, Héctor Veiga Ortiz
Book Image

Akka Cookbook

By: Vivek Mishra, Héctor Veiga Ortiz

Overview of this book

Akka is an open source toolkit that simplifies the construction of distributed and concurrent applications on the JVM. This book will teach you how to develop reactive applications in Scala using the Akka framework. This book will show you how to build concurrent, scalable, and reactive applications in Akka. You will see how to create high performance applications, extend applications, build microservices with Lagom, and more. We will explore Akka's actor model and show you how to incorporate concurrency into your applications. The book puts a special emphasis on performance improvement and how to make an application available for users. We also make a special mention of message routing and construction. By the end of this book, you will be able to create a high-performing Scala application using the Akka framework.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Title Page
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Handling callback on futures


In this recipe, you will learn how to handle future responses with callback functions; it is also known as asynchronous handling of futures. Using the callback function, we don't block the current thread for response from a future.

Getting ready

To step through this recipe, we will need to import the Hello-Akka project in the IDE, and the rest of the prerequisites are same as earlier.

How to do it...

  1. Create a scala file, callback.scala, in the com.packt.chapter4 package.
  2. Add the following import to the top of the file:
        import scala.concurrent.ExecutionContext.Implicits.global 
        import scala.concurrent.Future 
        import scala.util.{Failure, Success} 
  1. Create a Scala application, as follows:
        object Callback extends App { 
          val future = Future(1 + 2).mapTo[Int] 
          future onComplete { 
            case Success(result) => println(s"result is $result") 
            case Failure(fail) => fail.printStackTrace() 
            ...