. If you really are open to
feedback, I suggest keeping an eye there. When it is done, it is possible I will blog
about this if it is clear this is a going to be a problem. In the least people will
hopefully have that as a resource when they are confused.
The reality is that everyone has limited time. I can provide feedback when I can provide
feedback for any number of personal reasons including whether my employer allows it. It is
ultimately up to you to consider it fairly and objectively at all times. If you are
failing to do that for any reason before the spec is final it is rather unfortunate for
anyone relying on the spec.
In the end the beauty of all of this is that none of this impacts my livelihood
immediately any more. I am just another developer again now. In the end I get to walk over
to the Spring camp like everyone else. And thank goodness for that freedom.
Kindly do not assume I will be spending a lot of time providing you feedback going
forward. That was unlikely at all times given my time constraints. You should assume the
same for most developers out there. When you get feedback from us, you should consider it
in that light.
On Mar 8, 2016, at 5:37 AM, Antoine Sabot-Durand
<antoine(a)sabot-durand.net> wrote:
Answer inline
> Le mar. 8 mars 2016 à 03:15, Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com> a écrit :
> I have forwarded this issue to the Java EE platform EG for review. My inclination now
is to simply leave this alone with a final earnest request to kindly think carefully about
this before finalizing and getting this into the real world. Please keep in mind that the
average developer is not that skilled and looks to resources on the web routinely for
answers. All those resources are going to immediately point to CompletableFuture, not some
obscure superclass.
CS is not an obscure superclass it's an interface and all methods in CF returns it,
so it's impossible to learn CF and ignore CS existence.
Concurrency is not an easy feature to use, people that think they can cut and paste code
from stack overflow without digging in the doc will hit a wall very soon.
We decided to return a CS to allow advanced user to use it to build async pipeline from
here. I guess that the majority of beginners will ignore this returned object (as they
would have do it if it had been a CF).
>
> All I am trying to do is help design an API that is not going to immediately become
difficult for the average end developer to understand and use. It's rather unfortunate
that I am already feeling fed up in that simple effort to provide feedback.
Reza, feedback is always welcome. But if you don't do it in time you should expect
some resistance from the EG who worked a long time (and in an open way) to take these
decision. So you need more arguments than "user don't know CS" to make us
switch from an interface to an impl, that is not suited for Java EE.
Feedback on possible technical issues are welcome.
>
> Anyway I am now basically done with this. Unfortunately I have far more urgent
matters for Java EE 7 and Java EE 8 to deal with. If I have time I'll look at some
more of the CDI 2 work and provide feedback if I can manage time.
Again it's welcome. We are about to discuss a programmatic APi for SE boot. Your
input will be precious here.
>
>> On Mar 7, 2016, at 2:53 PM, Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com> wrote:
>> Argue
>> Yes, this can be done with a CompletableFuture that has already been constructed
- just take a look at the API.
>>
>> As far as not adding it to CDI, I can see either way. What was the original
motivation for adding CompletableFutures?
>>
>> Also, it's a good idea to run this by the platform expert group. I know at
least JAX-RS is planning to use CompletableFutures for their client API.
>>
>>> On Mar 7, 2016, at 2:39 PM, Romain Manni-Bucau <rmannibucau(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> 2016-03-07 20:35 GMT+01:00 Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>:
>>>> Talking with a colleague about this he reminded me of an important fact I
almost forgot. The CompletableFuture API can actually be used with custom executors. That
means users concerned about managed threads in a Java EE environment can use it with
existing EE 7 concurrency executors.
>>>>
>>>> Basically this means CompletableFutures are already pretty Java EE
ready.
>>>>
>>>> If this is the main cited reason for using CompletionStage, is it really
that valid of an argument to justify yet another custom subclass specific only to CDI
instead of what's likely to be far more familiar and expected?
>>>>
>>>
>>> Did he mention it is true for *created* comlpetion future which is not the
case for async events? But this is a good point to not add anything to CDI: the feature is
a one liner *already*.
>>>
>>>>> On Mar 7, 2016, at 8:11 AM, Reza Rahman <reza_rahman(a)lycos.com>
wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I think this is a very bad idea. It's better not to use either
API and wait to sort out how CompletableFuture can be used in EE consistently. Because of
backwards compatibility rules, it is better to have no API than a bad API.
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Mar 7, 2016, at 3:45 AM, Romain Manni-Bucau
<rmannibucau(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2016-03-07 9:07 GMT+01:00 Martin Kouba
<mkouba(a)redhat.com>:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Dne 7.3.2016 v 09:03 Romain Manni-Bucau napsal(a):
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Le 7 mars 2016 08:35, "Martin Kouba"
<mkouba(a)redhat.com
>>>>>>>> <mailto:mkouba@redhat.com>> a écrit :
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> > Dne 6.3.2016 v 15:39 Romain Manni-Bucau napsal(a):
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> >> Hi guys,
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> as a user having a ComlpetionStage makes me
loose some JDK utilities,
>>>>>>>> >> can we move back to CompletionFuture?
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> It would allow for instance:
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> // doesn't work with CompletionStage
>>>>>>>> >> CompletionFuture.allOf(event1.fireAsync(...),
event2.fireAsync(...))
>>>>>>>> >> .then(...)
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> > Well, this should work if the underlying
CompletionStage impl
>>>>>>>> supports toCompletableFuture(), i.e. in Weld 3:
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Yes but it is not natural to convert it IMO = we can do
better
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> >
CompletableFuture.allOf(event1.fireAsync(...).toCompletableFuture(),
>>>>>>>> event2.fireAsync(...).toCompletableFuture())
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> > AFAIK the default async execution facility of
CompletableFuture is
>>>>>>>> ForkJoinPool.commonPool() which is not a good fit for
Java EE. Using the
>>>>>>>> CompletionStage interface allows us to wrap the async
calls without the
>>>>>>>> specified executor (e.g.
CompletionStage.thenApplyAsync(Function<? super
>>>>>>>> T, ? extends U>)) and supply a default one provided by
the impl.
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> Should use the pool in which the evznt is fired then
"then step" is
>>>>>>>> synchronous is my sample so all is decided at fire time
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> I don't talk about your particular example - I understand
that it's not using async exec (although the "then()" method does not
exist).
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> was supposed to represent the different flavours (thenRun,
thenCompose, ...) ;).
>>>>>>
>>>>>> That said I agree on the state switching the pool is better but
with these 2 notes:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> - could be better to hide these poorly designed methods then
-> don't use CompletionXXX but a CDI API with a bridge to CompletionX to let the
user go back on SE tools
>>>>>> - we still don't have a *standard* config for the pool(s)
underlying CDI features so it sounds as poor as SE solution IMO (at least a core/max/ttl
config in beans.xml)
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> Romain Manni-Bucau
>>>>>>>> >> @rmannibucau
<
https://twitter.com/rmannibucau> | Blog
>>>>>>>> >> <
http://rmannibucau.wordpress.com> |
Github
>>>>>>>> >> <
https://github.com/rmannibucau> |
LinkedIn
>>>>>>>> >> <
https://www.linkedin.com/in/rmannibucau>
| Tomitriber
>>>>>>>> >> <
http://www.tomitribe.com>
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >>
_______________________________________________
>>>>>>>> >> cdi-dev mailing list
>>>>>>>> >> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
<mailto:cdi-dev@lists.jboss.org>
>>>>>>>> >>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >> Note that for all code provided on this list,
the provider licenses
>>>>>>>> the code under the Apache License, Version 2
>>>>>>>> (
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For
all other ideas
>>>>>>>> provided on this list, the provider waives all patent and
other
>>>>>>>> intellectual property rights inherent in such
information.
>>>>>>>> >>
>>>>>>>> >
>>>>>>>> > --
>>>>>>>> > Martin Kouba
>>>>>>>> > Software Engineer
>>>>>>>> > Red Hat, Czech Republic
>>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> --
>>>>>>> Martin Kouba
>>>>>>> Software Engineer
>>>>>>> Red Hat, Czech Republic
>>>>>>
>>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>>> cdi-dev mailing list
>>>>>> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider
licenses the code under the Apache License, Version 2
(
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all other ideas provided on this
list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual property rights inherent in
such information.
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>> cdi-dev mailing list
>>>> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>>>>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>>>>
>>>> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider licenses the
code under the Apache License, Version 2
(
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all other ideas provided on this
list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual property rights inherent in
such information.
>>>
> _______________________________________________
> cdi-dev mailing list
> cdi-dev(a)lists.jboss.org
>
https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/cdi-dev
>
> Note that for all code provided on this list, the provider licenses the code under
the Apache License, Version 2 (
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html). For all
other ideas provided on this list, the provider waives all patent and other intellectual
property rights inherent in such information.