On Dec 13, 2016, at 4:22 PM, Gytis Trikleris
<gtrikler(a)redhat.com> wrote:
Is there a way to make sure I'm making the service call not too early?
Also, ControlledProcessStateService methods which are used in that commit are deprecated.
That's why I wasn't sure if it's OK for me to use them.
I deprecated that code when wrote with a meaning more like “@Experimental”. But it’s still
valid years later so
https://github.com/wildfly/wildfly-core/pull/2030 will take care of
that.
On 13/12/2016 22:34, Brian Stansberry wrote:
> That commit you linked shows the mechanism for getting a notification of process
state changes (inject ControlledProcessStateService and register a property change
listener.)
>
> But, that commit is opening up the listener when it gets the notification, so if you
listen for the same notification and make a call it’s going to be racy.
>
>> On Dec 13, 2016, at 3:26 PM, Gytis Trikleris <gtrikler(a)redhat.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm wondering if there is a way to register a listener which would be
>> invoked when server status has changed. More specifically when
>> application server completed start-up.
>>
>> The reason for that is that after [1] commit was introduced our rest
>> transaction tests started to fail. The cause seems to be rest service
>> call during the start of one of our services. That call doesn't
>> necessarily have to be executed during the service start. However, the
>> sooner it's done the better and if it would be possible to register some
>> sort of callback to be invoked once start-up was done, that would be great.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Gytis
>>
>>
>> [1]
>>
https://github.com/wildfly/wildfly/commit/d56cd18137d3acbcb5027744d5ce57f...
>>
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--
Brian Stansberry
Manager, Senior Principal Software Engineer
JBoss by Red Hat