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AxoloTL

Axolo Task Library

Dependencies (from jitpack)

compile "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:compiler-core:${axolotlVersion}"
compile "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:tasklib:${axolotlVersion}"
compile "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:tasklib-core:${axolotlVersion}"
compile "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:tasklib-stetho:${axolotlVersion}"
testCompile "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:tasklib-test:${axolotlVersion}"
annotationProcessor "com.github.AutSoft.AxoloTL:taskcompiler:${axolotlVersion}"

Task creation

  • Create a *Worker class
  • Create a function in the Worker class with synchronous code
  • Use @CreateTask annotation for the function
  • TaskLib compiler will create a Task for every function annotated with @CreateTask
    • Every task class has the same parameters for the constructor as in the function which represented by the class
    • The getResult() function has the same return type as the function
public class SimpleWorker {
    @CreateTask
    public String first(int parameter) {
        return "Result: " + parameter;
    }
}

Task usage

  • Create a TaskEngineHolder where you would like to use the task (inside in an activity, fragment, etc.)
  • Execute the task with the executeTask function of the TaskEngineHolder
public class SampleTaskFragment extends Fragment {
  
    TaskEngineHolder holder;
 
    public SampleTaskFragment() {
        holder = new TaskEngineHolder(this);
    }
 
    @Override
    public void onResume() {
        super.onResume();
        holder.start();

        holder.executeTask(new FirstTask(3));
    }
 
    @Override
    public void onPause() {
        super.onPause();
        holder.stop();
    }
 
    public void onTaskResult(FirstTask task) {
        if(!task.hasError()) {
            // Handle result
            String result = task.getResult();
        } else {
            // Handle error...
        }
    }
}

For MVP, sample presenter:

public abstract class Presenter<S> {
 
    protected S screen;
 
    private TaskEngineHolder holder = new TaskEngineHolder(this);
 
    @CallSuper
    public void attachScreen(S screen) {
        this.screen = screen;
        holder.start();
    }
 
    @CallSuper
    public void detachScreen() {
        this.screen = null;
        holder.stop();
    }
     
    public void startFirstTask() {
        holder.executeTask(new FirstTask);
    }
 
    public void onTaskResult(FirstTask task) {
        if(!task.hasError()) {
            // Handle result
            String result = task.getResult();
        } else {
            // Handle error...
        }
    }
}

Inline 'callbacks'

holder.executeTask(new FirstTask(3), , new InlineTaskListener<String, Void>() {
    @Override
    public void onTaskResult(BaseTask<String, Void> task) {
        // handle task result...
    }
});

Error: Task Exception

In the worker function you can throw any RuntimeException. If any exception thrown, then the task.hasError() function will return true. With the task.getException() function you can get the thrown exception in the task result function.

Function in worker:

@CreateTask
public void taskWithError() {
    throw new TaskException(ERROR_CODE_INTEGER);
}

Callback:

public void onTaskResult(TaskWithErrorTask task) {
    task.hasError(); // returns true
    task.getErrorCode(); // returns ERROR_CODE_INTEGER
}

Error Object

You can pass any error object with the TaskException:

@CreateTask
public void taskWithError() {
    throw new TaskException(ERROR_CODE_INTEGER, new CustomObject());
}

In the callback function use getErrorObject() function:

public void onTaskResult(TaskWithErrorTask task) {
    task.hasError(); // returns true
    task.getErrorCode(); // returns ERROR_CODE_INTEGER
    task.getErrorObject(); // returns the created CustomObject
}

Progress

In the worker function you can use a TaskAgent as a first argument (it is only allowed in the first place). With a TaskAgent instance (which is created and passed by the Task Library) you can send progress updates to the caller.

public class ProgressWorker {
    @CreateTask
    public String longRunning(TaskAgent<String> agent, int parameter) {
        int max = 10;
        for (int i = 0; i < max; i++) {
            int percent = (int) ((100.0 * i) / max);
            agent.publishProgress("PROGRESS: " + percent + "%");
            Thread.sleep(300); // some long-running synch work
        }
        agent.publishProgress("PROGRESS: 100%");
        return "DONE: " + parameter;
    }
}

In the target object you can define an onTaskProgress function with two argument. One for the task and one for the progress object:

protected void onTaskProgress(LongRunningTask task, String progress) {
    // setProgress("onTaskProgress: " + progress);
}

Global Task Exception

Global task exception is similar to the simple task exception. The main difference is that you can handle global errors in any target which is held by a TaskEngineHolder:

public boolean onTaskGlobalError(GlobalError error) {
    if (error.getErrorCode() == SOME_CODE) {
        // handle global error
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}

TaskLib try to call the onTaskGlobalError method in the target which is executed the task with global error. If it is unsuccessful or the error is not handled then it will call the other targets in unspecified order. If any onTaskGlobalError method returns true then the global error is handled and there won't be any effect of the execution of the task (no onTaskResult or other call). If non of the onTaskGlobalError method returns true then the global task exception is handled like it was a simple task exception (onTaskResult call with hasError and errorCode).

Follow Task

FIXME

Defining a scheduler for a task

The @CreateTask annotation has a value parameter to specify which scheduler you want to use for running the task.

public class CustomSchedulersWorker {
 
    @CreateTask(TaskSchedulers.IO)
    public void customSchedulerIo() {
    	// do some work...
    }
 
    @CreateTask(MyCustomSchedulers.MY_SCHEDULER)
    public void fullCustomScheduler() {
        // do some work...
    }
 
}

In TaskSchedulers there are some basic scheduler which comes from RxJava:

  • SINGLE
  • COMPUTATION
  • IO
  • TRAMPOLINE
  • NEW_THREAD

If you need a custom scheduler you can register it with a positive integer id and you can use this id in @CreateTask annotation.

TaskSchedulers.registerScheduler(MyCustomSchedulers.MY_SCHEDULER, Schedulers.newThread());

Dagger compatibility

For dagger injection you have to annotate your injector static instance with hu.axolotl.tasklib.annotation.Injector annotation.

@Injector
public static AppComponent injector;

In the AppComponent interface you have to declare a new method for the helpers of each worker. For example if you have a ProfileWorker then the lib will generate a ProfileWorkerTaskHelper class, so you have to add:

void inject(FriendsWorkerTaskHelper friendsWorkerTaskHelper);

Rx support

public class RxTasksWorker {
 
    @CreateTask
    public Flowable<String> flowable() {
        return Flowable.just("Flowable done!");
    }
 
    @CreateTask
    public Observable<String> observable() {
        return Observable.just("Observable done!");
    }
 
    @CreateTask
    public Single<String> single() {
        return Single.just("Single done!");
    }
    
    @CreateTask
    public Completable completable() {
        return Completable.complete();
    }
 
}

Stetho support

FIXME

Testing

FIXME

Matcher

FIXME

Util

Compiler-Core

Future plans

  • Foreground service support for workers: So you can use executeTask to start a foreground service with given icon, name, etc.

License

Copyright 2017 AutSoft Kft.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at

   http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.

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