Migration Guide 2.0.x to 2.1.x
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Migration Guide 2.0.x to 2.1.x

Some parts of the 2.0 API have changed in the Akka 2.1 release. This guide lists the the changes and explains what you will need to do to upgrade your program to work with Akka 2.1.

Migrating from Akka 2.0.x to Akka 2.1.x is relatively straightforward. In Akka 2.1 the API has undergone some basic housekeeping, for example some package names have changed, but otherwise usage is largely unchanged. User programs will generally only need simple, mechanical changes in order to work with Akka 2.1.

If you are migrating from Akka 1.3.x you will need to follow the instructions for migrating from Akka 1.3.x to 2.0.x before following the instructions in this guide.

Scala Version

Akka 2.1 uses a new version of Scala. Change your project build and dependencies to Scala version 2.10.1.

Config Dependency

Akka's configuration system has graduated from Akka to become the Typesafe config project. The configuration system was previously embedded within akka-actor.jar, now it is specified as a dependency of akka-actor.jar.

If your are using a build tool with automatic dependency resolution, such as sbt or Maven, then you will not notice a difference. Otherwise you will need to ensure that config-1.0.0.jar is present on your classpath.

Pieces Moved to Scala Standard Library

Change the following import statements.

Search Replace with
akka.dispatch.Await scala.concurrent.Await
akka.dispatch.Future scala.concurrent.Future
akka.dispatch.Promise scala.concurrent.Promise
akka.dispatch.ExecutionContext scala.concurrent.ExecutionContext
akka.util.Duration scala.concurrent.duration.Duration
akka.util.duration scala.concurrent.duration
akka.util.Deadline scala.concurrent.duration.Deadline
akka.util.NonFatal scala.util.control.NonFatal
akka.japi.Util.manifest akka.japi.Util.classTag

Scheduler Dispatcher

The ExecutionContext to use for running scheduled tasks must now be specified. You can use an Akka Dispatcher for this purpose.

Scala:

import context.dispatcher // Use this Actors' Dispatcher as ExecutionContext
context.system.scheduler.scheduleOnce(10 seconds, self, Reconnect)

import system.dispatcher // Use ActorSystem's default Dispatcher as ExecutionContext
system.scheduler.scheduleOnce(50 milliseconds) {
  testActor ! System.currentTimeMillis
}

Java:

// Use this Actors' Dispatcher as ExecutionContext
getContext().system().scheduler().scheduleOnce(Duration.create(
  10, TimeUnit.SECONDS), getSelf(), new Reconnect(),
  getContext().getDispatcher());

// Use ActorSystem's default Dispatcher as ExecutionContext
system.scheduler().scheduleOnce(Duration.create(50, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS),
  new Runnable() {
    @Override
    public void run() {
      testActor.tell(System.currentTimeMillis());
    }
  }, system.dispatcher());

API Changes to Future - Scala

v2.0:

def square(i: Int): Future[Int] = Promise successful i * i

v2.1:

def square(i: Int): Future[Int] = Future successful i * i

v2.0:

val failedFilter = future1.filter(_ % 2 == 1).recover {
  case m: MatchError => //When filter fails, it will have a MatchError
}

v2.1:

val failedFilter = future1.filter(_ % 2 == 1).recover {
  // When filter fails, it will have a java.util.NoSuchElementException
  case m: NoSuchElementException =>
}

A Promise is no longer also a Future, obtain the reference to its Future by calling promise.future.

v2.0:

Await.result(promise, duration)

v2.1:

Await.result(promise.future, duration)

API Changes to Future - Java

v2.0:

ExecutorService yourExecutorServiceGoesHere = Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor();
ExecutionContextExecutorService ec =
  ExecutionContexts.fromExecutorService(yourExecutorServiceGoesHere);

// Use ec with your Futures
Future<String> f1 = Futures.successful("foo", ec);

// Then you shut the ec down somewhere at the end of your application.
ec.shutdown();

v2.1:

ExecutorService yourExecutorServiceGoesHere = Executors.newSingleThreadExecutor();
ExecutionContext ec =
  ExecutionContexts.fromExecutorService(yourExecutorServiceGoesHere);

//No need to pass the ExecutionContext here
Future<String> f1 = Futures.successful("foo");

// Then you shut the ExecutorService down somewhere at the end of your application.
yourExecutorServiceGoesHere.shutdown();

v2.0:

Future<String> f1 = future(new Callable<String>() {
  public String call() {
    return "Hello" + "World";
  }
}, system.dispatcher());

v2.1:

final ExecutionContext ec = system.dispatcher();

Future<String> f1 = future(new Callable<String>() {
  public String call() {
    return "Hello" + "World";
  }
}, ec);

v2.0:

Future<String> future1 = Futures.successful("value", system.dispatcher()).andThen(
  new OnComplete<String>() {
    public void onComplete(Throwable failure, String result) {
      if (failure != null)
          sendToIssueTracker(failure);
    }
}).andThen(new OnComplete<String>() {
  public void onComplete(Throwable failure, String result) {
    if (result != null)
      sendToTheInternetz(result);
  }
});

v2.1:

final ExecutionContext ec = system.dispatcher();
Future<String> future1 = Futures.successful("value").andThen(
  new OnComplete<String>() {
    public void onComplete(Throwable failure, String result) {
        if (failure != null)
            sendToIssueTracker(failure);
    }
}, ec).andThen(new OnComplete<String>() {
  public void onComplete(Throwable failure, String result) {
    if (result != null)
      sendToTheInternetz(result);
  }
}, ec);

A Promise is no longer also a Future, obtain the reference to its Future by calling promise.future().

v2.0:

Await.result(promise, duration);

v2.1:

Await.result(promise.future(), duration);

API changes to DynamicAccess

All methods with scala.Either[Throwable, X] have been changed to use scala.util.Try[X].

DynamicAccess.withErrorHandling has been removed since scala.util.Try now fulfills that role.

API changes to Serialization

All methods with scala.Either[Throwable, X] have been changed to use scala.util.Try[X].

Empty Props

v2.0 Scala:

val router2 = system.actorOf(Props().withRouter(
  RoundRobinRouter(routees = routees)))

v2.1 Scala:

val router2 = system.actorOf(Props.empty.withRouter(
  RoundRobinRouter(routees = routees)))

v2.0 Java:

ActorRef router2 = system.actorOf(new Props().withRouter(
  RoundRobinRouter.create(routees)));

v2.1 Java:

ActorRef router2 = system.actorOf(Props.empty().withRouter(
  RoundRobinRouter.create(routees)));

Props: Function-based creation

v2.0 Scala:

Props(context => { case someMessage => context.sender ! someMessage })

v2.1 Scala:

Props(new Actor { def receive = { case someMessage => sender ! someMessage } })

Failing Send

When failing to send to a remote actor or an actor with a bounded or durable mailbox the message will now be silently delivered to ActorSystem.deadletters instead of throwing an exception.

Graceful Stop Exception

If the target actor of akka.pattern.gracefulStop isn't terminated within the timeout then the Future is completed with a failure of akka.pattern.AskTimeoutException. In 2.0 it was akka.actor.ActorTimeoutException.

getInstance for Singletons - Java

v2.0:

import static akka.actor.Actors.*;

if (msg.equals("done")) {
  myActor.tell(poisonPill());
} else if (msg == Actors.receiveTimeout()) {

v2.1:

import akka.actor.PoisonPill;
import akka.actor.ReceiveTimeout;

if (msg.equals("done")) {
  myActor.tell(PoisonPill.getInstance());
} else if (msg == ReceiveTimeout.getInstance()) {

Testkit Probe Reply

v2.0:

probe.sender ! "world"

v2.1:

probe.reply("world")

log-remote-lifecycle-events

The default value of akka.remote.log-remote-lifecycle-events has changed to on. If you don't want these events in the log then you need to add this to your configuration:

akka.remote.log-remote-lifecycle-events = off

Stash postStop

Both Actors and UntypedActors using Stash now override postStop to make sure that stashed messages are put into the dead letters when the actor stops. Make sure you call super.postStop if you override it.

Forwarding Terminated messages

Forwarding Terminated messages is no longer supported. Instead, if you forward Terminated you should send the information in your own message.

v2.0:

context.watch(subject)

def receive = {
  case t @ Terminated => someone forward t
}

v2.1:

case class MyTerminated(subject: ActorRef)

context.watch(subject)

def receive = {
  case Terminated(s) => someone forward MyTerminated(s)
}

Custom Routers and Resizers

The API of RouterConfig, RouteeProvider and Resizer has been cleaned up. If you use these to build your own router functionality the compiler will tell you if you need to make adjustments.

v2.0:

class MyRouter(target: ActorRef) extends RouterConfig {
  override def createRoute(p: Props, prov: RouteeProvider): Route = {
    prov.createAndRegisterRoutees(p, 1, Nil)

v2.1:

class MyRouter(target: ActorRef) extends RouterConfig {
  override def createRoute(provider: RouteeProvider): Route = {
    provider.createRoutees(1)

v2.0:

def resize(props: Props, routeeProvider: RouteeProvider): Unit = {
  val currentRoutees = routeeProvider.routees
  val requestedCapacity = capacity(currentRoutees)

  if (requestedCapacity > 0) {
    val newRoutees = routeeProvider.createRoutees(props, requestedCapacity, Nil)
    routeeProvider.registerRoutees(newRoutees)
  } else if (requestedCapacity < 0) {
    val (keep, abandon) = currentRoutees.splitAt(currentRoutees.length +
      requestedCapacity)
    routeeProvider.unregisterRoutees(abandon)
    delayedStop(routeeProvider.context.system.scheduler, abandon)(
      routeeProvider.context.dispatcher)
  }

v2.1:

def resize(routeeProvider: RouteeProvider): Unit = {
  val currentRoutees = routeeProvider.routees
  val requestedCapacity = capacity(currentRoutees)

  if (requestedCapacity > 0) routeeProvider.createRoutees(requestedCapacity)
  else if (requestedCapacity < 0) routeeProvider.removeRoutees(
    -requestedCapacity, stopDelay)

Duration and Timeout

The akka.util.Duration class has been moved into the Scala library under the scala.concurrent.duration package. Several changes have been made to tighten up the duration and timeout API.

FiniteDuration is now used more consistently throught the API. The advantage is that if you try to pass a possibly non-finite duration where it does not belong you’ll get compile errors instead of runtime exceptions.

The main source incompatibility is that you may have to change the declared type of fields from Duration to FiniteDuration (factory methods already return the more precise type wherever possible).

Another change is that Duration.parse was not accepted by the Scala library maintainers; use Duration.create instead.

v2.0:

final Duration d = Duration.parse("1 second");
final Timeout t = new Timeout(d);

v2.1:

final FiniteDuration d = Duration.create(1, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
final Timeout t = new Timeout(d); // always required finite duration, now enforced

Package Name Changes in Remoting

The package name of all classes in the akka-remote.jar artifact now starts with akka.remote. This has been done to enable OSGi bundles that don't have conflicting package names.

Change the following import statements. Please note that serializers are often referenced from configuration files.

Search -> Replace with:

akka.routing.RemoteRouterConfig ->
akka.remote.routing.RemoteRouterConfig

akka.serialization.ProtobufSerializer ->
akka.remote.serialization.ProtobufSerializer

akka.serialization.DaemonMsgCreateSerializer ->
akka.remote.serialization.DaemonMsgCreateSerializer

Package Name Changes in Durable Mailboxes

The package names of all classes in the akka-file-mailbox.jar artifact now start with akka.actor.mailbox.filebased. This has been done to enable OSGi bundles that don't have conflicting package names.

Change the following import statements. Please note that the FileBasedMailboxType is often referenced from configuration.

Search -> Replace with:

akka.actor.mailbox.FileBasedMailboxType ->
akka.actor.mailbox.filebased.FileBasedMailboxType

akka.actor.mailbox.FileBasedMailboxSettings ->
akka.actor.mailbox.filebased.FileBasedMailboxSettings

akka.actor.mailbox.FileBasedMessageQueue ->
akka.actor.mailbox.filebased.FileBasedMessageQueue

akka.actor.mailbox.filequeue.* ->
akka.actor.mailbox.filebased.filequeue.*

Actor Receive Timeout

The API for setting and querying the receive timeout has been made more consistent in always taking and returning a Duration; the wrapping in Option has been removed.

(Samples for Java, Scala sources are affected in exactly the same way.)

v2.0:

getContext().setReceiveTimeout(Duration.create(10, SECONDS));
final Option<Duration> timeout = getContext().receiveTimeout();
final isSet = timeout.isDefined();
resetReceiveTimeout();

v2.1:

getContext().setReceiveTimeout(Duration.create(10, SECONDS));
final Duration timeout = getContext().receiveTimeout();
final isSet = timeout.isFinite();
getContext().setReceiveTimeout(Duration.Undefined());

ConsistentHash

akka.routing.ConsistentHash has been changed into an immutable data structure.

v2.0:

val consistentHash = new ConsistentHash(Seq(a1, a2, a3), replicas = 10)
consistentHash += a4
val a = consistentHash.nodeFor(data)

v2.1:

var consistentHash = ConsistentHash(Seq(a1, a2, a3), replicas = 10)
consistentHash = consistentHash :+ a4
val a = consistentHash.nodeFor(data)

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