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object Flow

Source
Flow.scala
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  1. final def !=(arg0: Any): Boolean
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  2. final def ##: Int
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  3. final def ==(arg0: Any): Boolean
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  4. def apply[T]: Flow[T, T, NotUsed]

    Returns a Flow which outputs all its inputs.

  5. final def asInstanceOf[T0]: T0
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  6. def clone(): AnyRef
    Attributes
    protected[lang]
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    @throws(classOf[java.lang.CloneNotSupportedException]) @HotSpotIntrinsicCandidate() @native()
  7. final def eq(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
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  8. def equals(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
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  9. def fromFunction[A, B](f: (A) => B): Flow[A, B, NotUsed]

    Creates a [Flow] which will use the given function to transform its inputs to outputs.

    Creates a [Flow] which will use the given function to transform its inputs to outputs. It is equivalent to Flow[T].map(f)

  10. def fromGraph[I, O, M](g: Graph[FlowShape[I, O], M]): Flow[I, O, M]

    A graph with the shape of a flow logically is a flow, this method makes it so also in type.

  11. def fromMaterializer[T, U, M](factory: (Materializer, Attributes) => Flow[T, U, M]): Flow[T, U, Future[M]]

    Defers the creation of a Flow until materialization.

    Defers the creation of a Flow until materialization. The factory function exposes Materializer which is going to be used during materialization and Attributes of the Flow returned by this method.

  12. def fromProcessor[I, O](processorFactory: () => Processor[I, O]): Flow[I, O, NotUsed]

    Creates a Flow from a Reactive Streams org.reactivestreams.Processor

  13. def fromProcessorMat[I, O, M](processorFactory: () => (Processor[I, O], M)): Flow[I, O, M]

    Creates a Flow from a Reactive Streams org.reactivestreams.Processor and returns a materialized value.

  14. def fromSinkAndSource[I, O](sink: Graph[SinkShape[I], _], source: Graph[SourceShape[O], _]): Flow[I, O, NotUsed]

    Creates a Flow from a Sink and a Source where the Flow's input will be sent to the Sink and the Flow's output will come from the Source.

    Creates a Flow from a Sink and a Source where the Flow's input will be sent to the Sink and the Flow's output will come from the Source.

    The resulting flow can be visualized as:

        +----------------------------------------------+
        | Resulting Flow[I, O, NotUsed]                |
        |                                              |
        |  +---------+                  +-----------+  |
        |  |         |                  |           |  |
    I  ~~> | Sink[I] | [no-connection!] | Source[O] | ~~> O
        |  |         |                  |           |  |
        |  +---------+                  +-----------+  |
        +----------------------------------------------+

    The completion of the Sink and Source sides of a Flow constructed using this method are independent. So if the Sink receives a completion signal, the Source side will remain unaware of that. If you are looking to couple the termination signals of the two sides use Flow.fromSinkAndSourceCoupled instead.

    See also fromSinkAndSourceMat when access to materialized values of the parameters is needed.

  15. def fromSinkAndSourceCoupled[I, O](sink: Graph[SinkShape[I], _], source: Graph[SourceShape[O], _]): Flow[I, O, NotUsed]

    Allows coupling termination (cancellation, completion, erroring) of Sinks and Sources while creating a Flow from them.

    Allows coupling termination (cancellation, completion, erroring) of Sinks and Sources while creating a Flow from them. Similar to Flow.fromSinkAndSource however couples the termination of these two operators.

    The resulting flow can be visualized as:

        +---------------------------------------------+
        | Resulting Flow[I, O, NotUsed]               |
        |                                             |
        |  +---------+                 +-----------+  |
        |  |         |                 |           |  |
    I  ~~> | Sink[I] | ~~~(coupled)~~~ | Source[O] | ~~> O
        |  |         |                 |           |  |
        |  +---------+                 +-----------+  |
        +---------------------------------------------+

    E.g. if the emitted Flow gets a cancellation, the Source of course is cancelled, however the Sink will also be completed. The table below illustrates the effects in detail:

    Returned Flow Sink (in) Source (out)
    cause: upstream (sink-side) receives completion effect: receives completion effect: receives cancel
    cause: upstream (sink-side) receives error effect: receives error effect: receives cancel
    cause: downstream (source-side) receives cancel effect: completes effect: receives cancel
    effect: cancels upstream, completes downstream effect: completes cause: signals complete
    effect: cancels upstream, errors downstream effect: receives error cause: signals error or throws
    effect: cancels upstream, completes downstream cause: cancels effect: receives cancel

    See also fromSinkAndSourceCoupledMat when access to materialized values of the parameters is needed.

  16. def fromSinkAndSourceCoupledMat[I, O, M1, M2, M](sink: Graph[SinkShape[I], M1], source: Graph[SourceShape[O], M2])(combine: (M1, M2) => M): Flow[I, O, M]

    Allows coupling termination (cancellation, completion, erroring) of Sinks and Sources while creating a Flow from them.

    Allows coupling termination (cancellation, completion, erroring) of Sinks and Sources while creating a Flow from them. Similar to Flow.fromSinkAndSource however couples the termination of these two operators.

    The resulting flow can be visualized as:

        +-----------------------------------------------------+
        | Resulting Flow[I, O, M]                             |
        |                                                     |
        |  +-------------+                 +---------------+  |
        |  |             |                 |               |  |
    I  ~~> | Sink[I, M1] | ~~~(coupled)~~~ | Source[O, M2] | ~~> O
        |  |             |                 |               |  |
        |  +-------------+                 +---------------+  |
        +-----------------------------------------------------+

    E.g. if the emitted Flow gets a cancellation, the Source of course is cancelled, however the Sink will also be completed. The table on Flow.fromSinkAndSourceCoupled illustrates the effects in detail.

    The combine function is used to compose the materialized values of the sink and source into the materialized value of the resulting Flow.

  17. def fromSinkAndSourceMat[I, O, M1, M2, M](sink: Graph[SinkShape[I], M1], source: Graph[SourceShape[O], M2])(combine: (M1, M2) => M): Flow[I, O, M]

    Creates a Flow from a Sink and a Source where the Flow's input will be sent to the Sink and the Flow's output will come from the Source.

    Creates a Flow from a Sink and a Source where the Flow's input will be sent to the Sink and the Flow's output will come from the Source.

    The resulting flow can be visualized as:

        +-------------------------------------------------------+
        | Resulting Flow[I, O, M]                              |
        |                                                      |
        |  +-------------+                  +---------------+  |
        |  |             |                  |               |  |
    I  ~~> | Sink[I, M1] | [no-connection!] | Source[O, M2] | ~~> O
        |  |             |                  |               |  |
        |  +-------------+                  +---------------+  |
        +------------------------------------------------------+

    The completion of the Sink and Source sides of a Flow constructed using this method are independent. So if the Sink receives a completion signal, the Source side will remain unaware of that. If you are looking to couple the termination signals of the two sides use Flow.fromSinkAndSourceCoupledMat instead.

    The combine function is used to compose the materialized values of the sink and source into the materialized value of the resulting Flow.

  18. def futureFlow[I, O, M](flow: Future[Flow[I, O, M]]): Flow[I, O, Future[M]]

    Turn a Future[Flow] into a flow that will consume the values of the source when the future completes successfully.

    Turn a Future[Flow] into a flow that will consume the values of the source when the future completes successfully. If the Future is completed with a failure the stream is failed.

    The materialized future value is completed with the materialized value of the future flow or failed with a NeverMaterializedException if upstream fails or downstream cancels before the future has completed.

    The operator's default behaviour in case of downstream cancellation before nested flow materialization (future completion) is to cancel immediately. This behaviour can be controlled by setting the akka.stream.Attributes.NestedMaterializationCancellationPolicy.PropagateToNested attribute, this will delay downstream cancellation until nested flow's materialization which is then immediately cancelled (with the original cancellation cause).

  19. final def getClass(): Class[_ <: AnyRef]
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  20. def hashCode(): Int
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  21. final def isInstanceOf[T0]: Boolean
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  22. def lazyFlow[I, O, M](create: () => Flow[I, O, M]): Flow[I, O, Future[M]]

    Defers invoking the create function to create a future flow until there is downstream demand and passing that downstream demand upstream triggers the first element.

    Defers invoking the create function to create a future flow until there is downstream demand and passing that downstream demand upstream triggers the first element.

    The materialized future value is completed with the materialized value of the created flow when that has successfully been materialized.

    If the create function throws or returns a future that fails the stream is failed, in this case the materialized future value is failed with a NeverMaterializedException.

    Note that asynchronous boundaries (and other operators) in the stream may do pre-fetching which counter acts the laziness and can trigger the factory earlier than expected.

    Emits when the internal flow is successfully created and it emits

    Backpressures when the internal flow is successfully created and it backpressures or downstream backpressures

    Completes when upstream completes and all elements have been emitted from the internal flow

    Cancels when downstream cancels (see below)

    The operator's default behaviour in case of downstream cancellation before nested flow materialization (future completion) is to cancel immediately. This behaviour can be controlled by setting the akka.stream.Attributes.NestedMaterializationCancellationPolicy.PropagateToNested attribute, this will delay downstream cancellation until nested flow's materialization which is then immediately cancelled (with the original cancellation cause).

  23. def lazyFutureFlow[I, O, M](create: () => Future[Flow[I, O, M]]): Flow[I, O, Future[M]]

    Defers invoking the create function to create a future flow until there downstream demand has caused upstream to send a first element.

    Defers invoking the create function to create a future flow until there downstream demand has caused upstream to send a first element.

    The materialized future value is completed with the materialized value of the created flow when that has successfully been materialized.

    If the create function throws or returns a future that fails the stream is failed, in this case the materialized future value is failed with a NeverMaterializedException.

    Note that asynchronous boundaries (and other operators) in the stream may do pre-fetching which counter acts the laziness and can trigger the factory earlier than expected.

    Emits when the internal flow is successfully created and it emits

    Backpressures when the internal flow is successfully created and it backpressures or downstream backpressures

    Completes when upstream completes and all elements have been emitted from the internal flow

    Cancels when downstream cancels (see below)

    The operator's default behaviour in case of downstream cancellation before nested flow materialization (future completion) is to cancel immediately. This behaviour can be controlled by setting the akka.stream.Attributes.NestedMaterializationCancellationPolicy.PropagateToNested attribute, this will delay downstream cancellation until nested flow's materialization which is then immediately cancelled (with the original cancellation cause).

  24. final def ne(arg0: AnyRef): Boolean
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  25. final def notify(): Unit
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  26. final def notifyAll(): Unit
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  27. final def synchronized[T0](arg0: => T0): T0
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  28. def toString(): String
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  29. final def wait(arg0: Long, arg1: Int): Unit
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  30. final def wait(arg0: Long): Unit
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  31. final def wait(): Unit
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Deprecated Value Members

  1. def finalize(): Unit
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    @throws(classOf[java.lang.Throwable]) @Deprecated
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    (Since version 9)

  2. def lazyInit[I, O, M](flowFactory: (I) => Future[Flow[I, O, M]], fallback: () => M): Flow[I, O, M]

    Creates a real Flow upon receiving the first element.

    Creates a real Flow upon receiving the first element. Internal Flow will not be created if there are no elements, because of completion, cancellation, or error.

    The materialized value of the Flow is the value that is created by the fallback function.

    Emits when the internal flow is successfully created and it emits

    Backpressures when the internal flow is successfully created and it backpressures

    Completes when upstream completes and all elements have been emitted from the internal flow

    Cancels when downstream cancels (see below)

    The operator's default behaviour in case of downstream cancellation before nested flow materialization (future completion) is to cancel immediately. This behaviour can be controlled by setting the akka.stream.Attributes.NestedMaterializationCancellationPolicy.PropagateToNested attribute, this will delay downstream cancellation until nested flow's materialization which is then immediately cancelled (with the original cancellation cause).

    Annotations
    @deprecated
    Deprecated

    (Since version 2.6.0) Use 'Flow.futureFlow' in combination with prefixAndTail(1) instead, see futureFlow operator docs for details

  3. def lazyInitAsync[I, O, M](flowFactory: () => Future[Flow[I, O, M]]): Flow[I, O, Future[Option[M]]]

    Creates a real Flow upon receiving the first element.

    Creates a real Flow upon receiving the first element. Internal Flow will not be created if there are no elements, because of completion, cancellation, or error.

    The materialized value of the Flow is a Future[Option[M]] that is completed with Some(mat) when the internal flow gets materialized or with None when there where no elements. If the flow materialization (including the call of the flowFactory) fails then the future is completed with a failure.

    Emits when the internal flow is successfully created and it emits

    Backpressures when the internal flow is successfully created and it backpressures

    Completes when upstream completes and all elements have been emitted from the internal flow

    Cancels when downstream cancels (see below)

    The operator's default behaviour in case of downstream cancellation before nested flow materialization (future completion) is to cancel immediately. This behaviour can be controlled by setting the akka.stream.Attributes.NestedMaterializationCancellationPolicy.PropagateToNested attribute, this will delay downstream cancellation until nested flow's materialization which is then immediately cancelled (with the original cancellation cause).

    Annotations
    @deprecated
    Deprecated

    (Since version 2.6.0) Use 'Flow.lazyFutureFlow' instead

  4. def setup[T, U, M](factory: (ActorMaterializer, Attributes) => Flow[T, U, M]): Flow[T, U, Future[M]]

    Defers the creation of a Flow until materialization.

    Defers the creation of a Flow until materialization. The factory function exposes ActorMaterializer which is going to be used during materialization and Attributes of the Flow returned by this method.

    Annotations
    @deprecated
    Deprecated

    (Since version 2.6.0) Use 'fromMaterializer' instead

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