Interface EntityRef<M>
-
- All Superinterfaces:
RecipientRef<M>
- All Known Implementing Classes:
EntityRefImpl
public interface EntityRef<M> extends RecipientRef<M>
A reference to an sharded Entity, which allowsActorRef
-like usage.An
EntityRef
is NOT anActorRef
–by design–in order to be explicit about the fact that the life-cycle of a sharded Entity is very different than a plain Actors. Most notably, this is shown by features of Entities such as re-balancing (an active Entity to a different node) or passivation. Both of which are aimed to be completely transparent to users of such Entity. In other words, if this were to be a plain ActorRef, it would be possible to apply DeathWatch to it, which in turn would then trigger when the sharded Actor stopped, breaking the illusion that Entity refs are "always there". Please note that while not encouraged, it is possible to expose an Actor'sself
ActorRef
and watch it in case such notification is desired. Not for user extension.
-
-
Nested Class Summary
-
Nested classes/interfaces inherited from interface akka.actor.typed.RecipientRef
RecipientRef.RecipientRefOps<T>, RecipientRef.RecipientRefOps$
-
-
Method Summary
All Methods Instance Methods Abstract Methods Modifier and Type Method Description void
$bang(M msg)
Send a message to the entity referenced by this EntityRef using *at-most-once* messaging semantics.<Res> scala.concurrent.Future<Res>
$qmark(scala.Function1<ActorRef<Res>,M> message, Timeout timeout)
Allows to "ask" theEntityRef
for a reply.<Res> scala.concurrent.Future<Res>
ask(scala.Function1<ActorRef<Res>,M> f, Timeout timeout)
Allows to "ask" theEntityRef
for a reply.void
tell(M msg)
Send a message to the entity referenced by this EntityRef using *at-most-once* messaging semantics.
-
-
-
Method Detail
-
$bang
void $bang(M msg)
Send a message to the entity referenced by this EntityRef using *at-most-once* messaging semantics.Example usage:
val target: EntityRef[String] = ... target ! "Hello"
-
$qmark
<Res> scala.concurrent.Future<Res> $qmark(scala.Function1<ActorRef<Res>,M> message, Timeout timeout)
Allows to "ask" theEntityRef
for a reply. SeeAskPattern
for a complete write-up of this patternNote that if you are inside of an actor you should prefer
akka.actor.typed.scaladsl.ActorContext.ask
as that provides better safety.Example usage:
case class Request(msg: String, replyTo: ActorRef[Reply]) case class Reply(msg: String) implicit val timeout = Timeout(3.seconds) val target: EntityRef[Request] = ... val f: Future[Reply] = target ? (replyTo => Request("hello", replyTo))
Please note that an implicit
Timeout
must be available to use this pattern.Note: it is preferable to use the non-symbolic ask method as it easier allows for wildcards for the
replyTo: ActorRef
.
-
ask
<Res> scala.concurrent.Future<Res> ask(scala.Function1<ActorRef<Res>,M> f, Timeout timeout)
Allows to "ask" theEntityRef
for a reply. SeeAskPattern
for a complete write-up of this patternNote that if you are inside of an actor you should prefer
akka.actor.typed.scaladsl.ActorContext.ask
as that provides better safety.Example usage:
case class Request(msg: String, replyTo: ActorRef[Reply]) case class Reply(msg: String) implicit val timeout = Timeout(3.seconds) val target: EntityRef[Request] = ... val f: Future[Reply] = target.ask(Request("hello", _))
Please note that an implicit
Timeout
must be available to use this pattern.
-
tell
void tell(M msg)
Send a message to the entity referenced by this EntityRef using *at-most-once* messaging semantics.Example usage:
val target: EntityRef[String] = ... target.tell("Hello")
- Specified by:
tell
in interfaceRecipientRef<M>
-
-