Substreams
Dependency
The Akka dependencies are available from Akka’s library repository. To access them there, you need to configure the URL for this repository.
- sbt
resolvers += "Akka library repository".at("https://repo.akka.io/maven")
- Maven
<project> ... <repositories> <repository> <id>akka-repository</id> <name>Akka library repository</name> <url>https://repo.akka.io/maven</url> </repository> </repositories> </project>
- Gradle
repositories { mavenCentral() maven { url "https://repo.akka.io/maven" } }
To use Akka Streams, add the module to your project:
- sbt
val AkkaVersion = "2.9.1" libraryDependencies += "com.typesafe.akka" %% "akka-stream" % AkkaVersion
- Maven
<properties> <scala.binary.version>2.13</scala.binary.version> </properties> <dependencyManagement> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>com.typesafe.akka</groupId> <artifactId>akka-bom_${scala.binary.version}</artifactId> <version>2.9.1</version> <type>pom</type> <scope>import</scope> </dependency> </dependencies> </dependencyManagement> <dependencies> <dependency> <groupId>com.typesafe.akka</groupId> <artifactId>akka-stream_${scala.binary.version}</artifactId> </dependency> </dependencies>
- Gradle
def versions = [ ScalaBinary: "2.13" ] dependencies { implementation platform("com.typesafe.akka:akka-bom_${versions.ScalaBinary}:2.9.1") implementation "com.typesafe.akka:akka-stream_${versions.ScalaBinary}" }
Introduction
Substreams are represented as SubSource
or SubFlow
SubFlow
instances, on which you can multiplex a single Source
Source
or Flow
Flow
into a stream of streams.
SubFlows cannot contribute to the super-flow’s materialized value since they are materialized later, during the runtime of the stream processing.
operators that create substreams are listed on Nesting and flattening operators
Nesting operators
groupBy
A typical operation that generates substreams is groupBy
groupBy
.
- Scala
-
source
val source = Source(1 to 10).groupBy(3, _ % 3)
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)).groupBy(3, elem -> elem % 3);
This operation splits the incoming stream into separate output streams, one for each element key. The key is computed for each element using the given function, which is f
in the above diagram. When a new key is encountered for the first time a new substream is opened and subsequently fed with all elements belonging to that key. If allowClosedSubstreamRecreation
is set to true
a substream belonging to a specific key will be recreated if it was closed before, otherwise elements belonging to that key will be dropped.
If you add a Sink
Sink
or Flow
Flow
right after the groupBy
operator, all transformations are applied to all encountered substreams in the same fashion. So, if you add the following Sink
, that is added to each of the substreams as in the below diagram.
- Scala
-
source
Source(1 to 10).groupBy(3, _ % 3).to(Sink.ignore).run()
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)) .groupBy(3, elem -> elem % 3) .to(Sink.ignore()) .run(system);
Also substreams, more precisely, SubFlow
SubFlow
and SubSource
have methods that allow you to merge or concat substreams into the main stream again.
The mergeSubstreams
mergeSubstreams
method merges an unbounded number of substreams back to the main stream.
- Scala
-
source
Source(1 to 10).groupBy(3, _ % 3).mergeSubstreams.runWith(Sink.ignore)
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)) .groupBy(3, elem -> elem % 3) .mergeSubstreams() .runWith(Sink.ignore(), system);
You can limit the number of active substreams running and being merged at a time, with either the mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism
mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism
or concatSubstreams
concatSubstreams
method.
- Scala
-
source
Source(1 to 10).groupBy(3, _ % 3).mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism(2).runWith(Sink.ignore) //concatSubstreams is equivalent to mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism(1) Source(1 to 10).groupBy(3, _ % 3).concatSubstreams.runWith(Sink.ignore)
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)) .groupBy(3, elem -> elem % 3) .mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism(2) .runWith(Sink.ignore(), system); // concatSubstreams is equivalent to mergeSubstreamsWithParallelism(1) Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)) .groupBy(3, elem -> elem % 3) .concatSubstreams() .runWith(Sink.ignore(), system);
However, since the number of running (i.e. not yet completed) substreams is capped, be careful so that these methods do not cause deadlocks with back pressure like in the below diagram.
Element one and two leads to two created substreams, but since the number of substreams are capped to 2 when element 3 comes in it cannot lead to creation of a new substream until one of the previous two are completed and this leads to the stream being deadlocked.
splitWhen and splitAfter
splitWhen
splitWhen
and splitAfter
splitAfter
are two other operations which generate substreams.
The difference from groupBy
groupBy
is that, if the predicate for splitWhen
and splitAfter
returns true, a new substream is generated, and the succeeding elements after split will flow into the new substream.
splitWhen
flows the element on which the predicate returned true to a new substream, whereas splitAfter
flows the next element to the new substream after the element on which predicate returned true.
- Scala
-
source
Source(1 to 10).splitWhen(SubstreamCancelStrategy.drain)(_ == 3) Source(1 to 10).splitAfter(SubstreamCancelStrategy.drain)(_ == 3)
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)).splitWhen(elem -> elem == 3); Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10)).splitAfter(elem -> elem == 3);
These are useful when you scanned over something and you don’t need to care about anything behind it. A typical example is counting the number of characters for each line like below.
- Scala
-
source
val text = "This is the first line.\n" + "The second line.\n" + "There is also the 3rd line\n" val charCount = Source(text.toList) .splitAfter { _ == '\n' } .filter(_ != '\n') .map(_ => 1) .reduce(_ + _) .to(Sink.foreach(println)) .run()
- Java
-
source
String text = "This is the first line.\n" + "The second line.\n" + "There is also the 3rd line\n"; Source.from(Arrays.asList(text.split(""))) .map(x -> x.charAt(0)) .splitAfter(x -> x == '\n') .filter(x -> x != '\n') .map(x -> 1) .reduce((x, y) -> x + y) .to(Sink.foreach(x -> System.out.println(x))) .run(system);
This prints out the following output.
23
16
26
Flattening operators
flatMapConcat
flatMapConcat
flatMapConcat
and flatMapMerge
flatMapMerge
are substream operations different from groupBy
groupBy
and splitWhen/After
.
flatMapConcat
takes a function, which is f
in the following diagram. The function f
of flatMapConcat
transforms each input element into a Source
Source
that is then flattened into the output stream by concatenation.
- Scala
-
source
Source(1 to 2).flatMapConcat(i => Source(List.fill(3)(i))).runWith(Sink.ignore)
- Java
-
source
Source.from(Arrays.asList(1, 2)) .flatMapConcat(i -> Source.from(Arrays.asList(i, i, i))) .runWith(Sink.ignore(), system);
Like the concat
operation on Flow
Flow
, it fully consumes one Source
Source
after the other. So, there is only one substream actively running at a given time.
Then once the active substream is fully consumed, the next substream can start running. Elements from all the substreams are concatenated to the sink.
flatMapMerge
flatMapMerge
is similar to flatMapConcat
, but it doesn’t wait for one Source
to be fully consumed. Instead, up to breadth
number of streams emit elements at any given time.