T - the value type
 Example
 Flowable.range(1, 5)
     .subscribe(new DefaultSubscriber<Integer>() {
         @Override public void onStart() {
             System.out.println("Start!");
             request(1);
         }
         @Override public void onNext(Integer t) {
             if (t == 3) {
                 cancel();
             }
             System.out.println(t);
             request(1);
         }
         @Override public void onError(Throwable t) {
             t.printStackTrace();
         }
         @Override public void onComplete() {
             System.out.println("Done!");
         }
     });
 public abstract class DefaultSubscriber<T> extends Object implements FlowableSubscriber<T>
Subscriber with
 support for requesting via request(long), cancelling via
 via cancel() (both synchronously) and calls onStart()
 when the subscription happens.
 All pre-implemented final methods are thread-safe.
The default onStart() requests Long.MAX_VALUE by default. Override
 the method to request a custom positive amount.
 
Note that calling request(long) from onStart() may trigger
 an immediate, asynchronous emission of data to Subscriber.onNext(Object). Make sure
 all initialization happens before the call to request() in onStart().
 Calling request(long) inside Subscriber.onNext(Object) can happen at any time
 because by design, onNext calls from upstream are non-reentrant and non-overlapping.
 
Use the protected cancel() to cancel the sequence from within an
 onNext implementation.
 
Like all other consumers, DefaultSubscriber can be subscribed only once.
 Any subsequent attempt to subscribe it to a new source will yield an
 IllegalStateException with message "It is not allowed to subscribe with a(n) <class name> multiple times.".
 
Implementation of onStart(), Subscriber.onNext(Object), Subscriber.onError(Throwable)
 and Subscriber.onComplete() are not allowed to throw any unchecked exceptions.
 If for some reason this can't be avoided, use Flowable.safeSubscribe(org.reactivestreams.Subscriber)
 instead of the standard subscribe() method.
| Constructor and Description | 
|---|
| DefaultSubscriber() | 
| Modifier and Type | Method and Description | 
|---|---|
| protected void | cancel()Cancels the upstream's Subscription. | 
| protected void | onStart()Called once the subscription has been set on this observer; override this
 to perform initialization or issue an initial request. | 
| void | onSubscribe(Subscription s)Implementors of this method should make sure everything that needs
 to be visible in  Subscriber.onNext(Object)is established before
 callingSubscription.request(long). | 
| protected void | request(long n)Requests from the upstream Subscription. | 
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, waitonComplete, onError, onNextpublic final void onSubscribe(Subscription s)
FlowableSubscriberSubscriber.onNext(Object) is established before
 calling Subscription.request(long). In practice this means
 no initialization should happen after the request() call and
 additional behavior is thread safe in respect to onNext.
 onSubscribe in interface FlowableSubscriber<T>onSubscribe in interface Subscriber<T>protected final void request(long n)
n - the request amount, positiveprotected final void cancel()
protected void onStart()
 The default implementation requests Long.MAX_VALUE.