T
- the received value type.public abstract class DisposableSubscriber<T> extends Object implements FlowableSubscriber<T>, Disposable
Disposable
.
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. Use the protected request(long)
to request more items and cancel()
to cancel the sequence from within an
onNext
implementation.
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.
Like all other consumers, DisposableSubscriber
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.
Example
Disposable d =
Flowable.range(1, 5)
.subscribeWith(new DisposableSubscriber<Integer>() {
@Override public void onStart() {
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!");
}
});
// ...
d.dispose();
Constructor and Description |
---|
DisposableSubscriber() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
protected void |
cancel()
Cancels the Subscription set via
onSubscribe(Subscription) or makes sure a
Subscription set asynchronously (later) is cancelled immediately. |
void |
dispose()
Dispose the resource, the operation should be idempotent.
|
boolean |
isDisposed()
Returns true if this resource has been disposed.
|
protected void |
onStart()
Called once the single upstream
Subscription is set via onSubscribe(Subscription) . |
void |
onSubscribe(Subscription s)
Implementors of this method should make sure everything that needs
to be visible in
Subscriber.onNext(Object) is established before
calling Subscription.request(long) . |
protected void |
request(long n)
Requests the specified amount from the upstream if its
Subscription is set via
onSubscribe already. |
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
onComplete, onError, onNext
disposed, empty, fromAction, fromAutoCloseable, fromFuture, fromFuture, fromRunnable, fromSubscription, toAutoCloseable
public final void onSubscribe(Subscription s)
FlowableSubscriber
Subscriber.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 void onStart()
Subscription
is set via onSubscribe(Subscription)
.protected final void request(long n)
Subscription
is set via
onSubscribe already.
Note that calling this method before a Subscription
is set via onSubscribe(Subscription)
leads to NullPointerException
and meant to be called from inside onStart()
or
Subscriber.onNext(Object)
.
n
- the request amount, positiveprotected final void cancel()
onSubscribe(Subscription)
or makes sure a
Subscription
set asynchronously (later) is cancelled immediately.
This method is thread-safe and can be exposed as a public API.
public final boolean isDisposed()
Disposable
isDisposed
in interface Disposable
public final void dispose()
Disposable
dispose
in interface Disposable