Skip to content

Automatically wrap Scala classes that return Futures with a Circuit Breaker

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

lucastorri/autobreaker

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

23 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

autobreaker

autobreaker is a Scala library that wraps your objects and intercepts all methods returning Futures with a circuit breaker.

It is based on atmos and Akka's Circuit Breaker, using Java's Proxy to intercept method calls.

Usage

import com.unstablebuild.autobreaker._

trait MyService {
  def add(a: Int, b: Int): Future[Int]
}

class FailingService extends MyService {
  override def add(a: Int, b: Int): Future[Int] = Future.failed(new Exception("error"))
}

val realService: MyService = new FailingService
val serviceWithCircuitBreaker = AutoBreaker.proxy(realService)

// Make it fail a few times
(1 to 10).foreach { _ => serviceWithCircuitBreaker.add(11, 23) }

// Try again and see that the service isn't called
serviceWithCircuitBreaker.add(11, 23)
// [warn] e.c.CircuitBreakerProxy - Attempt 1 of operation interrupted: akka.pattern.CircuitBreakerOpenException: Circuit Breaker is open; calls are failing fast
// akka.pattern.CircuitBreakerOpenException: Circuit Breaker is open; calls are failing fast

Please check the unit tests for more examples.

Skipping a specific method

You can prevent a method from being intercept with the NoCircuitBreaker annotation. For example:

class AnotherImplementation extends MyService {
  @NoCircuitBreaker
  override def add(a: Int, b: Int): Future[Int] = Future.failed(new Exception("error"))
}

Install

To use it with SBT, add the following to your build.sbt file:

resolvers += Resolver.sonatypeRepo("public")

libraryDependencies += "com.unstablebuild" %% "autobreaker" % "0.5.6"

Configuration

The following settings (and their default values) are available:

case class CircuitBreakerSettings(
  totalAttempts: TerminationPolicy = 3.attempts,
  backoffPolicy: BackoffPolicy = LimitedExponentialBackoffPolicy(2.minutes, 1.second),
  maxFailures: Int = 5,
  callTimeout: FiniteDuration = 10.seconds,
  resetTimeout: FiniteDuration = 1.minute,
  knownError: Throwable => Boolean = _ => false
)

Please see atmos and akka documentations for further reference.

knownError is used to decide if, given an exception type returned by the method, it should be retried or not, or counted as a failure on the circuit breaker. This allows the usage of custom exceptions to communicate the users about errors that don't affect the used method. For instance, you can decide that an exception communicating validation issues should not be considered as bad as a failure when communicating with a downstream system.

Guice Integration

autobreaker-guice allows you to annotate your implementations with @WithCircuitBreaker and modify your Guice module to automatically wrap the generated objects.

In order to use it, you need to add the following to your dependencies:

libraryDependencies += "com.unstablebuild" %% "autobreaker-guice" % "0.5.6"

Afterwards, it can be used like this:

@WithCircuitBreaker
class DownstreamService extends MyService {
  override def add(a: Int, b: Int): Future[Int] = ???
}

class TestModule extends AbstractModule {
  override def configure(): Unit = bind(classOf[MyService]).to(classOf[DownstreamService])
}

val module = new TestModule()
val injector = Guice.createInjector(AutoBreakerGuice.prepare(module))
val service = injector.getInstance(classOf[MyService])

An ExecutionContext and Scheduler should be available on your bindings.

You can also use a AutoBreakerModule instead of AbstractModule, and that will call AutoBreakerGuice.prepare for you.

Settings

You can inject settings in two ways:

  1. Bind a CircuitBreakerSettings;
  2. Bind a named CircuitBreakerSettings.

For example:

bind(classOf[CircuitBreakerSettings])
          .toInstance(mySettings)

bind(classOf[CircuitBreakerSettings])
  .annotatedWith(Names.named("custom-conf"))
  .toInstance(mySettings)

To use named Settings, you can add the use named to the WithCircuitBreaker annotation:

@WithCircuitBreaker(name = "custom-conf")
class CustomNamedFailureTestService(error: Throwable) extends MyService { ... }

If a Settings instance with the given name is not found, the library will try to use an unnamed one. If it also can't fidn one, it will fall back to AutoBreaker.defaultSettings.

Release

./sbt test guice/test
./sbt publishSigned guice/publishSigned
./sbt sonatypeReleaseAll

About

Automatically wrap Scala classes that return Futures with a Circuit Breaker

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published