I'm using apache http client within spring mvc 3.2.2 to send 5 get requests synchronously as illustrated.
How can I send all of these asynchronously (in parallel) and wait for the requests to return in order to return a parsed payload string from all GET requests?
public String myMVCControllerGETdataMethod()
{
// Send 1st request
HttpClient httpclient = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpGet httpget = new HttpGet("http://api/data?type=1");
ResponseHandler<String> responseHandler = new BasicResponseHandler();
String responseBody = httpclient.execute(httpget, responseHandler);
// Send 2st request
HttpClient httpclient2 = new DefaultHttpClient();
HttpGet httpget2 = new HttpGet("http://api/data?type=2");
ResponseHandler2<String> responseHandler2 = new BasicResponseHandler();
String responseBody2 = httpclient.execute(httpget, responseHandler2);
// o o o more gets here
// Perform some work here...and wait for all requests to return
// Parse info out of multiple requests and return
String results = doWorkwithMultipleDataReturned();
model.addAttribute(results, results);
return "index";
}
Just in general, you need to encapsulate your units of work in a Runnable
or java.util.concurrent.Callable
and execute them via java.util.concurrent.Executor
(or org.springframework.core.task.TaskExecutor
). This allows each unit of work to be executed separately, typically in an asynchronous fashion (depending on the implementation of the Executor
).
So for your specific problem, you could do something like this:
import java.util.ArrayList;
import java.util.Iterator;
import java.util.List;
import java.util.concurrent.Callable;
import java.util.concurrent.Executor;
import java.util.concurrent.FutureTask;
import org.apache.http.client.methods.HttpGet;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.BasicResponseHandler;
import org.apache.http.impl.client.DefaultHttpClient;
import org.springframework.stereotype.Controller;
import org.springframework.ui.Model;
import org.springframework.web.bind.annotation.RequestMapping;
@Controller
public class MyController {
//inject this
private Executor executor;
@RequestMapping("/your/path/here")
public String myMVCControllerGETdataMethod(Model model) {
//define all async requests and give them to injected Executor
List<GetRequestTask> tasks = new ArrayList<GetRequestTask>();
tasks.add(new GetRequestTask("http://api/data?type=1", this.executor));
tasks.add(new GetRequestTask("http://api/data?type=2", this.executor));
//...
//do other work here
//...
//now wait for all async tasks to complete
while(!tasks.isEmpty()) {
for(Iterator<GetRequestTask> it = tasks.iterator(); it.hasNext();) {
GetRequestTask task = it.next();
if(task.isDone()) {
String request = task.getRequest();
String response = task.getResponse();
//PUT YOUR CODE HERE
//possibly aggregate request and response in Map<String,String>
//or do something else with request and response
it.remove();
}
}
//avoid tight loop in "main" thread
if(!tasks.isEmpty()) Thread.sleep(100);
}
//now you have all responses for all async requests
//the following from your original code
//note: you should probably pass the responses from above
//to this next method (to keep your controller stateless)
String results = doWorkwithMultipleDataReturned();
model.addAttribute(results, results);
return "index";
}
//abstraction to wrap Callable and Future
class GetRequestTask {
private GetRequestWork work;
private FutureTask<String> task;
public GetRequestTask(String url, Executor executor) {
this.work = new GetRequestWork(url);
this.task = new FutureTask<String>(work);
executor.execute(this.task);
}
public String getRequest() {
return this.work.getUrl();
}
public boolean isDone() {
return this.task.isDone();
}
public String getResponse() {
try {
return this.task.get();
} catch(Exception e) {
throw new RuntimeException(e);
}
}
}
//Callable representing actual HTTP GET request
class GetRequestWork implements Callable<String> {
private final String url;
public GetRequestWork(String url) {
this.url = url;
}
public String getUrl() {
return this.url;
}
public String call() throws Exception {
return new DefaultHttpClient().execute(new HttpGet(getUrl()), new BasicResponseHandler());
}
}
}
Note that this code has not been tested.
For your Executor
implementation, check out Spring's TaskExecutor and task:executor namespace. You probably want a reusable pool of threads for this use-case (instead of creating a new thread every time).