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Clojure Reactive Programming

You're reading from   Clojure Reactive Programming Design and implement highly reusable reactive applications by integrating different frameworks with Clojure

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783986668
Length 232 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Leonardo Borges Leonardo Borges
Author Profile Icon Leonardo Borges
Leonardo Borges
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What is Reactive Programming? FREE CHAPTER 2. A Look at Reactive Extensions 3. Asynchronous Programming and Networking 4. Introduction to core.async 5. Creating Your Own CES Framework with core.async 6. Building a Simple ClojureScript Game with Reagi 7. The UI as a Function 8. Futures 9. A Reactive API to Amazon Web Services A. The Algebra of Library Design B. Bibliography
Index

Futures and blocking IO


The choice of using ForkJoinPool for imminent is deliberate. The ForkJoinPool—added on Java 7—is extremely smart. When created, you give it a desired level of parallelism, which defaults to the number of available processors.

ForkJoinPool then attempts to honor the desired parallelism by dynamically shrinking and expanding the pool as required. When a task is submitted to this pool, it doesn't necessarily create a new thread if it doesn't have to. This allows the pool to serve an extremely large number of tasks with a much smaller number of actual threads.

However, it cannot guarantee such optimizations in the face of blocking IO, as it can't know whether the thread is blocking waiting for an external resource. Nevertheless, ForkJoinPool provides a mechanism by which threads can notify the pool when they might block.

Imminent takes advantage of this mechanism by implementing the ManagedBlocker (see http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ForkJoinPool...

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