/* * Copyright (C) 2011 The Guava Authors * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except * in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License * is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express * or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under * the License. */ package com.google.common.util.concurrent; import com.google.common.annotations.Beta; import com.google.common.annotations.GwtIncompatible; import com.google.common.base.Preconditions; import com.google.errorprone.annotations.CanIgnoreReturnValue; import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit; import java.util.concurrent.TimeoutException; /** * A future which forwards all its method calls to another future. Subclasses should override one or * more methods to modify the behavior of the backing future as desired per the <a href= * "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Decorator_pattern">decorator pattern</a>. * * <p>Most subclasses can simply extend {@link SimpleForwardingCheckedFuture}. * * @param <V> The result type returned by this Future's {@code get} method * @param <X> The type of the Exception thrown by the Future's {@code checkedGet} method * @author Anthony Zana * @since 9.0 * @deprecated {@link CheckedFuture} cannot properly support the chained operations that are the * primary goal of {@link ListenableFuture}. {@code CheckedFuture} also encourages users to * rethrow exceptions from one thread in another thread, producing misleading stack traces. * Additionally, it has a surprising policy about which exceptions to map and which to leave * untouched. Guava users who want a {@code CheckedFuture} can fork the classes for their own * use, possibly specializing them to the particular exception type they use. We recommend that * most people use {@code ListenableFuture} and perform any exception wrapping themselves. This * class is scheduled for removal from Guava in February 2018. */ @Beta @Deprecated @GwtIncompatible public abstract class ForwardingCheckedFuture<V, X extends Exception> extends ForwardingListenableFuture<V> implements CheckedFuture<V, X> { @CanIgnoreReturnValue @Override public V checkedGet() throws X { return delegate().checkedGet(); } @CanIgnoreReturnValue @Override public V checkedGet(long timeout, TimeUnit unit) throws TimeoutException, X { return delegate().checkedGet(timeout, unit); } @Override protected abstract CheckedFuture<V, X> delegate(); // TODO(cpovirk): Use Standard Javadoc form for SimpleForwarding* /** * A simplified version of {@link ForwardingCheckedFuture} where subclasses can pass in an already * constructed {@link CheckedFuture} as the delegate. * * @since 9.0 * @deprecated {@link CheckedFuture} cannot properly support the chained operations that are the * primary goal of {@link ListenableFuture}. {@code CheckedFuture} also encourages users to * rethrow exceptions from one thread in another thread, producing misleading stack traces. * Additionally, it has a surprising policy about which exceptions to map and which to leave * untouched. Guava users who want a {@code CheckedFuture} can fork the classes for their own * use, possibly specializing them to the particular exception type they use. We recommend * that most people use {@code ListenableFuture} and perform any exception wrapping * themselves. This class is scheduled for removal from Guava in February 2018. */ @Beta @Deprecated public abstract static class SimpleForwardingCheckedFuture<V, X extends Exception> extends ForwardingCheckedFuture<V, X> { private final CheckedFuture<V, X> delegate; protected SimpleForwardingCheckedFuture(CheckedFuture<V, X> delegate) { this.delegate = Preconditions.checkNotNull(delegate); } @Override protected final CheckedFuture<V, X> delegate() { return delegate; } } }