Core Java

Java 8: Lambda Expressions vs Auto Closeable

If you used earlier versions of Neo4j via its Java API with Java 6 you probably have code similar to the following to ensure write operations happen within a transaction:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

public class StylesOfTx
{
    public static void main( String[] args ) throws IOException
    {
        String path = "/tmp/tx-style-test";
        FileUtils.deleteRecursively(new File(path));

        GraphDatabaseService db = new GraphDatabaseFactory().newEmbeddedDatabase( path );

        Transaction tx = db.beginTx();
        try 
        {
            db.createNode();
            tx.success();
        } 
        finally 
        {
            tx.close();
        }
    }
}

In Neo4j 2.0 Transaction started extending AutoCloseable which meant that you could use ‘try with resources’ and the ‘close’ method would be automatically called when the block finished:

public class StylesOfTx
{
    public static void main( String[] args ) throws IOException
    {
        String path = "/tmp/tx-style-test";
        FileUtils.deleteRecursively(new File(path));

        GraphDatabaseService db = new GraphDatabaseFactory().newEmbeddedDatabase( path );

        try ( Transaction tx = db.beginTx() )
        {
            Node node = db.createNode();
            tx.success();
        }
    }
}

This works quite well although it’s still possible to have transactions hanging around in an application when people don’t use this syntax – the old style is still permissible.

In Venkat Subramaniam’s Java 8 book he suggests an alternative approach where we use a lambda based approach:

public class StylesOfTx
{
    public static void main( String[] args ) throws IOException
    {
        String path = "/tmp/tx-style-test";
        FileUtils.deleteRecursively(new File(path));

        GraphDatabaseService db = new GraphDatabaseFactory().newEmbeddedDatabase( path );

        Db.withinTransaction(db, neo4jDb -> {
            Node node = neo4jDb.createNode();
        });
    }

    static class Db {
        public static void withinTransaction(GraphDatabaseService db, Consumer<GraphDatabaseService> fn) {
            try ( Transaction tx = db.beginTx() )
            {
                fn.accept(db);
                tx.success();
            }
        }
    }
}

The ‘withinTransaction’ function would actually go on GraphDatabaseService or similar rather than being on that Db class but it was easier to put it on there for this example.

A disadvantage of this style is that you don’t have explicit control over the transaction for handling the failure case – it’s assumed that if ‘tx.success()’ isn’t called then the transaction failed and it’s rolled back. I’m not sure what % of use cases actually need such fine grained control though.

Brian Hurt refers to this as the ‘hole in the middle pattern‘ and I imagine we’ll start seeing more code of this ilk once Java 8 is released and becomes more widely used.
 

Reference: Java 8: Lambda Expressions vs Auto Closeable from our JCG partner Mark Needham at the Mark Needham Blog blog.
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Alex
Alex
10 years ago

seriously? this could have been done without lambda … with an anonymous Callable :))) and why would you do that???? where do you treat exception and Rollback? this is why you are using transactions…

Andy
9 years ago

Alex, a lambda and an anonymous Callable are essentially the same (with less syntax – and maybe some bytecode magic in the JVM 8). Exceptions would be handled outside of this method or could even be generalized for some cases. The “commit” part of course completely ignores the rollback case (in any example). But maybe it just relies on the underlying framework to throw an appropriate exception…

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