Interface FunctionalMap<K,V> 
- All Superinterfaces:
- AutoCloseable
- All Known Subinterfaces:
- FunctionalMap.ReadOnlyMap<K,,- V> - FunctionalMap.ReadWriteMap<K,,- V> - FunctionalMap.WriteOnlyMap<K,- V> 
- All Known Implementing Classes:
- FunctionalMapImpl,- ReadOnlyMapImpl,- ReadWriteMapImpl,- SimpleReadOnlyMapImpl,- SimpleReadWriteMapImpl,- SimpleWriteOnlyMapImpl,- WriteOnlyMapImpl
Lambdas passed in as parameters to functional map methods define the type of operation that is executed, but since lambdas are transparent to the internal logic, it was decided to separate the API into three types of operation: read-only, write-only, and read-write. This separation helps the user understand the group of functions and their possibilities.
This conscious decision to separate read-only, write-only and read-write interfaces helps type safety. So, if a user gets a read-only map, it can't write to it by mistake since no such APIs are exposed. The same happens with write-only maps, the user can only write and cannot make the mistake of reading from the entry view because read operations are not exposed.
Lambdas passed in to read-write and write-only operations, when
 running in a cluster, must be marshallable. One option to do so is to
 mark them as being Serializable but this is expensive
 in terms of payload size. Alternatively, you can provide an Infinispan
 Externalizer for it which
 drastically reduces the payload size. Marshallable lambdas for some of
 the most popular lambda functions used by ConcurrentMap are
 available via the MarshallableFunctions helper class.
 
Being an asynchronous API, all methods that return a single result,
 return a CompletableFuture which wraps the result. To avoid
 blocking, it offers the possibility to receive callbacks when the
 CompletableFuture has completed, or it can be chained or composes
 with other CompletableFuture instances.
 
For those operations that return multiple results, the API returns
 instances of a Traversable interface which offers a lazy pullstyle
 API for working with multiple results. Although pushstyle interfaces for
 handling multiple results, such as RxJava, are fully asynchronous, they're
 harder to use from a user’s perspective. Traversable, being a lazy
 pullstyle API, can still be asynchronous underneath since the user can
 decide to work on the Traversable at a later stage, and the
 implementation itself can decide when to compute those results.
- Since:
- 8.0
- 
Nested Class SummaryNested ClassesModifier and TypeInterfaceDescriptionstatic interfaceExposes read-only operations that can be executed against the functional map.static interfaceExposes read-write operations that can be executed against the functional map.static interfaceExposes write-only operations that can be executed against the functional map.
- 
Method SummaryModifier and TypeMethodDescriptioncache()getName()Functional map's name.Functional map's status.default booleanTells if the underlying cache is using encoding or notwithParams(Param<?>... ps) Tweak functional map executions providingParaminstances.Methods inherited from interface java.lang.AutoCloseableclose
- 
Method Details- 
withParamsTweak functional map executions providingParaminstances.
- 
getNameString getName()Functional map's name.
- 
getStatusComponentStatus getStatus()Functional map's status.
- 
isEncodeddefault boolean isEncoded()Tells if the underlying cache is using encoding or not- Returns:
- true if the underlying cache is encoded
 
- 
cache
 
-