Skip to content

Distributed lock for your scheduled tasks

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

ae-govau/ShedLock

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

ShedLock

Apache License 2 Build Status Maven Central

ShedLock makes sure that your scheduled tasks are executed at most once at the same time. If a task is being executed on one node, it acquires a lock which prevents execution of the same task from another node (or thread). Please note, that if one task is already being executed on one node, execution on other nodes does not wait, it is simply skipped.

ShedLock uses external store like Mongo, JDBC database, Redis, Hazelcast, ZooKeeper or others for coordination.

Feedback and pull-requests welcome!

ShedLock is not a distributed scheduler

Please note that ShedLock is not and will never be full-fledged scheduler, it's just a lock. If you need a distributed scheduler, please use another project. ShedLock is designed to be used in situations where you have scheduled tasks that are not ready to be executed in parallel, but can be safely executed repeatedly. Moreover, the locks are time-based and ShedLock assumes that clocks on the nodes are synchronized.

Components

Shedlock consists of three parts

  • Core - The locking mechanism
  • Integration - integration with your application, using Spring AOP, Micronaut AOP or manual code
  • Lock provider - provides the lock using an external process like SQL database, Mongo, Redis and others

Usage

To use ShedLock, you do the following

  1. Enable and configure Scheduled locking
  2. Annotate your scheduled tasks
  3. Configure a Lock Provider

Enable and configure Scheduled locking (Spring)

First of all, we have to import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-spring</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Now we need to integrate the library with Spring. In order to enable schedule locking use @EnableSchedulerLock annotation

@Configuration
@EnableScheduling
@EnableSchedulerLock(defaultLockAtMostFor = "10m")
class MySpringConfiguration {
    ...
}

Annotate your scheduled tasks

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.spring.annotation.SchedulerLock;

...

@Scheduled(...)
@SchedulerLock(name = "scheduledTaskName")
public void scheduledTask() {
   // To assert that the lock is held (prevents misconfiguration errors)
   LockAssert.assertLocked();
   // do something
}

The @SchedulerLock annotation has several purposes. First of all, only annotated methods are locked, the library ignores all other scheduled tasks. You also have to specify the name for the lock. Only one task with the same name can be executed at the same time.

You can also set lockAtMostFor attribute which specifies how long the lock should be kept in case the executing node dies. This is just a fallback, under normal circumstances the lock is released as soon the tasks finishes. You have to set lockAtMostFor to a value which is much longer than normal execution time. If the task takes longer than lockAtMostFor the resulting behavior may be unpredictable (more then one process will effectively hold the lock).

If you do not specify lockAtMostFor in @SchedulerLock default value from @EnableSchedulerLock will be used.

Lastly, you can set lockAtLeastFor attribute which specifies minimum amount of time for which the lock should be kept. Its main purpose is to prevent execution from multiple nodes in case of really short tasks and clock difference between the nodes.

Example

Let's say you have a task which you execute every 15 minutes and which usually takes few minutes to run. Moreover, you want to execute it at most once per 15 minutes. In such case, you can configure it like this

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.core.SchedulerLock;


@Scheduled(cron = "0 */15 * * * *")
@SchedulerLock(name = "scheduledTaskName", lockAtMostFor = "14m", lockAtLeastFor = "14m")
public void scheduledTask() {
   // do something
}

By setting lockAtMostFor we make sure that the lock is released even if the node dies and by setting lockAtLeastFor we make sure it's not executed more than once in fifteen minutes. Please note that lockAtMostFor is just a safety net for a case that the node executing the task dies, so set it to a time that is significantly larger than maximum estimated execution time. If the task takes longer than lockAtMostFor, it may be executed again and the results will be unpredictable (more processes will hold the lock).

Configure LockProvider

There are several implementations of LockProvider.

JdbcTemplate

First, create lock table (please note that name has to be primary key)

# MySQL, MariaDB
CREATE TABLE shedlock(name VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL, lock_until TIMESTAMP(3) NOT NULL,
    locked_at TIMESTAMP(3) NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP(3), locked_by VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (name));

# Postgres
CREATE TABLE shedlock(name VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL, lock_until TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
    locked_at TIMESTAMP NOT NULL, locked_by VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (name));

# Oracle
CREATE TABLE shedlock(name VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL, lock_until TIMESTAMP(3) NOT NULL,
    locked_at TIMESTAMP(3) NOT NULL, locked_by VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (name));

# MS SQL
CREATE TABLE shedlock(name VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL, lock_until datetime2 NOT NULL,
    locked_at datetime2 NOT NULL, locked_by VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL, PRIMARY KEY (name));

# DB2
CREATE TABLE shedlock(name VARCHAR(64) NOT NULL PRIMARY KEY, lock_until TIMESTAMP NOT NULL,
    locked_at TIMESTAMP NOT NULL, locked_by VARCHAR(255) NOT NULL);

Add dependency

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-jdbc-template</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.jdbctemplate.JdbcTemplateLockProvider;

...
@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(DataSource dataSource) {
            return new JdbcTemplateLockProvider(
                JdbcTemplateLockProvider.Configuration.builder()
                .withJdbcTemplate(new JdbcTemplate(dataSource))
                .usingDbTime() // Works on Postgres, MySQL, MariaDb, MS SQL, Oracle, DB2, HSQL and H2
                .build()
            );
}

By specifying usingDbTime() (introduced in 4.9.3) the lock provider will use UTC time based on the DB server time. If you do not specify this option, current time on the client will be used (the time may differ between clients).

For more fine-grained configuration use other options of the Configuration object

new JdbcTemplateLockProvider(builder()
    .withTableName("shdlck")
    .withColumnNames(new ColumnNames("n", "lck_untl", "lckd_at", "lckd_by"))
    .withJdbcTemplate(new JdbcTemplate(getDatasource()))
    .withLockedByValue("my-value")
    .withTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC"))
    .build())

If you need to specify a schema, you can set it in the table name using the usual dot notation new JdbcTemplateLockProvider(datasource, "my_schema.shedlock")

Warning

Do not manually delete lock row from the DB table. ShedLock has an in-memory cache of existing locks so the row will NOT be automatically recreated until application restart. If you need to, you can edit the row/document, risking only that multiple locks will be held. Since 1.0.0 you can clean the cache by calling clearCache() on LockProvider.

Mongo

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-mongo</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.mongo.MongoLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(MongoClient mongo) {
    return new MongoLockProvider(mongo.getDatabase(databaseName))
}

Please note that MongoDB integration requires Mongo >= 2.4 and mongo-java-driver >= 3.7.0

Reactive Mongo

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-mongo-reactivestreams</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.mongo.reactivestreams.ReactiveStreamsMongoLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(MongoClient mongo) {
    return new ReactiveStreamsMongoLockProvider(mongo.getDatabase(databaseName))
}

Please note that MongoDB integration requires Mongo >= 4.x and mongodb-driver-reactivestreams 1.x

DynamoDB

This depends on AWS SDK v1.

Import the project

<dependency>
   <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
   <artifactId>shedlock-provider-dynamodb</artifactId>
   <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.dynamodb.DynamoDBLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2.document.DynamoDB dynamoDB) {
   return new DynamoDBLockProvider(dynamoDB.getTable("Shedlock"));
}

Please note that the lock table must be created externally. DynamoDBUtils#createLockTable may be used for creating it programmatically. A table definition is available from DynamoDBLockProvider's Javadoc.

DynamoDB 2

This depends on AWS SDK v2.

Import the project

<dependency>
   <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
   <artifactId>shedlock-provider-dynamodb2</artifactId>
   <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.dynamodb2.DynamoDBLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(software.amazon.awssdk.services.dynamodb.DynamoDbClient dynamoDB) {
   return new DynamoDBLockProvider(dynamoDB, "Shedlock");
}

Please note that the lock table must be created externally. DynamoDBUtils#createLockTable may be used for creating it programmatically. A table definition is available from DynamoDBLockProvider's Javadoc.

ZooKeeper (using Curator)

Import

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-zookeeper-curator</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

and configure

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.zookeeper.curator.ZookeeperCuratorLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(org.apache.curator.framework.CuratorFramework client) {
    return new ZookeeperCuratorLockProvider(client);
}

By default, nodes for locks will be created under /shedlock node.

Redis (using Spring RedisConnectionFactory)

Import

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-redis-spring</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

and configure

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.redis.spring.RedisLockProvider;
import org.springframework.data.redis.connection.RedisConnectionFactory;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(RedisConnectionFactory connectionFactory) {
    return new RedisLockProvider(connectionFactory, ENV);
}

Redis lock provider uses classical lock mechanism as described here which may not be reliable in case of Redis master failure.

If you are still using Spring Data Redis 1, import special lock provider shedlock-provider-redis-spring-1 which works around issue #105 or upgrade to Spring Data Redis 2 or higher.

Redis (using Jedis)

Import

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-redis-jedis</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

and configure

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.redis.jedis.JedisLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public LockProvider lockProvider(JedisPool jedisPool) {
    return new JedisLockProvider(jedisPool, ENV);
}

Hazelcast

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <!-- Hazelcast < 4 -->
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-hazelcast</artifactId>
    <!-- Hazelcast 4 -->
    <!-- <artifactId>shedlock-provider-hazelcast4</artifactId> -->
    <version>4.15.1/version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.hazelcast.HazelcastLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public HazelcastLockProvider lockProvider(HazelcastInstance hazelcastInstance) {
    return new HazelcastLockProvider(hazelcastInstance);
}

For Hazelcast 4 use shedlock-provider-hazelcast4 module and net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.hazelcast4 package.

Couchbase

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-couchbase-javaclient</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1/version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.couchbase.javaclient.CouchbaseLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public CouchbaseLockProvider lockProvider(Bucket bucket) {
    return new CouchbaseLockProvider(bucket);
}

For Couchbase 3 use shedlock-provider-couchbase3 module and net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.couchbase3 package.

Elasticsearch

I am really not sure that it's a good idea to use Elasticsearch as a lock provider. But if you have no other choice, you can. Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-elasticsearch</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import static net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.elasticsearch.ElasticsearchLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public ElasticsearchLockProvider lockProvider(RestHighLevelClient highLevelClient) {
    return new ElasticsearchLockProvider(highLevelClient);
}

CosmosDB

CosmosDB support is provided by a third-party module available here

Cassandra

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-cassandra</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1/version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.cassandra.CassandraLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public CassandraLockProvider lockProvider(CqlSession cqlSession) {
    return new CassandraLockProvider(cqlSession);
}

Example for creating default keyspace and table in local Cassandra instance:

CREATE KEYSPACE shedlock with replication={'class':'SimpleStrategy', 'replication_factor':1} and durable_writes=true;
CREATE TABLE shedlock.lock (name text PRIMARY KEY, lockUntil timestamp, lockedAt timestamp, lockedBy text);

Please, note that CassandraLockProvider uses Cassandra driver v4, which is part of Spring Boot since 2.3.

Consul

ConsulLockProvider has one limitation: lockAtMostFor setting will have a minimum value of 10 seconds. It is dictated by consul's session limitations.

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-consul</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.consul.ConsulLockProvider;

...

@Bean // for micronaut please define preDestroy property @Bean(preDestroy="close")
public ConsulLockProvider lockProvider(com.ecwid.consul.v1.ConsulClient consulClient) {
    return new ConsulLockProvider(consulClient);
}

Please, note that Consul lock provider uses ecwid consul-api client, which is part of spring cloud consul integration (the spring-cloud-starter-consul-discovery package).

ArangoDB

Import the project

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-provider-arangodb</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure:

import net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.arangodb.ArangoLockProvider;

...

@Bean
public ArangoLockProvider lockProvider(final ArangoOperations arangoTemplate) {
    return new ArangoLockProvider(arangoTemplate.driver().db(DB_NAME));
}

Please, note that ArangoDB lock provider uses ArangoDB driver v6.7, which is part of arango-spring-data in version 3.3.0.

Multi-tenancy

If you have multi-tenancy use-case you can use a lock provider similar to this one (see the full example)

private static abstract class MultiTenancyLockProvider implements LockProvider {
    private final ConcurrentHashMap<String, LockProvider> providers = new ConcurrentHashMap<>();

    @Override
    public @NonNull Optional<SimpleLock> lock(@NonNull LockConfiguration lockConfiguration) {
        String tenantName = getTenantName(lockConfiguration);
        return providers.computeIfAbsent(tenantName, this::createLockProvider).lock(lockConfiguration);
    }

    protected abstract LockProvider createLockProvider(String tenantName) ;

    protected abstract String getTenantName(LockConfiguration lockConfiguration);
}

Duration specification

All the annotations where you need to specify a duration support the following formats

  • duration+unit - 1s, 5ms, 5m, 1d (Since 4.0.0)
  • duration in ms - 100 (only Spring integration)
  • ISO-8601 - PT15M (see Duration.parse() documentation)

Micronaut integration

Since version 4.0.0, it's possible to use Micronaut framework for integration

Import the project:

<dependency>
    <groupId>net.javacrumbs.shedlock</groupId>
    <artifactId>shedlock-micronaut</artifactId>
    <version>4.15.1</version>
</dependency>

Configure default lockAtMostFor value (application.yml):

shedlock:
  defaults:
    lock-at-most-for: 1m

Configure lock provider:

@Singleton
public LockProvider lockProvider() {
    ... select and configure your lock provider
}

Configure the scheduled task:

@Scheduled(fixedDelay = "1s")
@SchedulerLock(name = "myTask")
public void myTask() {
    assertLocked();
    ...
}

Locking without a framework

It is possible to use ShedLock without a framework

LockingTaskExecutor executor = new DefaultLockingTaskExecutor(lockProvider);

...

Instant lockAtMostUntil = Instant.now().plusSeconds(600);
executor.executeWithLock(runnable, new LockConfiguration("lockName", lockAtMostUntil));

Modes of Spring integration

ShedLock supports two modes of Spring integration. One that uses AOP proxy about scheduled method (PROXY_METHOD) and one that proxies TaskScheduler (PROXY_SCHEDULER)

Scheduled Method proxy

Since version 4.0.0, the default mode of Spring integration is an AOP proxy around the annotated method.

The main advantage of this mode is that it plays well with other frameworks that want to somehow alter the default Spring scheduling mechanism. The disadvantage is that the lock is applied even if you call the method directly. If the method returns a value and the lock is held by another process, null or an empty Optional will be returned (primitive return types are not supported).

Final and non-public methods are not proxied so either you have to make your scheduled methods public and non-final or use TaskScheduler proxy.

Method proxy sequenceDiagram

TaskScheduler proxy

This mode wraps Spring TaskScheduler in an AOP proxy. It can be switched-on like this (PROXY_SCHEDULER was the default method before 4.0.0):

@EnableSchedulerLock(interceptMode = PROXY_SCHEDULER)

If you do not specify your task scheduler, a default one is created for you. If you have special needs, just create a bean implementing TaskScheduler interface and it will get wrapped into the AOP proxy automatically.

@Bean
public TaskScheduler taskScheduler() {
    return new MySpecialTaskScheduler();
}

Alternatively, you can define a bean of type ScheduledExecutorService and it will automatically get used by the tasks scheduling mechanism.

TaskScheduler proxy sequence diagram

Spring XML configuration

Spring XML configuration is not supported as of version 3.0.0. If you need it, please use version 2.6.0 or file an issue explaining why it is needed.

Lock assert

To prevent misconfiguration errors, like AOP miscofiguration, missing annotataion etc., you can assert that the lock works by using LockAssert:

@Scheduled(...)
@SchedulerLock(..)
public void scheduledTask() {
    // To assert that the lock is held (prevents misconfiguration errors)
    LockAssert.assertLocked();
    // do something
}

In unit tests you can switch-off the assertion by calling LockAssert.TestHelper.makeAllAssertsPass(true) on given thread (as in this example).

Kotlin gotchas

The library is tested with Kotlin and works fine. The only issue is Spring AOP which does not work on final method. If you use @SchedulerLock with @Scheduled annotation, everyting should work since Kotling Spring compiler plugin will automatically 'open' the method for you. If @Scheduled annotation is not present, you have to open the method by yourself.

Caveats

Locks in ShedLock have expiration time which leads to following possible issues.

  1. If the task runs longer than lockAtMostFor, the task can be executed more than once
  2. If the clock difference between two nodes is more than lockAtLeastFor or minimal execution time the task can be executed more than once.

Troubleshooting

Help, ShedLock does not do what it's supposed to do!

  1. Upgrade to the newest version
  2. Check the storage. If you are using JDBC, check the ShedLock table. If it's empty, ShedLock is not properly configured. If there is more than one record with the same name, you are missing a primary key.
  3. Use ShedLock debug log. ShedLock logs interesting information on DEBUG level with logger name net.javacrumbs.shedlock. It should help you to see what's going on.
  4. For short-running tasks consider using lockAtLeastFor. If the tasks are short-running, they can be executed one after each other, lockAtLeastFor can prevent it.
  5. If you encounter weird error complaining that a Proxy is not class of ThreadPoolTaskScheduler please check lukas-krecan#115 or this StackOverflow quesiton

Requirements and dependencies

  • Java 8
  • slf4j-api

Release notes

4.15.1

  • Fix session leak in Consul provider #340 (thanks @haraldpusch)

4.15.0

  • ArangoDB lock provider added (thanks @patrick-birkle)

4.14.0

  • Support for Couchbase 3 driver (thanks @blitzenzzz)
  • Removed forgotten configuration files form micronaut package (thanks @drmaas)
  • Shutdown hook for Consul (thanks @kaliy)

4.13.0

  • Support for Consul (thanks @kaliy)
  • Various dependencies updated
  • Deprecated default LockConfiguration constructor

4.12.0

  • Lazy initialization of SqlStatementsSource #258

4.11.1

  • MongoLockProvider uses mongodb-driver-sync
  • Removed deprecated constructors from MongoLockProvider

4.10.1

  • New Mongo reactive streams driver (thanks @codependent)

4.9.3

  • Fixed JdbcTemplateLockProvider useDbTime() locking #244 thanks @gjorgievskivlatko

4.9.2

  • Do not fail on DB type determining code if DB connection is not available

4.9.1

  • Support for server time in DB2
  • removed shedlock-provider-jdbc-internal module

4.9.0

  • Support for server time in JdbcTemplateLockProvider
  • Using custom non-null annotations
  • Trimming time precision to milliseconds
  • Micronaut upgraded to 1.3.4
  • Add automatic DB tests for Oracle, MariaDB and MS SQL.

4.8.0

  • DynamoDB 2 module introduced (thanks Mark Egan)
  • JDBC template code refactored to not log error on failed insert in Postgres
    • INSERT .. ON CONFLICT UPDATE is used for Postgres

4.7.1

  • Make LockAssert.TestHelper public

4.7.0

  • New module for Hazelcasts 4
  • Ability to switch-off LockAssert in unit tests

4.6.0

  • Support for Meta annotations and annotation inheritance in Spring

4.5.2

  • Made compatible with PostgreSQL JDBC Driver 42.2.11

4.5.1

  • Inject redis template

4.5.0

  • ClockProvider introduced
  • MongoLockProvider(MongoDatabase) introduced

4.4.0

  • Support for non-void returning methods when PROXY_METHOD interception is used

4.3.1

  • Introduced shedlock-provider-redis-spring-1 to make it work around Spring Data Redis 1 issue #105 (thanks @rygh4775)

4.3.0

  • Jedis dependency upgraded to 3.2.0
  • Support for JedisCluster
  • Tests upgraded to JUnit 5

4.2.0

  • Cassandra provider (thanks @mitjag)

4.1.0

  • More configuration option for JdbcTemplateProvider

4.0.4

  • Allow configuration of key prefix in RedisLockProvider #181 (thanks @krm1312)

4.0.3

  • Fixed junit dependency scope #179

4.0.2

  • Fix NPE caused by Redisson #178

4.0.1

  • DefaultLockingTaskExecutor made reentrant #175

4.0.0

Version 4.0.0 is a major release changing quite a lot stuff

  • net.javacrumbs.shedlock.core.SchedulerLock has been replaced by net.javacrumbs.shedlock.spring.annotation.SchedulerLock. The original annotation has been in wrong module and was too complex. Please use the new annotation, the old one still works, but in few years it will be removed.
  • Default intercept mode changed from PROXY_SCHEDULER to PROXY_METHOD. The reason is that there was lot of issues with PROXY_SCHEDULER (for example #168). You can still use PROXY_SCHEDULER mode if you specifay it manually.
  • Support for more readable duration strings
  • Support for lock assertion LockAssert.assertLocked()
  • Support for Micronaut added

3.0.1

  • Fixed bean definition configuration #171

3.0.0

  • EnableSchedulerLock.mode renamed to interceptMode
  • Use standard Spring AOP configuration to honor Spring Boot config (supports proxyTargetClass flag)
  • Removed deprecated SpringLockableTaskSchedulerFactoryBean and related classes
  • Removed support for XML configuration

2.6.0

  • Updated dependency to Spring 2.1.9
  • Support for lock extensions (beta)

2.5.0

  • Zookeeper supports lockAtMostFor and lockAtLeastFor params
  • Better debug logging

2.4.0

  • Fixed potential deadlock in Hazelcast (thanks @HubertTatar)
  • Finding class level annotation in proxy method mode (thanks @volkovs)
  • ScheduledLockConfigurationBuilder deprecated

2.3.0

  • LockProvides is initialized lazilly so it does not change DataSource initialization order

2.2.1

  • MongoLockProvider accepts MongoCollection as a constructor param

2.2.0

  • DynamoDBLockProvider added

2.1.0

  • MongoLockProvider rewritten to use upsert
  • ElasticsearchLockProvider added

2.0.1

  • AOP proxy and annotation configuration support

1.3.0

  • Can set Timezone to JdbcTemplateLock provider

1.2.0

  • Support for Couchbase (thanks to @MoranVaisberg)

1.1.1

  • Spring RedisLockProvider refactored to use RedisTemplate

1.1.0

  • Support for transaction manager in JdbcTemplateLockProvider (thanks to @grmblfrz)

1.0.0

  • Upgraded dependencies to Spring 5 and Spring Data 2
  • Removed deprecated net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.jedis.JedisLockProvider (use net.javacrumbs.shedlock.provider.redis.jedis.JedisLockProvide instead)
  • Removed deprecated SpringLockableTaskSchedulerFactory (use ScheduledLockConfigurationBuilder instead)

0.18.2

  • ablility to clean lock cache

0.18.1

  • shedlock-provider-redis-spring made compatible with spring-data-redis 1.x.x

0.18.0

  • Added shedlock-provider-redis-spring (thanks to @siposr)
  • shedlock-provider-jedis moved to shedlock-provider-redis-jedis

0.17.0

  • Support for SPEL in lock name annotation

0.16.1

  • Automatically closing TaskExecutor on Spring shutdown

0.16.0

  • Removed spring-test from shedlock-spring compile time dependencies
  • Added Automatic-Module-Names

0.15.1

  • Hazelcast works with remote cluster

0.15.0

  • Fixed ScheduledLockConfigurationBuilder interfaces #32
  • Hazelcast code refactoring

0.14.0

  • Support for Hazelcast (thanks to @peyo)

0.13.0

  • Jedis constructor made more generic (thanks to @mgrzeszczak)

0.12.0

  • Support for property placeholders in annotation lockAtMostForString/lockAtLeastForString
  • Support for composed annotations
  • ScheduledLockConfigurationBuilder introduced (deprecating SpringLockableTaskSchedulerFactory)

0.11.0

  • Support for Redis (thanks to @clamey)
  • Checking that lockAtMostFor is in the future
  • Checking that lockAtMostFor is larger than lockAtLeastFor

0.10.0

  • jdbc-template-provider does not participate in task transaction

0.9.0

  • Support for @SchedulerLock annotations on proxied classes

0.8.0

  • LockableTaskScheduler made AutoClosable so it's closed upon Spring shutdown

0.7.0

  • Support for lockAtLeastFor

0.6.0

  • Possible to configure defaultLockFor time so it does not have to be repeated in every annotation

0.5.0

  • ZooKeeper nodes created under /shedlock by default

0.4.1

  • JdbcLockProvider insert does not fail on DataIntegrityViolationException

0.4.0

  • Extracted LockingTaskExecutor
  • LockManager.executeIfNotLocked renamed to executeWithLock
  • Default table name in JDBC lock providers

0.3.0

  • @ShedlulerLock.name made obligatory
  • @ShedlulerLock.lockForMillis renamed to lockAtMostFor
  • Adding plain JDBC LockProvider
  • Adding ZooKeepr LockProvider

About

Distributed lock for your scheduled tasks

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Java 99.0%
  • Kotlin 1.0%