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Scala Reactive Programming

You're reading from   Scala Reactive Programming Build scalable, functional reactive microservices with Akka, Play, and Lagom

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787288645
Length 552 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rambabu Posa Rambabu Posa
Author Profile Icon Rambabu Posa
Rambabu Posa
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Reactive and Functional Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Functional Scala 3. Asynchronous Programming with Scala 4. Building Reactive Applications with Akka 5. Adding Reactiveness with RxScala 6. Extending Applications with Play 7. Working with Reactive Streams 8. Integrating Akka Streams to Play Application 9. Reactive Microservices with Lagom 10. Testing Reactive Microservices 11. Managing Microservices in ConductR 12. Reactive Design Patterns and Best Practices 13. Scala Plugin for IntelliJ IDEA 14. Installing Robomongo 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Backpressure

In this section, we will discuss backpressure, one of the most important key concepts of Akka Streams supported features, with some simple and useful diagrams.

The main goal of the Akka Streams API is to support asynchronous streaming data with non-blocking backpressure, so as to support better performance and ease of maintainability for fast data-processing applications. It's therefore very important to understand what backpressure is, how it works, and why we need it in Akka Streams.

In Akka Streams, backpressure is a technique for flow-control between a Producer and a Consumer. It gives a way for the Consumer to inform the Producer about the number of data elements or messages it can accept so that the Producer sends only that number of data elements to the Consumer to avoid failures such as OutOfMemory issues.

Before moving to Akka-style backpressure, we...

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