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Mastering Akka

You're reading from   Mastering Akka A hands-on guide to build application using the Akka framework

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786465023
Length 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Christian Baxter Christian Baxter
Author Profile Icon Christian Baxter
Christian Baxter
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Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Building a Better Reactive App FREE CHAPTER 2. Simplifying Concurrent Programming with Actors 3. Curing Anemic Models with Domain-Driven Design 4. Making History with Event Sourcing 5. Separating Concerns with CQRS 6. Going with the Flow with Akka Streams 7. REST Easy with Akka HTTP 8. Scaling Out with Akka Remoting/Clustering 9. Managing Deployments with ConductR 10. Troubleshooting and Best Practices

A word on dispatchers in Akka


Throughout some of the previous sections, I've mentioned the dispatcher within Akka. This is an extremely important component within Akka's actor system. In Akka's docs, they refer to it as the engine that makes the actor system tick, which I think is a very apt description. Since this component is so important, I want to touch on what it does a bit and also describe the different types and why you might use them.

Dispatchers and executors

The dispatcher in your actor system is responsible for assigning a thread to an actor instance so that it can do work. When an actor instance has no messages to process, it just sits there idle, not taking up any threads. This is why it's okay to have so many actor instances within your system at once (as long as they are not all trying to do work all the time). They don't take any resources, aside from a small amount of heap memory, unless they are processing a message.

Akka is an event-driven system. Work is only done in response...

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