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Akka Cookbook

You're reading from   Akka Cookbook Recipes for concurrent, fast, and reactive applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785288180
Length 414 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Vivek Mishra Vivek Mishra
Author Profile Icon Vivek Mishra
Vivek Mishra
Piyush Mishra Piyush Mishra
Author Profile Icon Piyush Mishra
Piyush Mishra
Héctor Veiga Ortiz Héctor Veiga Ortiz
Author Profile Icon Héctor Veiga Ortiz
Héctor Veiga Ortiz
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Diving into Akka FREE CHAPTER 2. Supervision and Monitoring 3. Routing Messages 4. Using Futures and Agents 5. Scheduling Actors and Other Utilities 6. Akka Persistence 7. Remoting and Akka Clustering 8. Akka Streams 9. Akka HTTP 10. Understanding Various Akka patterns 11. Microservices with Lagom

Creating child actors of a parent actor


In this recipe, we will learn how to create child actors of an actor. Akka follows a tree-like hierarchy to create actors and it is also the recommended practice.

By following such practices, we can handle failures in actors as the parent can take care of it. Lets see how to do it.

Getting ready

We need to import the Hello-Akka project in the IDE of our choice. The Akka actor dependency that we added in build.sbt is sufficient for most of the recipes in this chapter, so we will skip the Getting ready section in our further recipes.

How to do it...

  1. Create a file named ParentChild.scala in package com.packt.chapter2.
  2. Add the following imports to the top of the file:
        import akka.actor.{ActorSystem, Props, Actor} 
  1. Create messages for sending to actors.
        case object CreateChild 
        case class Greet(msg: String) 
  1. Define a child actor as follows:
        class ChildActor extends Actor { 
          def receive = { 
            case Greet(msg) =&gt...
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