Table of contents
This section covers coroutine cancellation and timeouts.
In a long-running application you might need fine-grained control on your background coroutines. For example, a user might have closed the page that launched a coroutine and now its result is no longer needed and its operation can be cancelled. The launch function returns a Job that can be used to cancel the running coroutine:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val job = launch { repeat(1000) { i -> println("job: I'm sleeping $i ...") delay(500L) } } delay(1300L) // delay a bit println("main: I'm tired of waiting!") job.cancel() // cancels the job job.join() // waits for job's completion println("main: Now I can quit.") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
It produces the following output:
job: I'm sleeping 0 ... job: I'm sleeping 1 ... job: I'm sleeping 2 ... main: I'm tired of waiting! main: Now I can quit.
As soon as main invokes job.cancel
, we don't see any output from the other coroutine because it was cancelled. There is also a Job extension function cancelAndJoin that combines cancel and join invocations.
Coroutine cancellation is cooperative. A coroutine code has to cooperate to be cancellable. All the suspending functions in kotlinx.coroutines
are cancellable. They check for cancellation of coroutine and throw CancellationException when cancelled. However, if a coroutine is working in a computation and does not check for cancellation, then it cannot be cancelled, like the following example shows:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val startTime = System.currentTimeMillis() val job = launch(Dispatchers.Default) { var nextPrintTime = startTime var i = 0 while (i < 5) { // computation loop, just wastes CPU // print a message twice a second if (System.currentTimeMillis() >= nextPrintTime) { println("job: I'm sleeping ${i++} ...") nextPrintTime += 500L } } } delay(1300L) // delay a bit println("main: I'm tired of waiting!") job.cancelAndJoin() // cancels the job and waits for its completion println("main: Now I can quit.") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
Run it to see that it continues to print "I'm sleeping" even after cancellation until the job completes by itself after five iterations.
There are two approaches to making computation code cancellable. The first one is to periodically invoke a suspending function that checks for cancellation. There is a yield function that is a good choice for that purpose. The other one is to explicitly check the cancellation status. Let us try the latter approach.
Replace while (i < 5)
in the previous example with while (isActive)
and rerun it.
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val startTime = System.currentTimeMillis() val job = launch(Dispatchers.Default) { var nextPrintTime = startTime var i = 0 while (isActive) { // cancellable computation loop // print a message twice a second if (System.currentTimeMillis() >= nextPrintTime) { println("job: I'm sleeping ${i++} ...") nextPrintTime += 500L } } } delay(1300L) // delay a bit println("main: I'm tired of waiting!") job.cancelAndJoin() // cancels the job and waits for its completion println("main: Now I can quit.") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
As you can see, now this loop is cancelled. isActive is an extension property available inside the coroutine via the CoroutineScope object.
finally
Cancellable suspending functions throw CancellationException on cancellation which can be handled in the usual way. For example, try {...} finally {...}
expression and Kotlin use
function execute their finalization actions normally when a coroutine is cancelled:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val job = launch { try { repeat(1000) { i -> println("job: I'm sleeping $i ...") delay(500L) } } finally { println("job: I'm running finally") } } delay(1300L) // delay a bit println("main: I'm tired of waiting!") job.cancelAndJoin() // cancels the job and waits for its completion println("main: Now I can quit.") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
Both join and cancelAndJoin wait for all finalization actions to complete, so the example above produces the following output:
job: I'm sleeping 0 ... job: I'm sleeping 1 ... job: I'm sleeping 2 ... main: I'm tired of waiting! job: I'm running finally main: Now I can quit.
Any attempt to use a suspending function in the finally
block of the previous example causes CancellationException, because the coroutine running this code is cancelled. Usually, this is not a problem, since all well-behaving closing operations (closing a file, cancelling a job, or closing any kind of a communication channel) are usually non-blocking and do not involve any suspending functions. However, in the rare case when you need to suspend in a cancelled coroutine you can wrap the corresponding code in withContext(NonCancellable) {...}
using withContext function and NonCancellable context as the following example shows:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val job = launch { try { repeat(1000) { i -> println("job: I'm sleeping $i ...") delay(500L) } } finally { withContext(NonCancellable) { println("job: I'm running finally") delay(1000L) println("job: And I've just delayed for 1 sec because I'm non-cancellable") } } } delay(1300L) // delay a bit println("main: I'm tired of waiting!") job.cancelAndJoin() // cancels the job and waits for its completion println("main: Now I can quit.") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
The most obvious practical reason to cancel execution of a coroutine is because its execution time has exceeded some timeout. While you can manually track the reference to the corresponding Job and launch a separate coroutine to cancel the tracked one after delay, there is a ready to use withTimeout function that does it. Look at the following example:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart withTimeout(1300L) { repeat(1000) { i -> println("I'm sleeping $i ...") delay(500L) } } //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
It produces the following output:
I'm sleeping 0 ... I'm sleeping 1 ... I'm sleeping 2 ... Exception in thread "main" kotlinx.coroutines.TimeoutCancellationException: Timed out waiting for 1300 ms
The TimeoutCancellationException
that is thrown by withTimeout is a subclass of CancellationException. We have not seen its stack trace printed on the console before. That is because inside a cancelled coroutine CancellationException
is considered to be a normal reason for coroutine completion. However, in this example we have used withTimeout
right inside the main
function.
Since cancellation is just an exception, all resources are closed in the usual way. You can wrap the code with timeout in a try {...} catch (e: TimeoutCancellationException) {...}
block if you need to do some additional action specifically on any kind of timeout or use the withTimeoutOrNull function that is similar to withTimeout but returns null
on timeout instead of throwing an exception:
import kotlinx.coroutines.* fun main() = runBlocking { //sampleStart val result = withTimeoutOrNull(1300L) { repeat(1000) { i -> println("I'm sleeping $i ...") delay(500L) } "Done" // will get cancelled before it produces this result } println("Result is $result") //sampleEnd }
You can get full code here.
There is no longer an exception when running this code:
I'm sleeping 0 ... I'm sleeping 1 ... I'm sleeping 2 ... Result is null
© 2010–2019 JetBrains s.r.o.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0.
https://kotlinlang.org/docs/reference/coroutines/cancellation-and-timeouts.html