@Test public void testMergeCovariance4() { Observable<Movie> o1 = Observable.create( new OnSubscribeFunc<Movie>() { @Override public Subscription onSubscribe(Observer<? super Movie> o) { o.onNext(new HorrorMovie()); o.onNext(new Movie()); // o.onNext(new Media()); // correctly doesn't compile o.onCompleted(); return Subscriptions.empty(); } }); Observable<Media> o2 = Observable.from(new Media(), new HorrorMovie()); List<Media> values = Observable.merge(o1, o2).toList().toBlockingObservable().single(); assertTrue(values.get(0) instanceof HorrorMovie); assertTrue(values.get(1) instanceof Movie); assertTrue(values.get(2) instanceof Media); assertTrue(values.get(3) instanceof HorrorMovie); }
@Test public void testMergeSync() { int NUM = (int) (RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 4.1); AtomicInteger c1 = new AtomicInteger(); AtomicInteger c2 = new AtomicInteger(); TestSubscriber<Integer> ts = new TestSubscriber<Integer>(); Observable<Integer> merged = Observable.merge(incrementingIntegers(c1), incrementingIntegers(c2)); merged.take(NUM).subscribe(ts); ts.awaitTerminalEvent(); ts.assertNoErrors(); System.out.println("Expected: " + NUM + " got: " + ts.getOnNextEvents().size()); System.out.println( "testMergeSync => Received: " + ts.getOnNextEvents().size() + " Emitted: " + c1.get() + " / " + c2.get()); assertEquals(NUM, ts.getOnNextEvents().size()); // either one can starve the other, but neither should be capable of doing more than 5 batches // (taking 4.1) // TODO is it possible to make this deterministic rather than one possibly starving the other? // benjchristensen => In general I'd say it's not worth trying to make it so, as "fair" // algoritms generally take a performance hit assertTrue(c1.get() < RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 5); assertTrue(c2.get() < RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 5); }
@Test public void testMergeAsyncThenObserveOn() { int NUM = (int) (RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 4.1); AtomicInteger c1 = new AtomicInteger(); AtomicInteger c2 = new AtomicInteger(); TestSubscriber<Integer> ts = new TestSubscriber<Integer>(); Observable<Integer> merged = Observable.merge( incrementingIntegers(c1).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation()), incrementingIntegers(c2).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation())); merged.observeOn(Schedulers.newThread()).take(NUM).subscribe(ts); ts.awaitTerminalEvent(); ts.assertNoErrors(); System.out.println( "testMergeAsyncThenObserveOn => Received: " + ts.getOnNextEvents().size() + " Emitted: " + c1.get() + " / " + c2.get()); assertEquals(NUM, ts.getOnNextEvents().size()); // either one can starve the other, but neither should be capable of doing more than 5 batches // (taking 4.1) // TODO is it possible to make this deterministic rather than one possibly starving the other? // benjchristensen => In general I'd say it's not worth trying to make it so, as "fair" // algoritms generally take a performance hit // akarnokd => run this in a loop over 10k times and never saw values get as high as 7*SIZE, but // since observeOn delays the unsubscription non-deterministically, the test will remain // unreliable assertTrue(c1.get() < RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 7); assertTrue(c2.get() < RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 7); }
@Test public void testMergeAsyncThenObserveOnLoop() { for (int i = 0; i < 500; i++) { if (i % 10 == 0) { System.out.println("testMergeAsyncThenObserveOnLoop >> " + i); } // Verify there is no MissingBackpressureException int NUM = (int) (RxRingBuffer.SIZE * 4.1); AtomicInteger c1 = new AtomicInteger(); AtomicInteger c2 = new AtomicInteger(); TestSubscriber<Integer> ts = new TestSubscriber<Integer>(); Observable<Integer> merged = Observable.merge( incrementingIntegers(c1).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation()), incrementingIntegers(c2).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation())); merged.observeOn(Schedulers.io()).take(NUM).subscribe(ts); ts.awaitTerminalEvent(); ts.assertNoErrors(); System.out.println( "testMergeAsyncThenObserveOn => Received: " + ts.getOnNextEvents().size() + " Emitted: " + c1.get() + " / " + c2.get()); assertEquals(NUM, ts.getOnNextEvents().size()); } }
@Test public void testMergeAsync() { int NUM = (int) (Observable.bufferSize() * 4.1); AtomicInteger c1 = new AtomicInteger(); AtomicInteger c2 = new AtomicInteger(); TestSubscriber<Integer> ts = new TestSubscriber<>(); Observable<Integer> merged = Observable.merge( incrementingIntegers(c1).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation()), incrementingIntegers(c2).subscribeOn(Schedulers.computation())); merged.take(NUM).subscribe(ts); ts.awaitTerminalEvent(); ts.assertNoErrors(); System.out.println( "testMergeAsync => Received: " + ts.valueCount() + " Emitted: " + c1.get() + " / " + c2.get()); assertEquals(NUM, ts.valueCount()); // either one can starve the other, but neither should be capable of doing more than 5 batches // (taking 4.1) // TODO is it possible to make this deterministic rather than one possibly starving the other? // benjchristensen => In general I'd say it's not worth trying to make it so, as "fair" // algoritms generally take a performance hit int max = Observable.bufferSize() * 7; assertTrue("" + c1.get() + " >= " + max, c1.get() < max); assertTrue("" + c2.get() + " >= " + max, c2.get() < max); }
@Test public void testMergeCovariance2() { Observable<Media> o1 = Observable.from(new HorrorMovie(), new Movie(), new Media()); Observable<Media> o2 = Observable.from(new Media(), new HorrorMovie()); Observable<Observable<Media>> os = Observable.from(o1, o2); List<Media> values = Observable.merge(os).toList().toBlockingObservable().single(); }
@Test public void testMergeCovariance3() { Observable<Movie> o1 = Observable.from(new HorrorMovie(), new Movie()); Observable<Media> o2 = Observable.from(new Media(), new HorrorMovie()); List<Media> values = Observable.merge(o1, o2).toList().toBlockingObservable().single(); assertTrue(values.get(0) instanceof HorrorMovie); assertTrue(values.get(1) instanceof Movie); assertTrue(values.get(2) instanceof Media); assertTrue(values.get(3) instanceof HorrorMovie); }
/** This won't compile if super/extends isn't done correctly on generics */ @Test public void testCovarianceOfMerge() { Observable<HorrorMovie> horrors = Observable.from(new HorrorMovie()); Observable<Observable<HorrorMovie>> metaHorrors = Observable.just(horrors); Observable.<Media>merge(metaHorrors); }