Quartz

Quartz HelloWorld Example

In this example we shall talk about the Quartz Scheduler, a Java library for job scheduling, with various features, which is also open source. It is licensed under the Apache 2.0 license. The Quartz Scheduler can create simple or complex schedules for executing jobs in an application and also includes features like support for JTA transactions and clustering.

A Quartz Scheduler is commonly used for system maintenance needs, to drive the workflow of a procedure, or even to work as a reminder for other services in an application.

The basic interfaces of the quartz API are the ones below:

  • Scheduler: the basic component to schedule jobs.
  • Job: an interface represending the job to be scheduled. It is implemented by custom components that the Scheduler will execute.
  • JobDetail: used to define instances of Jobs.
  • Trigger: a component that defines the schedule upon which a given Job will be executed.
  • JobBuilder: used to build JobDetail instances, which define instances of Jobs.
  • TriggerBuilder: used to build Trigger instances.

Here, we will use two Trigger API classes of the library to create and schedule two different custom jobs. The first trigger is the SimpleTrigger class of the library and the second is the CronTrigger class.

Our preferred development environment is Eclipse. We are using Eclipse Juno (4.2) version, along with Maven Integration plugin version 3.1.0. You can download Eclipse from here and Maven Plugin for Eclipse from here. The installation of Maven plugin for Eclipse is out of the scope of this tutorial and will not be discussed. We are also using JDK 7_u_21.

Let’s begin,

1. Create a new Maven project

Go to File -> Project ->Maven -> Maven Project.

New Maven Project
New Maven Project – step 1

In the “Select project name and location” page of the wizard, make sure that “Create a simple project (skip archetype selection)” option is checked, hit “Next” to continue with default values.

Maven-Project-Name-Location
New Maven project- step 2

In the “Enter an artifact id” page of the wizard, you can define the name and main package of your project. We will set the “Group Id” variable to "com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise" and the “Artifact Id” variable to "quartzexample". The aforementioned selections compose the main project package as "com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample" and the project name as "quartzexample". Hit “Finish” to exit the wizard and to create your project.

quartz project
quartz project

The Maven project structure is shown below:

quartz project structure
quartz project structure

    It consists of the following folders:

  • /src/main/java folder, that contains source files for the dynamic content of the application,
  • /src/test/java folder contains all source files for unit tests,
  • /src/main/resources folder contains configurations files,
  • /target folder contains the compiled and packaged deliverables,
  • the pom.xml is the project object model (POM) file. The single file that contains all project related configuration.

2. Add quartz dependency

Add the quartz dependency in Maven’s pom.xml file, by editing it at the “Pom.xml” page of the POM editor, as shown below:
 
pom.xml:

<project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
	xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0 http://maven.apache.org/xsd/maven-4.0.0.xsd">
	<modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
	<groupId>com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise</groupId>
	<artifactId>quartzexample</artifactId>
	<version>0.0.1-SNAPSHOT</version>

	<dependencies>
		<dependency>
			<groupId>org.quartz-scheduler</groupId>
			<artifactId>quartz</artifactId>
			<version>2.2.1</version>
		</dependency>
	</dependencies>

</project>

As you can see Maven manages library dependencies declaratively. A local repository is created (by default under {user_home}/.m2 folder) and all required libraries are downloaded and placed there from public repositories. Furthermore intra – library dependencies are automatically resolved and manipulated.

3. Create the job

As referenced above, in order to create a job we must implement the Job interface. It overrides the execute(JobExecutionContext context) method. When the Job‘s trigger fires, this method is invoked by one of the Scheduler‘s worker threads. The JobExecutionContext object that is passed to this method provides the job instance with a handle to the scheduler that executed it, a handle to the trigger that triggered the execution and the job’s JobDetail object.

Below, there are two custom jobs, HelloJob.java and ByeJob.java, which will use the different trigger classes to be triggered:

HelloJob.java will be triggered by the SimpleTrigger.

HelloJob.java

package com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.job;

import org.quartz.Job;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionContext;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionException;

import com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.service.HelloService;

public class HelloJob implements Job{ 
	
	private HelloService hs = new HelloService();
	
	public void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException {
		hs.sayHello();
		} 
}

ByeJob.java will be triggered by the CronTrigger.

ByeJob.java

package com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.job;

import org.quartz.Job;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionContext;
import org.quartz.JobExecutionException;

import com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.service.ByeService;

public class ByeJob implements Job{ 
	
	private ByeService bs = new ByeService();
	
	public void execute(JobExecutionContext context) throws JobExecutionException {
		bs.sayGoodbye();
	} 
}

Below, there are two services, HelloService.java and ByeService.java that are called by the HelloJob.java and ByeJob.java respectivelly to type a message.

HelloService.java:

package com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.service;

import java.util.Date;

public class HelloService {

	public void sayHello() {
		System.out.println("Hello geeks! Time is " + new Date());
	}
}

ByeService.java

package com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.service;

import java.util.Date;

public class ByeService {

	public void sayGoodbye() {
		System.out.println("Bye geeks! Time is " + new Date());
	}
}

4. Create the Scheduler and the Trigger

MyApp.java class creates two JobDetail objects. They are actually used to create the job instances. They use the JobBuilder to instantiate each job:

  • newJob(Class<? extends Job> jobClass) method sets the java class representing the job they are building.
  • withIdentity(String name) method sets a JobKey with the given name and default group to identify the JobDetail.
  • build() method builds each job.

There are also two Trigger classes. They both use the TriggerBuilder.newTrigger() to create the trigger instances, and the withIdentity(String name, String group) method to set a triggerKey with the given name and a group to identify the Trigger.

Trigger1 is a SimpleTrigger, which is used to fire a Job at a given moment in time, and optionally repeated at a specified interval. It is set in the withSchedule(SimpleScheduleBuilder.repeatSecondlyForTotalCount(30)) method, which creates a SimpleScheduleBuilder set to repeat for 30 seconds with a 1 second interval.

Trigger2 is a CronTrigger, which is used to fire a Job at given moments in time, defined with Unix ‘cron-like’ schedule definitions. It uses the withSchedule(CronScheduleBuilder.cronSchedule("0/5 * * * * ?")) method, which creates a CronScheduleBuilder set to repeat every 5 seconds.

The build() method is used to build each Trigger.

Finally, two schedulers are also created, using new StdSchedulerFactory().getScheduler(). Each scheduler starts the threads that fire the Triggers with the start() method and adds the given JobDetail and associates the given Trigger with it, using scheduleJob(JobDetail jobDetail, Trigger trigger).

MyApp.java

package com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample;

import org.quartz.CronScheduleBuilder;
import org.quartz.JobBuilder;
import org.quartz.JobDetail;
import org.quartz.Scheduler;
import org.quartz.SimpleScheduleBuilder;
import org.quartz.Trigger;
import org.quartz.TriggerBuilder;
import org.quartz.impl.StdSchedulerFactory;

import com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.job.ByeJob;
import com.javacodegeeks.snippets.enterprise.quartzexample.job.HelloJob;

public class MyApp {

	public static void main(String[] args) {
		try {
			JobDetail job1 = JobBuilder.newJob(HelloJob.class).withIdentity("helloJob", "group1").build();

			Trigger trigger1 = TriggerBuilder.newTrigger().withIdentity("simpleTrigger", "group1")
					.withSchedule(SimpleScheduleBuilder.repeatSecondlyForTotalCount(30)).build();   
			Scheduler scheduler1 = new StdSchedulerFactory().getScheduler(); 
			scheduler1.start(); 
			scheduler1.scheduleJob(job1, trigger1); 
			
			JobDetail job2 = JobBuilder.newJob(ByeJob.class).withIdentity("byeJob", "group2").build();
			Trigger trigger2 = TriggerBuilder.newTrigger().withIdentity("cronTrigger", "group2")
					.withSchedule(CronScheduleBuilder.cronSchedule("0/5 * * * * ?")).build();
			Scheduler scheduler2 = new StdSchedulerFactory().getScheduler();
			scheduler2.start(); 
			scheduler2.scheduleJob(job2, trigger2); 
			}
		catch(Exception e){ 
			e.printStackTrace();
		}
	}

}

5. Run the application

If you run MyApp.java class, the result will be something like the output below:

As you can see, the HelloJob.java is executed every second for 30 seconds, whereas the ByeJob.java is executed every 5 seconds forever.

Output

Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:41 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:41 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:41 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:42 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:43 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:44 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:45 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:45 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:46 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:47 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:48 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:49 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:50 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:50 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:51 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:52 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:53 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:55 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:55 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:55 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:56 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:57 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:58 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:39:59 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:00 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:00 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:01 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:02 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:03 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:04 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:05 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:05 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:06 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:07 EET 2015
Hello Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:08 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:10 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:15 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:20 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:25 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:30 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:35 EET 2015
Bye Geeks !! Time is Tue Jan 20 23:40:40 EET 2015

6. Download the Eclipse Project

This was an example of how to schedule jobs with the quartz scheduler library.

Download
You can download the full source code of this example here: QuartzHelloWorldExample.zip

Theodora Fragkouli

Theodora has graduated from Computer Engineering and Informatics Department in the University of Patras. She also holds a Master degree in Economics from the National and Technical University of Athens. During her studies she has been involved with a large number of projects ranging from programming and software engineering to telecommunications, hardware design and analysis. She works as a junior Software Engineer in the telecommunications sector where she is mainly involved with projects based on Java and Big Data technologies.
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2 Comments
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Shashikanth
Shashikanth
5 years ago

hai,
can we write test cases for this code?
If Yes, can you explain how to write test cases?

Ken
Ken
4 years ago

Verry well presented. Thanks alot

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