Library support for Kotlin coroutines with multiplatform support.
This is a companion version for Kotlin 1.3.0
release.
NOTE: 0.30.2
was the last release with Kotlin 1.2 and experimental coroutines.
See COMPATIBILITY.md for details of migration onto the stable Kotlin 1.3 coroutines.
GlobalScope.launch {
delay(1000)
println("Hello from Kotlin Coroutines!")
}
- common — common coroutines across all backends:
launch
andasync
coroutine builders;Job
andDeferred
light-weight future with cancellation support;Dispatchers
object withMain
dispatcher for Android/Swing/JavaFx, andDefault
dispatcher for background coroutines;delay
andyield
top-level suspending functions;Channel
andMutex
communication and synchronization primitives;coroutineScope
andsupervisorScope
scope builders;SupervisorJob
andCoroutineExceptionHandler
for supervision of coroutines hierarchies;select
expression support and more.
- core — Kotlin/JVM implementation of common coroutines with additional features:
Dispatchers.IO
dispatcher for blocking coroutines;Executor.asCoroutineDispatcher()
extension, custom thread pools, and more.
- js — Kotlin/JS implementation of common coroutines with
Promise
support. - native — Kotlin/Native implementation of common coroutines with
runBlocking
single-threaded event loop. - reactive — modules that provide builders and iteration support for various reactive streams libraries:
- Reactive Streams, RxJava 2.x, and Project Reactor.
- ui — modules that provide coroutine dispatchers for various single-threaded UI libraries:
- Android, JavaFX, and Swing.
- integration — modules that provide integration with various asynchronous callback- and future-based libraries.
- JDK8
CompletableFuture
, GuavaListenableFuture
, and Google Play ServicesTask
; - SLF4J MDC integration via
MDCContext
.
- JDK8
- Presentations and videos:
- Introduction to Coroutines (Roman Elizarov at KotlinConf 2017, slides)
- Deep dive into Coroutines (Roman Elizarov at KotlinConf 2017, slides)
- Kotlin Coroutines in Practice (Roman Elizarov at KotlinConf 2018, slides)
- Guides and manuals:
- Change log for kotlinx.coroutines
- Coroutines design document (KEEP)
- Full kotlinx.coroutines API reference
The libraries are published to kotlinx bintray repository, linked to JCenter and pushed to Maven Central.
Add dependencies (you can also add other modules that you need):
<dependency>
<groupId>org.jetbrains.kotlinx</groupId>
<artifactId>kotlinx-coroutines-core</artifactId>
<version>1.0.1</version>
</dependency>
And make sure that you use the latest Kotlin version:
<properties>
<kotlin.version>1.3.0</kotlin.version>
</properties>
Add dependencies (you can also add other modules that you need):
dependencies {
implementation 'org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-coroutines-core:1.0.1'
}
And make sure that you use the latest Kotlin version:
buildscript {
ext.kotlin_version = '1.3.0'
}
Make sure that you have either jcenter()
or mavenCentral()
in the list of repositories:
repository {
jcenter()
}
Add dependencies (you can also add other modules that you need):
dependencies {
implementation("org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-coroutines-core:1.0.1")
}
And make sure that you use the latest Kotlin version:
plugins {
kotlin("jvm") version "1.3.0"
}
Make sure that you have either jcenter()
or mavenCentral()
in the list of repositories.
Core modules of kotlinx.coroutines
are also available for
Kotlin/JS and Kotlin/Native. If you write
a common code that should get compiled or different platforms, add
org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-coroutines-core-common:<version>
to your common code dependencies.
Add kotlinx-coroutines-android
module as dependency when using kotlinx.coroutines
on Android:
implementation 'org.jetbrains.kotlinx:kotlinx-coroutines-android:1.0.1'
This gives you access to Android Dispatchers.Main coroutine dispatcher and also makes sure that in case of crashed coroutine with unhandled exception this exception is logged before crashing Android application, similarly to the way uncaught exceptions in threads are handled by Android runtime.
If you are using R8 or ProGuard add the options from coroutines.pro file to your rules.
This library is built with Gradle. To build it, use ./gradlew build
.
You can import this project into IDEA, but you have to delegate build actions
to Gradle (in Preferences -> Build, Execution, Deployment -> Build Tools -> Gradle -> Runner)
- JDK >= 1.8 referred to by the
JAVA_HOME
environment variable. - JDK 1.6 referred to by the
JDK_16
environment variable. It is okay to haveJDK_16
pointing toJAVA_HOME
for external contributions.
All development (both new features and bug fixes) is performed in develop
branch.
This way master
sources always contain sources of the most recently released version.
Please send PRs with bug fixes to develop
branch.
Fixes to documentation in markdown files are an exception to this rule. They are updated directly in master
.
The develop
branch is pushed to master
during release.