问题
Hi,
I'm using Scala 2.10 with the new futures library and I'm trying to write some code to test an infinite loop. I use a scala.concurrent.Future to run the code with the loop in a separate thread. I would then like to wait a little while  to do some testing and then kill off the separate thread/future. I have looked at Await.result but that doesn't actually kill the future. Is there any way to timeout or kill the new Scala 2.10 futures?
I would prefer not having to add external dependencies such as Akka just for this simple part.
回答1:
Do not try it at home.
import scala.concurrent._
import scala.concurrent.duration._
class MyCustomExecutionContext extends AnyRef with ExecutionContext {
  import ExecutionContext.Implicits.global
  @volatile var lastThread: Option[Thread] = None
  override def execute(runnable: Runnable): Unit = {
    ExecutionContext.Implicits.global.execute(new Runnable() {
      override def run() {
        lastThread = Some(Thread.currentThread)
        runnable.run()
      }
    })
  }
  override def reportFailure(t: Throwable): Unit = ???
}    
implicit val exec = new MyCustomExecutionContext()
val f = future[Int]{ do{}while(true); 1 }
try {
  Await.result(f, 10 seconds) // 100% cpu here
} catch {
  case e: TimeoutException => 
    println("Stopping...")
    exec.lastThread.getOrElse(throw new RuntimeException("Not started"))
      .stop() // 0% cpu here
}
回答2:
No - you will have to add a flag that your loop checks.  If the flag is set, stop the loop.  Make sure the flag is at least volatile.
See Java Concurrency in Practice, p 135-137.
回答3:
I had a similar problem and wrote the following nonblocking future op:
class TerminationToken(var isTerminated: Boolean)
object TerminationToken { def apply() = new TerminationToken(false) }
 implicit class FutureOps[T](future: Future[Option[T]]) {
 def terminate(timeout: FiniteDuration, token: TerminationToken): Future[Option[T]] = {
   val timeoutFuture = after[Option[T]](timeout, using = context.system.scheduler) {
     Future[Option[T]] { token.isTerminated = true; None } }
          Future.firstCompletedOf[Option[T]](Seq (future recover { case _ => None }, timeoutFuture))
     }
   }
Then just create a future that returns an option, and use .terminate(timeout, token) on it
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14449862/kill-or-timeout-a-future-in-scala-2-10