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From version 0.12 to 1.0

We've made multiple improvements to the API, and to the configuration, for Java tracker v1. See the Github changelog for full details. See below for a guide to the changes.

API improvements (breaking changes)

Snowplow interface, Configuration classes, and deprecated Builders

This is a big change. We wanted an intuitive API going into v1, so we've added a Snowplow interface to easily create and manage trackers. We've added Configuration classes - TrackerConfiguration, NetworkConfiguration, EmitterConfiguration and SubjectConfiguration - and several new constructors for instantiating the tracker or tracker components. As part of this work, we've deprecated the builders for the Tracker, BatchEmitter, HttpClientAdapter and Subject classes.

Instantiating a tracker with default configuration only requires three strings. Use configuration objects to instantiate custom trackers.

Example: creating a tracker with default configuration

Old API:

BatchEmitter emitter = BatchEmitter.builder()
.url("http://collectorEndpoint")
.build();
Tracker tracker = new Tracker
.TrackerBuilder(emitter, "trackerNamespace", "appId")
.build();

New v1 API:

Tracker tracker = Snowplow.createTracker("trackerNamespace", "appId", "http://collectorEndpoint");

Example: creating a tracker with custom configuration

Old API:

BatchEmitter emitter = BatchEmitter.builder()
.url("http://collectorEndpoint")
.batchSize(10)
.threadCount(1)
.build();
Tracker tracker = new Tracker
.TrackerBuilder(emitter, "trackerNamespace", "appId")
.platform(DevicePlatform.Desktop)
.base64(false)
.build();

Version 1.0.0:

TrackerConfiguration trackerConfig = new TrackerConfiguration("trackerNamespace", "appId")
.platform(DevicePlatform.Desktop)
.base64Encoded(false);
NetworkConfiguration networkConfig = new NetworkConfiguration("http://collectorEndpoint");
EmitterConfiguration emitterConfig = new EmitterConfiguration()
.batchSize(10)
.threadCount(1);

Tracker tracker = Snowplow.createTracker(trackerConfig, networkConfig, emitterConfig);

In the above examples, the Tracker is saved as a separate variable. That's not actually necessary with the new Snowplow class! Access stored Tracker objects by their namespace, or use the default tracker:

New v1 API:

Snowplow.createTracker("trackerNamespace", "appId", "http://collectorEndpoint");
Snowplow.getDefaultTracker().track(event);

SelfDescribing events

The Unstructured class has been renamed to SelfDescribing, bringing consistency with other Snowplow trackers. These are the custom events, based on self-describing (self-referential) JSONs, that allow you to create the perfect data for your business needs.

Example: replacing Unstructured with SelfDescribing

Old API:

Unstructured event = Unstructured.builder()
.eventData(dataAsSelfDescribingJson)
.build();

New v1 API:

SelfDescribing event = SelfDescribing.builder()
.eventData(dataAsSelfDescribingJson)
.build();

Custom retry logic

The event sending retry logic has been refined. By default, the tracker will now not retry requests with the HTTP status codes 400, 401, 403, 410, or 422. This can be configured using the Emitter builder option customRetryForStatusCodes(), which replaces fatalResponseCodes(). Note that 2xx status codes will always be deemed successful, and will never be retried.

customRetryForStatusCodes() takes a map of integer codes and booleans - true for "yes, this should be retried" and false for "no, this should not be retried".

Example: setting custom retry rules

Old API:

List<Integer> noRetry = new ArrayList<>();
noRetry.add(500);

BatchEmitter emitter = BatchEmitter.builder()
.url("https://collector")
.fatalResponseCodes(noRetry)
.build();

New v1 API:

Map<Integer, Boolean> customRetry = new HashMap<>();
customRetry.put(500, false);

BatchEmitter emitter = new BatchEmitter(
new NetworkConfiguration("https://collector"),
new EmitterConfiguration().customRetryForStatusCodes(customRetry));

New method for Emitter interface

The BatchEmitter method close() has been added to the Emitter interface. This method stops the executor service and closes the threads, and may be required to cleanly exit your application. If you are using a custom Emitter, you'll need to implement the method (@Override). The Tracker class now has a close() method too, which calls Emitter.close().

Updated method for EventStore interface

The EventStore method cleanupAfterSendingAttempt() now returns List<TrackerPayload>, rather than void. This is to help with the new EmitterCallback implementation (see below). If you are using a custom EventStore, you'll need to update the method signature.

Default configuration changes

The default bufferCapacity, the maximum number of events that can be buffered in memory, is now 10 000 (down from Integer.MAX_VALUE).

By default, the Java tracker now does not retry sending events if the request received the HTTP status code 400 Bad Request, 401 Unauthorised, 403 Forbidden, 410 Gone, or 422 Unprocessable Entity.

When requests get a "unsuccessful" response status code - anything other than 2xx - a backoff wait time is added before the next request is processed. The wait time increases exponentially with every failure. There is now a maximum wait time of 10 minutes.

Removed features

The SimpleEmitter class, deprecated in v0.12, has been removed. The default Emitter is the BatchEmitter, but you can also create your own Emitter using the provided interface. The BatchEmitter sends events in batches via POST. Deleting SimpleEmitter allowed us to tidy up behind-the-scenes, merging AbstractEmitter and BatchEmitter into one class.

We also removed the Guava dependency.

New features

New and improved callbacks! You can now add custom callbacks using the EmitterCallback interface, for example to create tracker metrics. The EmitterCallback will be called when events are successfully sent, and also in response to several different failures. It's described fully here.

You can now add a CookieJar to persist the third-party event collector sp cookie across requests. This allows all events to have the same network_userid.

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