Spring Boot Resilience4j Patterns
Overview
Provides Resilience4j patterns (circuit breaker, retry, rate limiter, bulkhead, time limiter, fallback) for Spring Boot 3.x fault tolerance with configuration and testing workflows.
When to Use
- Implementing fault tolerance and preventing cascading failures
- Adding circuit breakers, retry logic, or rate limiting to service calls
- Handling transient failures with exponential backoff
- Protecting services from overload and resource exhaustion
- Combining multiple patterns for comprehensive resilience
Instructions
1. Setup and Dependencies
Add Resilience4j dependencies to your project. For Maven, add to pom.xml:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.github.resilience4j</groupId>
<artifactId>resilience4j-spring-boot3</artifactId>
<version>2.2.0</version> // Use latest stable version
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-aop</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-actuator</artifactId>
</dependency>
For Gradle, add to build.gradle:
implementation "io.github.resilience4j:resilience4j-spring-boot3:2.2.0"
implementation "org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-aop"
implementation "org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-actuator"
Enable AOP annotation processing with @EnableAspectJAutoProxy (auto-configured by Spring Boot).
2. Circuit Breaker Pattern
Apply @CircuitBreaker annotation to methods calling external services:
@Service
public class PaymentService {
private final RestTemplate restTemplate;
public PaymentService(RestTemplate restTemplate) {
this.restTemplate = restTemplate;
}
@CircuitBreaker(name = "paymentService", fallbackMethod = "paymentFallback")
public PaymentResponse processPayment(PaymentRequest request) {
return restTemplate.postForObject("http://payment-api/process",
request, PaymentResponse.class);
}
private PaymentResponse paymentFallback(PaymentRequest request, Exception ex) {
return PaymentResponse.builder()
.status("PENDING")
.message("Service temporarily unavailable")
.build();
}
}
Configure in application.yml:
resilience4j:
circuitbreaker:
configs:
default:
registerHealthIndicator: true
slidingWindowSize: 10
minimumNumberOfCalls: 5
failureRateThreshold: 50
waitDurationInOpenState: 10s
instances:
paymentService:
baseConfig: default
See @references/configuration-reference.md for complete circuit breaker configuration options.
3. Retry Pattern
Apply @Retry annotation for transient failure recovery:
@Service
public class ProductService {
private final RestTemplate restTemplate;
public ProductService(RestTemplate restTemplate) {
this.restTemplate = restTemplate;
}
@Retry(name = "productService", fallbackMethod = "getProductFallback")
public Product getProduct(Long productId) {
return restTemplate.getForObject(
"http://product-api/products/" + productId,
Product.class);
}
private Product getProductFallback(Long productId, Exception ex) {
return Product.builder()
.id(productId)
.name("Unavailable")
.available(false)
.build();
}
}
Configure retry in application.yml:
resilience4j:
retry:
configs:
default:
maxAttempts: 3
waitDuration: 500ms
enableExponentialBackoff: true
exponentialBackoffMultiplier: 2
instances:
productService:
baseConfig: default
maxAttempts: 5
See @references/configuration-reference.md for retry exception configuration.
4. Rate Limiter Pattern
Apply @RateLimiter to control request rates:
@Service
public class NotificationService {
private final EmailClient emailClient;
public NotificationService(EmailClient emailClient) {
this.emailClient = emailClient;
}
@RateLimiter(name = "notificationService",
fallbackMethod = "rateLimitFallback")
public void sendEmail(EmailRequest request) {
emailClient.send(request);
}
private void rateLimitFallback(EmailRequest request, Exception ex) {
throw new RateLimitExceededException(
"Too many requests. Please try again later.");
}
}
Configure in application.yml:
resilience4j:
ratelimiter:
configs:
default:
registerHealthIndicator: true
limitForPeriod: 10
limitRefreshPeriod: 1s
timeoutDuration: 500ms
instances:
notificationService:
baseConfig: default
limitForPeriod: 5
5. Bulkhead Pattern
Apply @Bulkhead to isolate resources. Use type = SEMAPHORE for synchronous methods:
@Service
public class ReportService {
private final ReportGenerator reportGenerator;
public ReportService(ReportGenerator reportGenerator) {
this.reportGenerator = reportGenerator;
}
@Bulkhead(name = "reportService", type = Bulkhead.Type.SEMAPHORE)
public Report generateReport(ReportRequest request) {
return reportGenerator.generate(request);
}
}
Use type = THREADPOOL for async/CompletableFuture methods:
@Service
public class AnalyticsService {
@Bulkhead(name = "analyticsService", type = Bulkhead.Type.THREADPOOL)
public CompletableFuture<AnalyticsResult> runAnalytics(
AnalyticsRequest request) {
return CompletableFuture.supplyAsync(() ->
analyticsEngine.analyze(request));
}
}
Configure in application.yml:
resilience4j:
bulkhead:
configs:
default:
maxConcurrentCalls: 10
maxWaitDuration: 100ms
instances:
reportService:
baseConfig: default
maxConcurrentCalls: 5
thread-pool-bulkhead:
instances:
analyticsService:
maxThreadPoolSize: 8
6. Time Limiter Pattern
Apply @TimeLimiter to async methods to enforce timeout boundaries:
@Service
public class SearchService {
@TimeLimiter(name = "searchService", fallbackMethod = "searchFallback")
public CompletableFuture<SearchResults> search(SearchQuery query) {
return CompletableFuture.supplyAsync(() ->
searchEngine.executeSearch(query));
}
private CompletableFuture<SearchResults> searchFallback(
SearchQuery query, Exception ex) {
return CompletableFuture.completedFuture(
SearchResults.empty("Search timed out"));
}
}
Configure in application.yml:
resilience4j:
timelimiter:
configs:
default:
timeoutDuration: 2s
cancelRunningFuture: true
instances:
searchService:
baseConfig: default
timeoutDuration: 3s
7. Combining Multiple Patterns
Stack multiple patterns on a single method for comprehensive fault tolerance:
@Service
public class OrderService {
@CircuitBreaker(name = "orderService")
@Retry(name = "orderService")
@RateLimiter(name = "orderService")
@Bulkhead(name = "orderService")
public Order createOrder(OrderRequest request) {
return orderClient.createOrder(request);
}
}
Execution order: Retry → CircuitBreaker → RateLimiter → Bulkhead → Method
All patterns should reference the same named configuration instance for consistency.
8. Exception Handling and Monitoring
Create a global exception handler using @RestControllerAdvice:
@RestControllerAdvice
public class ResilienceExceptionHandler {
@ExceptionHandler(CallNotPermittedException.class)
@ResponseStatus(HttpStatus.SERVICE_UNAVAILABLE)
public ErrorResponse handleCircuitOpen(CallNotPermittedException