I'm experimenting with writing a Java Durable function and have been getting this strange error message when I try and kick off an orchestration using DurableClientContext.getClient.
The issue is transient.
I'm using Java 17.
All the durable function packages are up to date.
The error occurs running locally on windows as-well as on an Azure Function app in the cloud (linux).
The weird thing is the orchestrations all seem to run so I'd like to know if this is safe to ignore.
The error message looks like this:
[2024-02-20T07:21:36.332Z] Feb 20, 2024 6:21:36 PM io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper$ManagedChannelReference cleanQueue [2024-02-20T07:21:36.333Z] SEVERE: *~*~*~ Previous channel ManagedChannelImpl{logId=157, target=localhost:4001} was not shutdown properly!!! ~*~*~* [2024-02-20T07:21:36.333Z] Make sure to call shutdown()/shutdownNow() and wait until awaitTermination() returns true.
and it stems from this call where I am about to kick-off a new orchestration.
[2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] java.lang.RuntimeException: ManagedChannel allocation site [2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper$ManagedChannelReference.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:102) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:60) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.335Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:51) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.335Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelImplBuilder.build(ManagedChannelImplBuilder.java:655) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.336Z] at io.grpc.ForwardingChannelBuilder2.build(ForwardingChannelBuilder2.java:261) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.336Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.DurableTaskGrpcClient.<init>(DurableTaskGrpcClient.java:51) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.337Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.DurableTaskGrpcClientBuilder.build(DurableTaskGrpcClientBuilder.java:61) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.337Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.azurefunctions.DurableClientContext.getClient(DurableClientContext.java:59)
Hi,
I'm experimenting with writing a Java Durable function and have been getting this strange error message when I try and kick off an orchestration using DurableClientContext.getClient.
The issue is transient. I'm using Java 17. All the durable function packages are up to date. The error occurs running locally on windows as-well as on an Azure Function app in the cloud (linux).
The weird thing is the orchestrations all seem to run so I'd like to know if this is safe to ignore.
The error message looks like this:
[2024-02-20T07:21:36.332Z] Feb 20, 2024 6:21:36 PM io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper$ManagedChannelReference cleanQueue [2024-02-20T07:21:36.333Z] SEVERE: *~*~*~ Previous channel ManagedChannelImpl{logId=157, target=localhost:4001} was not shutdown properly!!! ~*~*~* [2024-02-20T07:21:36.333Z] Make sure to call shutdown()/shutdownNow() and wait until awaitTermination() returns true.
and it stems from this call where I am about to kick-off a new orchestration.
[2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] java.lang.RuntimeException: ManagedChannel allocation site [2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper$ManagedChannelReference.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:102) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.334Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:60) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.335Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.<init>(ManagedChannelOrphanWrapper.java:51) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.335Z] at io.grpc.internal.ManagedChannelImplBuilder.build(ManagedChannelImplBuilder.java:655) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.336Z] at io.grpc.ForwardingChannelBuilder2.build(ForwardingChannelBuilder2.java:261) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.336Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.DurableTaskGrpcClient.<init>(DurableTaskGrpcClient.java:51) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.337Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.DurableTaskGrpcClientBuilder.build(DurableTaskGrpcClientBuilder.java:61) [2024-02-20T07:21:36.337Z] at com.microsoft.durabletask.azurefunctions.DurableClientContext.getClient(DurableClientContext.java:59)
Is it safe to ignore? Should it be logged out?
Thanks,
Graeme