Class HttpServer

  • Direct Known Subclasses:
    HttpsServer

    public abstract class HttpServer
    extends Object
    This class implements a simple HTTP server. A HttpServer is bound to an IP address and port number and listens for incoming TCP connections from clients on this address. The sub-class HttpsServer implements a server which handles HTTPS requests.

    One or more HttpHandler objects must be associated with a server in order to process requests. Each such HttpHandler is registered with a root URI path which represents the location of the application or service on this server. The mapping of a handler to a HttpServer is encapsulated by a HttpContext object. HttpContexts are created by calling createContext(String,HttpHandler). Any request for which no handler can be found is rejected with a 404 response. Management of threads can be done external to this object by providing a Executor object. If none is provided a default implementation is used.

    Mapping request URIs to HttpContext paths

    When a HTTP request is received, the appropriate HttpContext (and handler) is located by finding the context whose path is the longest matching prefix of the request URI's path. Paths are matched literally, which means that the strings are compared case sensitively, and with no conversion to or from any encoded forms. For example. Given a HttpServer with the following HttpContexts configured.

    description
    ContextContext path
    ctx1"/"
    ctx2"/apps/"
    ctx3"/apps/foo/"

    the following table shows some request URIs and which, if any context they would match with.

    description
    Request URIMatches context
    "http://foo.com/apps/foo/bar"ctx3
    "http://foo.com/apps/Foo/bar"no match, wrong case
    "http://foo.com/apps/app1"ctx2
    "http://foo.com/foo"ctx1

    Note about socket backlogs

    When binding to an address and port number, the application can also specify an integer backlog parameter. This represents the maximum number of incoming TCP connections which the system will queue internally. Connections are queued while they are waiting to be accepted by the HttpServer. When the limit is reached, further connections may be rejected (or possibly ignored) by the underlying TCP implementation. Setting the right backlog value is a compromise between efficient resource usage in the TCP layer (not setting it too high) and allowing adequate throughput of incoming requests (not setting it too low).

    Since:
    1.6
    • Constructor Detail

      • HttpServer

        protected HttpServer()
    • Method Detail

      • create

        public static HttpServer create​(InetSocketAddress addr,
                                        int backlog)
                                 throws IOException
        Create a HttpServer instance which will bind to the specified InetSocketAddress (IP address and port number) A maximum backlog can also be specified. This is the maximum number of queued incoming connections to allow on the listening socket. Queued TCP connections exceeding this limit may be rejected by the TCP implementation. The HttpServer is acquired from the currently installed HttpServerProvider
        Parameters:
        addr - the address to listen on, if null then bind() must be called to set the address
        backlog - the socket backlog. If this value is less than or equal to zero, then a system default value is used.
        Throws:
        BindException - if the server cannot bind to the requested address, or if the server is already bound.
        IOException
      • bind

        public abstract void bind​(InetSocketAddress addr,
                                  int backlog)
                           throws IOException
        Binds a currently unbound HttpServer to the given address and port number. A maximum backlog can also be specified. This is the maximum number of queued incoming connections to allow on the listening socket. Queued TCP connections exceeding this limit may be rejected by the TCP implementation.
        Parameters:
        addr - the address to listen on
        backlog - the socket backlog. If this value is less than or equal to zero, then a system default value is used.
        Throws:
        BindException - if the server cannot bind to the requested address or if the server is already bound.
        NullPointerException - if addr is null
        IOException
      • start

        public abstract void start()
        Starts this server in a new background thread. The background thread inherits the priority, thread group and context class loader of the caller.
      • setExecutor

        public abstract void setExecutor​(Executor executor)
        sets this server's Executor object. An Executor must be established before start() is called. All HTTP requests are handled in tasks given to the executor. If this method is not called (before start()) or if it is called with a null Executor, then a default implementation is used, which uses the thread which was created by the start() method.
        Parameters:
        executor - the Executor to set, or null for default implementation
        Throws:
        IllegalStateException - if the server is already started
      • getExecutor

        public abstract Executor getExecutor()
        returns this server's Executor object if one was specified with setExecutor(Executor), or null if none was specified.
        Returns:
        the Executor established for this server or null if not set.
      • stop

        public abstract void stop​(int delay)
        stops this server by closing the listening socket and disallowing any new exchanges from being processed. The method will then block until all current exchange handlers have completed or else when approximately delay seconds have elapsed (whichever happens sooner). Then, all open TCP connections are closed, the background thread created by start() exits, and the method returns. Once stopped, a HttpServer cannot be re-used.
        Parameters:
        delay - the maximum time in seconds to wait until exchanges have finished.
        Throws:
        IllegalArgumentException - if delay is less than zero.
      • createContext

        public abstract HttpContext createContext​(String path,
                                                  HttpHandler handler)
        Creates a HttpContext. A HttpContext represents a mapping from a URI path to a exchange handler on this HttpServer. Once created, all requests received by the server for the path will be handled by calling the given handler object. The context is identified by the path, and can later be removed from the server using this with the removeContext(String) method.

        The path specifies the root URI path for this context. The first character of path must be '/'.

        The class overview describes how incoming request URIs are mapped to HttpContext instances.

        Parameters:
        path - the root URI path to associate the context with
        handler - the handler to invoke for incoming requests.
        Throws:
        IllegalArgumentException - if path is invalid, or if a context already exists for this path
        NullPointerException - if either path, or handler are null
      • createContext

        public abstract HttpContext createContext​(String path)
        Creates a HttpContext without initially specifying a handler. The handler must later be specified using HttpContext.setHandler(HttpHandler). A HttpContext represents a mapping from a URI path to an exchange handler on this HttpServer. Once created, and when the handler has been set, all requests received by the server for the path will be handled by calling the handler object. The context is identified by the path, and can later be removed from the server using this with the removeContext(String) method.

        The path specifies the root URI path for this context. The first character of path must be '/'.

        The class overview describes how incoming request URIs are mapped to HttpContext instances.

        Parameters:
        path - the root URI path to associate the context with
        Throws:
        IllegalArgumentException - if path is invalid, or if a context already exists for this path
        NullPointerException - if path is null
      • removeContext

        public abstract void removeContext​(String path)
                                    throws IllegalArgumentException
        Removes the context identified by the given path from the server. Removing a context does not affect exchanges currently being processed but prevents new ones from being accepted.
        Parameters:
        path - the path of the handler to remove
        Throws:
        IllegalArgumentException - if no handler corresponding to this path exists.
        NullPointerException - if path is null
      • removeContext

        public abstract void removeContext​(HttpContext context)
        Removes the given context from the server. Removing a context does not affect exchanges currently being processed but prevents new ones from being accepted.
        Parameters:
        context - the context to remove
        Throws:
        NullPointerException - if context is null
      • getAddress

        public abstract InetSocketAddress getAddress()
        returns the address this server is listening on
        Returns:
        the address/port number the server is listening on