This documentation is for WSO2 ESB version 4.5.0. View documentation for the latest release.

Skip to end of metadata
Go to start of metadata

You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

Version 1 Next »

HTTP-NIO transport is a module of the Apache Synapse project. Apache Synapse as well as WSO2 ESB ship the HTTP-NIO transport as the default HTTP transport implementation. The two classes that implement the receiver and sender APIs are org.apache.synapse.transport.nhttp.HttpCoreNIOListener and org.apache.synapse.transport.nhttp.HttpCoreNIOSender respectively. These classes are available in the JAR file named synapse-nhttp-transport.jar. This non-blocking transport implementation is one of the secrets behind the blistering performance figures of Apache Synapse and WSO2 ESB. The transport implementation is based on Apache HTTP Core - NIO and uses a configurable pool of non-blocking worker threads to grab incoming HTTP messages off the wire.


HTTP Relay Transport

Message Relay in the previous versions was simply a message builder-formatter pair (See Message Relay). You engage it on a per content type basis. Once engaged for a given content type, messages with that content type are streamed through the ESB. It ran on same old NHTTP transport.

The Relay transport (New in version 4.0) is an entire HTTP transport implementation based on HTTP Core NIO. This can be used as an alternative to the NHTTP transport. It doesn't really care about the content type and simply streams all received messages through. It's as if the old Message Relay was engaged on all possible content types. The new transport also has a simpler and cleaner model for forwarding messages back and forth.

To enable this, uncomment the relevant HTTP transport entries in the axis2.xml. Comment out also the usual settings for NHTTP transport receiver and sender.


Transport Receiver Parameters:

Tip

In transport parameter tables, literals displayed in italic mode under the "Possible Values" column should be considered as fixed literal constant values. Those values can be directly put in transport configurations.

Parameter Name

Description

Requried

Possible Values

Default Value

port

The port on which this transport receiver should listen for incoming messages.

No

A positive integer less than 65535

8280

non-blocking

Setting this parameter to true is vital for reliable messaging and a number of other scenarios to work properly.

Yes

true

 

bind-address

The address of the interface to which the transport listener should bind.

No

A host name or an IP address

127.0.0.1

hostname

The host name of the server to be displayed in service EPRs, WSDLs etc. This parameter takes effect only when the WSDLEPRPrefix parameter is not set.

No

A host name or an IP address

localhost

WSDLEPRPrefix

A URL prefix which will be added to all service EPRs and EPRs in WSDLs etc.

No

A URL of the form <protocol>://<hostname>:<port>/

 

Transport Sender Parameters

Parameter Name

Description

Requried

Possible Values

Default Value

http.proxyHost

If the outgoing messages should be sent through an HTTP proxy server, use this parameter to specify the target proxy.

No

A host name or an IP address

 

http.proxyPort

The port through which the target proxy accepts HTTP traffic.

No

A positive integer less than 65535

 

http.nonProxyHosts

The list of hosts to which the HTTP traffic should be sent directly without going through the proxy.

No

A list of host names or IP addresses separated by '|'

 

non-blocking

Setting this parameter to true is vital for reliable messaging and a number of other scenarios to work properly.

Yes

true

 

See more information in Transports.

  • No labels