Connection management
Connection persistence
The process of establishing a connection from one host to another is quite complex and
involves multiple packet exchanges between two endpoints, which can be quite time
consuming. The overhead of connection handshaking can be significant, especially for
small HTTP messages. One can achieve a much higher data throughput if open connections
can be re-used to execute multiple requests.
HTTP/1.1 states that HTTP connections can be re-used for multiple requests per
default. HTTP/1.0 compliant endpoints can also use a mechanism to explicitly
communicate their preference to keep connection alive and use it for multiple requests.
HTTP agents can also keep idle connections alive for a certain period time in case a
connection to the same target host is needed for subsequent requests. The ability to
keep connections alive is usually refered to as connection persistence. HttpClient fully
supports connection persistence.
HTTP connection routing
HttpClient is capable of establishing connections to the target host either directly
or via a route that may involve multiple intermediate connections - also referred to as
hops. HttpClient differentiates connections of a route into plain, tunneled and layered.
The use of multiple intermediate proxies to tunnel connections to the target host is
referred to as proxy chaining.
Plain routes are established by connecting to the target or the first and only proxy.
Tunnelled routes are established by connecting to the first and tunnelling through a
chain of proxies to the target. Routes without a proxy cannot be tunnelled. Layered
routes are established by layering a protocol over an existing connection. Protocols can
only be layered over a tunnel to the target, or over a direct connection without
proxies.
Route computation
The RouteInfo interface represents information
about a definitive route to a target host involving one or more intermediate steps
or hops. HttpRoute is a concrete implementation of
the RouteInfo, which cannot be changed (is
immutable). HttpTracker is a mutable
RouteInfo implementation used internally by
HttpClient to track the remaining hops to the ultimate route target.
HttpTracker can be updated after a successful execution
of the next hop towards the route target. HttpRouteDirector
is a helper class that can be used to compute the next step in a route. This class
is used internally by HttpClient.
HttpRoutePlanner is an interface representing a
strategy to compute a complete route to a given target based on the execution
context. HttpClient ships with two default
HttpRoutePlanner implementations.
SystemDefaultRoutePlanner is based on
java.net.ProxySelector. By default, it will pick up the
proxy settings of the JVM, either from system properties or from the browser running
the application. The DefaultProxyRoutePlanner implementation
does not make use of any Java system properties, nor any system or browser proxy
settings. It always computes routes via the same default proxy.
Secure HTTP connections
HTTP connections can be considered secure if information transmitted between two
connection endpoints cannot be read or tampered with by an unauthorized third party.
The SSL/TLS protocol is the most widely used technique to ensure HTTP transport
security. However, other encryption techniques could be employed as well. Usually,
HTTP transport is layered over the SSL/TLS encrypted connection.
HTTP connection managers
Managed connections and connection managers
HTTP connections are complex, stateful, thread-unsafe objects which need to be
properly managed to function correctly. HTTP connections can only be used by one
execution thread at a time. HttpClient employs a special entity to manage access to
HTTP connections called HTTP connection manager and represented by the
HttpClientConnectionManager interface. The purpose of
an HTTP connection manager is to serve as a factory for new HTTP connections,
to manage life cycle of persistent connections and to synchronize access to
persistent connections making sure that only one thread can have access
to a connection at a time. Internally HTTP connection managers work with instances
of ManagedHttpClientConnection acting as a proxy
for a real connection that manages connection state and controls execution
of I/O operations. If a managed connection is released or get explicitly closed
by its consumer the underlying connection gets detached from its proxy and is
returned back to the manager. Even though the service consumer still holds
a reference to the proxy instance, it is no longer able to execute any
I/O operations or change the state of the real connection either intentionally
or unintentionally.
This is an example of acquiring a connection from a connection manager:
The connection request can be terminated prematurely by calling
ConnectionRequest#cancel() if necessary. This will unblock
the thread blocked in the ConnectionRequest#get()
method.
Simple connection manager
BasicHttpClientConnectionManager is a simple connection
manager that maintains only one connection at a time. Even though this class
is thread-safe it ought to be used by one execution thread only.
BasicHttpClientConnectionManager will make an effort to reuse
the connection for subsequent requests with the same route. It will, however, close
the existing connection and re-open it for the given route, if the route of the
persistent connection does not match that of the connection request.
If the connection has been already been allocated, then
java.lang.IllegalStateException is thrown.
This connection manager implementation should be used inside an EJB
container.
Pooling connection manager
PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager is a more complex
implementation that manages a pool of client connections and is able to service
connection requests from multiple execution threads. Connections are pooled on a per
route basis. A request for a route for which the manager already has a persistent
connection available in the pool will be serviced by leasing a connection from
the pool rather than creating a brand new connection.
PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager maintains a maximum
limit of connections on a per route basis and in total. Per default this
implementation will create no more than 2 concurrent connections per given route
and no more 20 connections in total. For many real-world applications these limits
may prove too constraining, especially if they use HTTP as a transport protocol for
their services.
This example shows how the connection pool parameters can be adjusted:
Connection manager shutdown
When an HttpClient instance is no longer needed and is about to go out of scope it
is important to shut down its connection manager to ensure that all connections kept
alive by the manager get closed and system resources allocated by those connections
are released.
httpClient.close();
]]>
Multithreaded request execution
When equipped with a pooling connection manager such as
PoolingClientConnectionManager, HttpClient can be used to execute multiple
requests simultaneously using multiple threads of execution.
The PoolingClientConnectionManager will allocate connections
based on its configuration. If all connections for a given route have already been
leased, a request for a connection will block until a connection is released back to
the pool. One can ensure the connection manager does not block indefinitely in the
connection request operation by setting 'http.conn-manager.timeout'
to a positive value. If the connection request cannot be serviced within the given time
period ConnectionPoolTimeoutException will be thrown.
While HttpClient instances are thread safe and can be
shared between multiple threads of execution, it is highly recommended that each
thread maintains its own dedicated instance of HttpContext
.
Connection eviction policy
One of the major shortcomings of the classic blocking I/O model is that the network
socket can react to I/O events only when blocked in an I/O operation. When a connection
is released back to the manager, it can be kept alive however it is unable to monitor
the status of the socket and react to any I/O events. If the connection gets closed on
the server side, the client side connection is unable to detect the change in the
connection state (and react appropriately by closing the socket on its end).
HttpClient tries to mitigate the problem by testing whether the connection is 'stale',
that is no longer valid because it was closed on the server side, prior to using the
connection for executing an HTTP request. The stale connection check is not 100%
reliable. The only feasible solution that does not involve a one thread per socket
model for idle connections is a dedicated monitor thread used to evict connections
that are considered expired due to a long period of inactivity. The monitor thread can
periodically call
ClientConnectionManager#closeExpiredConnections() method to
close all expired connections and evict closed connections from the pool. It can also
optionally call ClientConnectionManager#closeIdleConnections()
method to close all connections that have been idle over a given period of time.
Connection keep alive strategy
The HTTP specification does not specify how long a persistent connection may be and
should be kept alive. Some HTTP servers use a non-standard Keep-Alive
header to communicate to the client the period of time in seconds they intend to keep
the connection alive on the server side. HttpClient makes use of this information if
available. If the Keep-Alive header is not present in the response,
HttpClient assumes the connection can be kept alive indefinitely. However, many HTTP
servers in general use are configured to drop persistent connections after a certain period
of inactivity in order to conserve system resources, quite often without informing the
client. In case the default strategy turns out to be too optimistic, one may want to
provide a custom keep-alive strategy.
Connection socket factories
HTTP connections make use of a java.net.Socket object
internally to handle transmission of data across the wire. However they rely on
the ConnectionSocketFactory interface to create,
initialize and connect sockets. This enables the users of HttpClient to provide
application specific socket initialization code at runtime.
PlainConnectionSocketFactory is the default factory for creating and
initializing plain (unencrypted) sockets.
The process of creating a socket and that of connecting it to a host are decoupled, so
that the socket could be closed while being blocked in the connect operation.
Secure socket layering
LayeredConnectionSocketFactory is an extension of
the ConnectionSocketFactory interface. Layered socket
factories are capable of creating sockets layered over an existing plain socket.
Socket layering is used primarily for creating secure sockets through proxies.
HttpClient ships with SSLSocketFactory that implements
SSL/TLS layering. Please note HttpClient does not use any custom encryption
functionality. It is fully reliant on standard Java Cryptography (JCE) and Secure
Sockets (JSEE) extensions.
Integration with connection manager
Custom connection socket factories can be associated with a particular
protocol scheme as as HTTP or HTTPS and then used to create a custom connection
manager.
LayeredConnectionSocketFactory sslsf = <...>
Registry r = RegistryBuilder.create()
.register("http", plainsf)
.register("https", sslsf)
.build();
HttpClientConnectionManager cm = new PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager(r);
HttpClients.custom()
.setConnectionManager(cm)
.build();
]]>
SSL/TLS customization
HttpClient makes use of SSLConnectionSocketFactory
to create SSL connections. SSLConnectionSocketFactory allows
for a high degree of customization. It can take an instance of
javax.net.ssl.SSLContext as a parameter and use
it to create custom configured SSL connections.
SSLContext sslContext = SSLContexts.custom()
.useTLS()
.loadTrustMaterial(myTrustStore)
.build();
SSLConnectionSocketFactory sslsf = new SSLConnectionSocketFactory(sslContext);
]]>
Customization of SSLConnectionSocketFactory implies
a certain degree of familiarity with the concepts of the SSL/TLS protocol,
a detailed explanation of which is out of scope for this document. Please refer
to the
Java™ Secure Socket Extension (JSSE) Reference Guide for a detailed description of
javax.net.ssl.SSLContext and related
tools.
Hostname verification
In addition to the trust verification and the client authentication performed on
the SSL/TLS protocol level, HttpClient can optionally verify whether the target
hostname matches the names stored inside the server's X.509 certificate, once the
connection has been established. This verification can provide additional guarantees
of authenticity of the server trust material.
The javax.net.ssl.HostnameVerifier interface
represents a strategy for hostname verification. HttpClient ships with two
javax.net.ssl.HostnameVerifier implementations.
Important: hostname verification should not be confused with
SSL trust verification.
DefaultHostnameVerifier:
The default implementation used by HttpClient is expected to be
compliant with RFC 2818. The hostname must match any of alternative
names specified by the certificate, or in case no alternative
names are given the most specific CN of the certificate subject. A
wildcard can occur in the CN, and in any of the subject-alts.
NoopHostnameVerifier:
This hostname verifier essentially turns hostname verification off.
It accepts any SSL session as valid and matching the target host.
Per default HttpClient uses the DefaultHostnameVerifier
implementation. One can specify a different hostname verifier implementation if
desired
As of version 4.4 HttpClient uses the public suffix list kindly maintained
by Mozilla Foundation to make sure that wildcards in SSL certificates cannot be
misused to apply to multiple domains with a common top-level domain. HttpClient
ships with a copy of the list retrieved at the time of the release. The latest
revision of the list can found at
https://publicsuffix.org/list/. It is highly adviseable to make a local
copy of the list and download the list no more than once per day from its original
location.
One can disable verification against the public suffic list by using
null
matcher.
HttpClient proxy configuration
Even though HttpClient is aware of complex routing schemes and proxy chaining, it
supports only simple direct or one hop proxy connections out of the box.
The simplest way to tell HttpClient to connect to the target host via a proxy is by
setting the default proxy parameter:
One can also instruct HttpClient to use the standard JRE proxy selector to obtain proxy
information:
Alternatively, one can provide a custom RoutePlanner
implementation in order to have a complete control over the process of HTTP route
computation: