configuration.asciidoc 7.0 KB

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  1. [[java-rest-low-config]]
  2. == Common configuration
  3. As explained in <<java-rest-low-usage-initialization>>, the `RestClientBuilder`
  4. supports providing both a `RequestConfigCallback` and an `HttpClientConfigCallback`
  5. which allow for any customization that the Apache Async Http Client exposes.
  6. Those callbacks make it possible to modify some specific behaviour of the client
  7. without overriding every other default configuration that the `RestClient`
  8. is initialized with. This section describes some common scenarios that require
  9. additional configuration for the low-level Java REST Client.
  10. === Timeouts
  11. Configuring requests timeouts can be done by providing an instance of
  12. `RequestConfigCallback` while building the `RestClient` through its builder.
  13. The interface has one method that receives an instance of
  14. https://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-client-ga/httpclient/apidocs/org/apache/http/client/config/RequestConfig.Builder.html[`org.apache.http.client.config.RequestConfig.Builder`]
  15. as an argument and has the same return type. The request config builder can
  16. be modified and then returned. In the following example we increase the
  17. connect timeout (defaults to 1 second) and the socket timeout (defaults to 30
  18. seconds). Also we adjust the max retry timeout accordingly (defaults to 30
  19. seconds too).
  20. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  21. --------------------------------------------------
  22. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-config-timeouts]
  23. --------------------------------------------------
  24. === Number of threads
  25. The Apache Http Async Client starts by default one dispatcher thread, and a
  26. number of worker threads used by the connection manager, as many as the number
  27. of locally detected processors (depending on what
  28. `Runtime.getRuntime().availableProcessors()` returns). The number of threads
  29. can be modified as follows:
  30. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  31. --------------------------------------------------
  32. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-config-threads]
  33. --------------------------------------------------
  34. === Basic authentication
  35. Configuring basic authentication can be done by providing an
  36. `HttpClientConfigCallback` while building the `RestClient` through its builder.
  37. The interface has one method that receives an instance of
  38. https://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-asyncclient-dev/httpasyncclient/apidocs/org/apache/http/impl/nio/client/HttpAsyncClientBuilder.html[`org.apache.http.impl.nio.client.HttpAsyncClientBuilder`]
  39. as an argument and has the same return type. The http client builder can be
  40. modified and then returned. In the following example we set a default
  41. credentials provider that requires basic authentication.
  42. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  43. --------------------------------------------------
  44. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-config-basic-auth]
  45. --------------------------------------------------
  46. Preemptive Authentication can be disabled, which means that every request will be sent without
  47. authorization headers to see if it is accepted and, upon receiving an HTTP 401 response, it will
  48. resend the exact same request with the basic authentication header. If you wish to do this, then
  49. you can do so by disabling it via the `HttpAsyncClientBuilder`:
  50. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  51. --------------------------------------------------
  52. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-config-disable-preemptive-auth]
  53. --------------------------------------------------
  54. <1> Disable preemptive authentication
  55. === Encrypted communication
  56. Encrypted communication can also be configured through the
  57. `HttpClientConfigCallback`. The
  58. https://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-asyncclient-dev/httpasyncclient/apidocs/org/apache/http/impl/nio/client/HttpAsyncClientBuilder.html[`org.apache.http.impl.nio.client.HttpAsyncClientBuilder`]
  59. received as an argument exposes multiple methods to configure encrypted
  60. communication: `setSSLContext`, `setSSLSessionStrategy` and
  61. `setConnectionManager`, in order of precedence from the least important.
  62. The following is an example:
  63. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  64. --------------------------------------------------
  65. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-config-encrypted-communication]
  66. --------------------------------------------------
  67. If no explicit configuration is provided, the http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/security/jsse/JSSERefGuide.html#CustomizingStores[system default configuration]
  68. will be used.
  69. === Others
  70. For any other required configuration needed, the Apache HttpAsyncClient docs
  71. should be consulted: https://hc.apache.org/httpcomponents-asyncclient-4.1.x/ .
  72. NOTE: If your application runs under the security manager you might be subject
  73. to the JVM default policies of caching positive hostname resolutions
  74. indefinitely and negative hostname resolutions for ten seconds. If the resolved
  75. addresses of the hosts to which you are connecting the client to vary with time
  76. then you might want to modify the default JVM behavior. These can be modified by
  77. adding
  78. http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/net/properties.html[`networkaddress.cache.ttl=<timeout>`]
  79. and
  80. http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/net/properties.html[`networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl=<timeout>`]
  81. to your
  82. http://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/technotes/guides/security/PolicyFiles.html[Java
  83. security policy].
  84. === Node selector
  85. The client sends each request to one of the configured nodes in round-robin
  86. fashion. Nodes can optionally be filtered through a node selector that needs
  87. to be provided when initializing the client. This is useful when sniffing is
  88. enabled, in case only dedicated master nodes should be hit by HTTP requests.
  89. For each request the client will run the eventually configured node selector
  90. to filter the node candidates, then select the next one in the list out of the
  91. remaining ones.
  92. ["source","java",subs="attributes,callouts,macros"]
  93. --------------------------------------------------
  94. include-tagged::{doc-tests}/RestClientDocumentation.java[rest-client-init-allocation-aware-selector]
  95. --------------------------------------------------
  96. <1> Set an allocation aware node selector that allows to pick a node in the
  97. local rack if any available, otherwise go to any other node in any rack. It
  98. acts as a preference rather than a strict requirement, given that it goes to
  99. another rack if none of the local nodes are available, rather than returning
  100. no nodes in such case which would make the client forcibly revive a local node
  101. whenever none of the nodes from the preferred rack is available.
  102. WARNING: Node selectors that do not consistently select the same set of nodes
  103. will make round-robin behaviour unpredictable and possibly unfair. The
  104. preference example above is fine as it reasons about availability of nodes
  105. which already affects the predictability of round-robin. Node selection should
  106. not depend on other external factors or round-robin will not work properly.