public class EventSource extends Object implements EventListener
incoming Server-Sent Events
.
Instances of this class are thread safe. To build a new instance, you can use one of the
available public EventSource
constructors that produce pre-configured event
source instances. Alternatively, you can create a new EventSource.Builder
instance
using EventSource.target(endpoint)
factory method.
Compared to EventSource
constructors, an event source builder provides greater flexibility
when custom-configuring a new event source builder.
Once an EventSource
is created, it opens a connection
to the associated web target
and starts processing any incoming inbound events.
Whenever a new event is received, an onEvent(InboundEvent)
method is called as well as any
registered event listeners
are notified (see register(EventListener)
and register(EventListener, String, String...)
.
The EventSource
supports automated recuperation from a connection loss, including
negotiation of delivery of any missed events based on the last received SSE event id
field value, provided
this field is set by the server and the negotiation facility is supported by the server. In case of a connection loss,
the last received SSE event id
field value is send in the HTTP
request header as part of a new connection request sent to the SSE endpoint. Upon a receipt of such reconnect request, the SSE
endpoint that supports this negotiation facility is expected to replay all missed events. Note however, that this is a
best-effort mechanism which does not provide any guaranty that all events would be delivered without a loss. You should
therefore not rely on receiving every single event and design your client application code accordingly.
By default, when a connection the the SSE endpoint is lost, the event source will wait 500L ms
before attempting to reconnect to the SSE endpoint. The SSE endpoint can however control the client-side retry delay
by including a special retry
field value in the any send event. Jersey EventSource
implementation
tracks any received SSE event retry
field values set by the endpoint and adjusts the reconnect delay accordingly,
using the last received retry
field value as the reconnect delay.
In addition to handling the standard connection losses, Jersey EventSource
automatically deals with any
HTTP 503 Service Unavailable
responses from SSE endpoint, that contain a
"Retry-After" HTTP header with a valid value. The
HTTP 503 + "Retry-After" technique is often used by HTTP endpoints
as a means of connection and traffic throttling. In case a
HTTP 503 + "Retry-After" response is received in return to a connection
request, Jersey EventSource
will automatically schedule a new reconnect attempt and use the received
"Retry-After" HTTP header value as a one-time override of the reconnect delay.
The experience has shown that persistent HTTP connection management in the HttpURLConnection
,
that is used as a default Jersey client connector
, is fragile.
It is unfortunately quite possible, that under heavy load the client and server connections may get out of sync,
causing Jersey EventSource
hang on a connection that has already been closed by a server, but has not been
properly cleaned up by the HttpURLConnection
management code, and has been reused for a re-connect
request instead. To avoid this issue, Jersey EventSource
implementation by default disables
persistent HTTP connections when connecting
(or reconnecting) to the SSE endpoint.
In case you are using Jersey event source with a Jersey client
ClientConfig.connectorProvider(org.glassfish.jersey.client.spi.ConnectorProvider)
connector provider configured to use some other client ConnectorProvider
implementation able to reliably
manage persistent HTTP connections (such as org.glassfish.jersey.grizzly.connector.GrizzlyConnectorProvider
or
org.glassfish.jersey.apache.connector.ApacheConnectorProvider
), or in case you simply need to use persistent
HTTP connections, you may do so by invoking the usePersistentConnections()
method
on an event source builder prior to creating a new event source instance.
Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
---|---|
static class |
EventSource.Builder
Jersey
EventSource builder class. |
Modifier and Type | Field and Description |
---|---|
static long |
RECONNECT_DEFAULT
Default SSE
EventSource reconnect delay value in milliseconds. |
Constructor and Description |
---|
EventSource(WebTarget endpoint)
Create new SSE event source and open a connection it to the supplied SSE streaming
web target . |
EventSource(WebTarget endpoint,
boolean open)
Create new SSE event source pointing at a SSE streaming
web target . |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
close()
Close this event source.
|
boolean |
close(long timeout,
TimeUnit unit)
Close this event source and wait for the internal event processing task to complete
for up to the specified amount of wait time.
|
boolean |
isOpen()
Check if this event source instance has already been
opened . |
void |
onEvent(InboundEvent inboundEvent)
Invoked when an event is received.
|
void |
open()
Open the connection to the supplied SSE underlying
web target and start processing incoming
events . |
void |
register(EventListener listener)
Register new
event listener to receive all streamed SSE events . |
void |
register(EventListener listener,
String eventName,
String... eventNames)
Add name-bound
event listener which will be called only for incoming SSE
events whose name is equal to the specified
name(s). |
static EventSource.Builder |
target(WebTarget endpoint)
Create a new
event source builder that provides convenient way how to
configure and fine-tune various aspects of a newly prepared event source instance. |
public static final long RECONNECT_DEFAULT
EventSource
reconnect delay value in milliseconds.public EventSource(WebTarget endpoint)
web target
.
This constructor is performs the same series of actions as a call to:
EventSource.target(endpoint).open()
The created event source instance automatically opens a connection
to the supplied SSE streaming
web target and starts processing incoming events
.
The incoming events are processed by the event source in an asynchronous task that runs in an
internal single-threaded scheduled executor service
.
endpoint
- SSE streaming endpoint. Must not be null
.NullPointerException
- in case the supplied web target is null
.public EventSource(WebTarget endpoint, boolean open)
web target
.
This constructor is performs the same series of actions as a call to:
if (open) { EventSource.target(endpoint).open(); } else { EventSource.target(endpoint).build(); }
If the supplied open
flag is true
, the created event source instance automatically
opens a connection
to the supplied SSE streaming web target and starts processing incoming
events
.
Otherwise, if the open
flag is set to false
, the created event source instance
is not automatically connected to the web target. In this case it is expected that the user who
created the event source will manually invoke its open()
method.
Once the event source is open, the incoming events are processed by the event source in an
asynchronous task that runs in an internal single-threaded scheduled executor service
.
endpoint
- SSE streaming endpoint. Must not be null
.open
- if true
, the event source will immediately connect to the SSE endpoint,
if false
, the connection will not be established until open()
method is
called explicitly on the event stream.NullPointerException
- in case the supplied web target is null
.public static EventSource.Builder target(WebTarget endpoint)
event source builder
that provides convenient way how to
configure and fine-tune various aspects of a newly prepared event source instance.endpoint
- SSE streaming endpoint. Must not be null
.NullPointerException
- in case the supplied web target is null
.public void open()
web target
and start processing incoming
events
.IllegalStateException
- in case the event source has already been opened earlier.public boolean isOpen()
opened
.true
if this event source is open, false
otherwise.public void register(EventListener listener)
event listener
to receive all streamed SSE events
.listener
- event listener to be registered with the event source.register(EventListener, String, String...)
public void register(EventListener listener, String eventName, String... eventNames)
event listener
which will be called only for incoming SSE
events
whose name
is equal to the specified
name(s).listener
- event listener to register with this event source.eventName
- inbound event name.eventNames
- additional event names.register(EventListener)
public void onEvent(InboundEvent inboundEvent)
The default EventSource
implementation is empty, users can override this method to handle
incoming InboundEvent
s.
Note that overriding this method may be necessary to make sure no InboundEvent incoming events
are lost in case the event source is constructed using EventSource(javax.ws.rs.client.WebTarget)
constructor or in case a true
flag is passed to the EventSource(javax.ws.rs.client.WebTarget, boolean)
constructor, since the connection is opened as as part of the constructor call and the event processing starts
immediately. Therefore any EventListener
s registered later after the event source has been constructed
may miss the notifications about the one or more events that arrive immediately after the connection to the
event source is established.
onEvent
in interface EventListener
inboundEvent
- received inbound event.public void close()
public boolean close(long timeout, TimeUnit unit)
The method blocks until the event processing task has completed execution after a shutdown request, or until the timeout occurs, or the current thread is interrupted, whichever happens first.
In case the waiting for the event processing task has been interrupted, this method restores
the interrupt
flag on the thread before returning false
.
timeout
- the maximum time to wait.unit
- the time unit of the timeout argument.true
if this executor terminated and false
if the timeout elapsed
before termination or the termination was interrupted.Copyright © 2007-2023, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Use is subject to license terms.