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sjlee0 edited comment on GERONIMO-3616 at 12/6/07 11:17 AM: ----------------------------------------------------------------- I have a patch ready that addresses this issue and also GERONIMO-3615. Essentially the sendRequest() method is modified to return a ResponseFuture instead of void. In addition, an overloaded version of sendRequest() is created to take an additional argument of BlockingQueue<ResponseFuture>. The queue will serve as a completion queue on which a ResponseFuture object will be added as the request is complete. The semantics is entirely analogous to a familiar java.util.concurrent.CompletionService, although I thought creating a concrete CompletionService implementation was an overkill. I have also created a test class that exercises the new method. I'll be uploading the patch... was (Author: sjlee0): I have a patch ready that addresses this issue and also GERONIMO-3617. Essentially the sendRequest() method is modified to return a ResponseFuture instead of void. In addition, an overloaded version of sendRequest() is created to take an additional argument of BlockingQueue<ResponseFuture>. The queue will serve as a completion queue on which a ResponseFuture object will be added as the request is complete. The semantics is entirely analogous to a familiar java.util.concurrent.CompletionService, although I thought creating a concrete CompletionService implementation was an overkill. I have also created a test class that exercises the new method. I'll be uploading the patch... > AsyncHttpClient should support a batch invocation method > -------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: GERONIMO-3616 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GERONIMO-3616 > Project: Geronimo > Issue Type: New Feature > Security Level: public(Regular issues) > Components: AsyncHttpClient > Affects Versions: 1.x > Reporter: Sangjin Lee > Attachments: patch.zip > > > It is desirable to have a method on AsyncHttpClient that submits multiple > URLs at once. For example, > public void sendRequests(HttpRequestMessage[] requests); > One would expect it to initiate all HTTP requests as soon as possible in a > non-blocking manner and return. > Furthermore, it would be even more powerful if it returned a list of futures > or a completion queue of results. One idea would be to return something like > a completion queue (blocking) so that results or futures are added as they > are completed. In other words, > public BlockingQueue<HttpResponseMessage> sendRequests(HttpRequestMessage[] > requests); -- This message is automatically generated by JIRA. - You can reply to this email to add a comment to the issue online.