[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/GERONIMO-3616?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel#action_12549144
]
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.