Oleg,
Actually in DefaultConnectingIOReactor.processSessionRequests
after this code segment
SessionRequestHandle requestHandle = new SessionRequestHandle(request);
key.attach(requestHandle);
key.interestOps(SelectionKey.OP_CONNECT);
we tried
this.selector.select(0)
this.selector.selectedKeys()
This doesn't help!
thanks
Balaji
olegk wrote:
>
> On Fri, 2007-07-06 at 07:29 -0700, balaji hari wrote:
>
> ...
>
>> > The above seems quite confusing to me.. If the sample code you provide
>> > can talk to an external Windows server, I don't see any reason why it
>> > cant talk to a Solaris server? Just to be certain.. do you have any
>> > firewalls or other software between the two boxes? Can you do a "telnet
>> > <solarishost> <httpport>" from the command line and then a "GET /
>> > HTTP/1.1" and see if you get some response back?
>> >
>> >
>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> > No firewall issues, as we are able to do a telnet from solaris box to
>> the
>> > server running on localhost
>> > and able to retrieve response. This is how results look like
>> >
>> > solaris -> windows - yes
>> > windows -> solaris - yes
>> > solaris -> solaris (localhost) - no (synapse and jboss server sitting
>> on
>> > the same machine can't talk to each other)
>> >
>
> Very peculiar.
>
>>
>> > Not sure what the problem could be other than with NIO (because using
>> > commons-httpclient API we are able to communicate to server running in
>> > solaris)
>> >
>> > This is the code segment from
>> > org.apache.http.impl.nio.reactor.DefaultConnectingIOReactor.java
>> >
>> > try {
>> > readyCount =
>> this.selector.select(TIMEOUT_CHECK_INTERVAL);
>> > } catch (InterruptedIOException ex) {
>> > throw ex;
>> > } catch (IOException ex) {
>> > throw new IOReactorException("Unexpected selector
>> > failure", ex);
>> > }
>> >
>> > if (this.closed) {
>> > break;
>> > }
>> >
>> > processSessionRequests();
>> >
>> > if (readyCount > 0) {
>> > processEvents(this.selector.selectedKeys());
>> > }
>> >
>> > Even though
>> >
>> > key = socketChannel.register(this.selector, 0);
>> >
>> > returns a valid selector key, the select() method returns count = 0.
>> >
>
> This looks like a bug in Sun Solaris NIO implementation to me. However,
> if just ignoring the readyCount value helps work the problem around I do
> not see a problem with including it into HttpCore.
>
> Could you please try patching the latest snapshot locally on a Solaris
> 2.9 box and see if you can get the test suite pass successfully?
>
> Oleg
>
>>
>> >
>> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>> >
>> >
>> > Lets give this problem the due attention it deserves and try to find
>> its
>> > root cause.
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > Hope this helps.
>> >
>> > thanks
>> > Balaji
>> >
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>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>
>
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