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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/THRIFT-5?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=12600335#action_12600335
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Bryan Duxbury commented on THRIFT-5:
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Would there be objections to using Mina (or another NIO framework like Grizzly) 
as the basis for a nonblocking server in Java? I know that in general we want 
to avoid external dependencies in Thrift, but this seems like a scenario where 
we'd be able to take advantage of existing projects that would really give us a 
leg up on implementation.

> Need a thread pool server that is fair in terms of invocations, not sockets
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: THRIFT-5
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/THRIFT-5
>             Project: Thrift
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Library (Java)
>            Reporter: Bryan Duxbury
>
> The current TThreadPoolServer in the Java libraries is suboptimal. If you 
> actually limit the upper bound of threads, and you have long-lived clients, 
> and you have more clients than you have max allowed threads, then any clients 
> in excess of the max number of threads will never be given a time slice to 
> execute. 
> Conceptually, it seems like the correct behavior here is for the individual 
> method invocations to be the items that end up on the thread pool's execution 
> queue, not the individual client sockets (as it is now). This would support 
> this and other use cases better. 
> Perhaps we should do a Half-Sync/Half-Async server to fulfill this goal?

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