Hi, Thanks for the clarification. I have another query:
Should the relation between a server and the service handlers be one to many or one to one? Should one server be responsible for delegating responsibilities to all the handlers or should each service have a server of its own? In that case, do I assign each server different ports or ips in the local network to communicate through? Regards, Dedipyaman On Mon, Aug 26, 2019, 11:20 PM Jens Geyer <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi, > > although you can combine languages in general, this is restricted to what > the underlying platform allowes and has absolutely nothing to do with > Thrift. For example, I could link a library that is written in C into some > other language, or combine a C# Thrift assembly with another NET language, > like F#. If there is no tecghnical way under the suin to integrate Java dn > Go into one process and call each other (which is the absolute minimum > requirement) I'd say there is no way to achieve that. > > In that regard and aside from that, there is no additional magic in > Thrift. > Thrift only deals with serializing and deserializing data and > sending/receiving them across some transport mechanism. That's no rocket > science, it's just a matter of standardizing stuff and make it efficient. > > One could use Thrift to have different parts of an application talk to > each > other (that's not your use case, I know). E.g. we have a scenario where we > load a native Win32 DLL into a C# application and use Thrift to take off > the > burden from the application developers to deal with the technical details > and possbible complications of PInvoke etc. > > Have fun, > JensG > > > > -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- > From: Abhishek Chhajer > Sent: Monday, August 26, 2019 5:55 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: Can I use a Nonblocking server in one language (Go) and have > handlers written in another (Java) > > I have only worked in Java for thrift. > > You are writing code only for handlers. The framework has it's non blocking > server implementation which you are using in your application. > > Note - I am fairly new, so take this with some skepticism. > > -Abhishek > > > On Sun, Aug 25, 2019, 9:03 PM Dedipyaman Das <[email protected]> > wrote: > > > I'm trying to use Go's concurrency, so having a server written in go > makes > > sense to me. But most of my business logic is written in Java. Can I make > > use of a server (some sort of threaded server) in Go and delegate the > > method calls to handlers implemented in Java? > > > >
