Howdy, Jetty is from IBM? You mean it is from Eclipse?
AFAIR, Jetty "moved in" under the Eclipse umbrella but originally it was not an Eclipse project.... It started on the venerable Codehaus as I remember.... T On Tue, Nov 18, 2025 at 6:30 PM Tommy Svensson <[email protected]> wrote: > > Thanks for all answers, I have decided to take a deeper look at Jetty. The > only thing I have against Jetty is that it is from IBM! But that said their > big, old office in Stockholm are now inhabited by birds and rats! i.e. not > much have changed ... > > Tommy Svensson > > [email protected] > > > > > Från: Timothy Stone <[email protected]> > Svara: Maven Users List <[email protected]> > Datum: 18 november 2025 at 15:42:48 > Till: [email protected] <[email protected]> > Ämne: Re: UnderTow > > > On 11/18/25 09:05, Nils Breunese wrote: > > > > > > > > >> Op 18 nov 2025, om 14:33 heeft Tommy Svensson <[email protected]> het > >> volgende geschreven: > > > > ...snip > > > > >> Can anyone suggest an alternative ? I just want to be able to do HTTP/S > >> requests and receive HTTP/S requests. This in its simplest form possible. > > > > > > For doing requests: Java has HttpClient built-in since JDK 11. (In older > > JDK versions you only get HttpURLConnection, which is not fun to work with > > directly.) If JDK HttpClient doesn’t serve your needs, check out Apache > > HttpClient, Jetty HttpClient or Reactor Netty HttpClient. > > > > > > For receiving requests: the JDK has a simple HttpServer API. For anything > > slightly serious I’d consider embedding Tomcat, Jetty or Reactor Netty. > > > > > > I would personally use an application framework like Spring Boot or > > Quarkus, which typically provides integrations like these out of the box, > > but this might be overkill for your use case. > > > > All great answers. I'm going to throw my hat in the ring for Tomcat. > > Been an in production user, at global finance scale with millions of > > daily and 1000s of concurrent users*, for more than 20 years, since v4 > > (possibly v3 and the first releases). > > > > Issues will always be present, in your favorite tooling, even in the > > tooling you write. They are ever present trade-offs: "Can I live with > > this?" If the issues you have in Undertow are security related, the > > trade-offs may be made for you and you'll have to mitigate and chase > > patches. > > > > HTH, > > Tim > > > > * there's always the architecture involved that supports that, > > horizontally scaled instances, load balancers, session "umbrellas," and > > a little bit more. > > > > > > -- > > Timothy Stone > > ============= > > There are some that call me ... Tim. > > Husband, Father, Blogger, OSS, Architect, Wargamer, Home Brewer, and 🤓 > > Find me on GitLab | GitHub | Linked In | MeWe | GnuPG --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]
