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The Netty project is an effort to provide an asynchronous event-driven
network application framework and tools for rapid development of
maintainable high performance and high scalability protocol servers and
clients. In other words, Netty is a NIO client server framework which
enables quick and easy development of network applications such as protocol
servers and clients. It greatly simplifies and streamlines network
programming such as TCP and UDP socket server.
/*
* Copyright 2012 The Netty Project
*
* The Netty Project licenses this file to you under the Apache License,
* version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
* with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at:
*
* http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
*
* Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
* distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
* WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
* License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
* under the License.
*/
package org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.string;
import org.jboss.netty.buffer.ChannelBuffer;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.Channel;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.ChannelHandler.Sharable;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.ChannelHandlerContext;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.ChannelPipeline;
import org.jboss.netty.channel.MessageEvent;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.frame.DelimiterBasedFrameDecoder;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.frame.Delimiters;
import org.jboss.netty.handler.codec.oneone.OneToOneEncoder;
import java.nio.charset.Charset;
import static org.jboss.netty.buffer.ChannelBuffers.*;
/**
* Encodes the requested {@link String} into a {@link ChannelBuffer}.
* A typical setup for a text-based line protocol in a TCP/IP socket would be:
*
* {@link ChannelPipeline} pipeline = ...;
*
* // Decoders
* pipeline.addLast("frameDecoder", new {@link DelimiterBasedFrameDecoder}({@link Delimiters#lineDelimiter()}));
* pipeline.addLast("stringDecoder", new {@link StringDecoder}(CharsetUtil.UTF_8));
*
* // Encoder
* pipeline.addLast("stringEncoder", new {@link StringEncoder}(CharsetUtil.UTF_8));
*
* and then you can use a {@link String} instead of a {@link ChannelBuffer}
* as a message:
*
* void messageReceived({@link ChannelHandlerContext} ctx, {@link MessageEvent} e) {
* String msg = (String) e.getMessage();
* ch.write("Did you say '" + msg + "'?\n");
* }
*
*
* @apiviz.landmark
*/
@Sharable
public class StringEncoder extends OneToOneEncoder {
// TODO Use CharsetEncoder instead.
private final Charset charset;
/**
* Creates a new instance with the current system character set.
*/
public StringEncoder() {
this(Charset.defaultCharset());
}
/**
* Creates a new instance with the specified character set.
*/
public StringEncoder(Charset charset) {
if (charset == null) {
throw new NullPointerException("charset");
}
this.charset = charset;
}
@Override
protected Object encode(
ChannelHandlerContext ctx, Channel channel, Object msg) throws Exception {
if (msg instanceof String) {
return copiedBuffer(
ctx.getChannel().getConfig().getBufferFactory().getDefaultOrder(), (String) msg, charset);
}
return msg;
}
}
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