org.apache.thrift.TMultiplexedProcessor Maven / Gradle / Ivy
Go to download
Show more of this group Show more artifacts with this name
Show all versions of libthrift Show documentation
Show all versions of libthrift Show documentation
Thrift is a software framework for scalable cross-language services development.
/*
* Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one
* or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file
* distributed with this work for additional information
* regarding copyright ownership. The ASF 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.apache.thrift;
import org.apache.thrift.protocol.*;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.HashMap;
/**
* TMultiplexedProcessor
is a TProcessor
allowing
* a single TServer
to provide multiple services.
*
* To do so, you instantiate the processor and then register additional
* processors with it, as shown in the following example:
*
*
* TMultiplexedProcessor processor = new TMultiplexedProcessor();
*
* processor.registerProcessor(
* "Calculator",
* new Calculator.Processor(new CalculatorHandler()));
*
* processor.registerProcessor(
* "WeatherReport",
* new WeatherReport.Processor(new WeatherReportHandler()));
*
* TServerTransport t = new TServerSocket(9090);
* TSimpleServer server = new TSimpleServer(processor, t);
*
* server.serve();
*
*/
public class TMultiplexedProcessor implements TProcessor {
private final Map SERVICE_PROCESSOR_MAP
= new HashMap();
/**
* 'Register' a service with this TMultiplexedProcessor
. This
* allows us to broker requests to individual services by using the service
* name to select them at request time.
*
* @param serviceName Name of a service, has to be identical to the name
* declared in the Thrift IDL, e.g. "WeatherReport".
* @param processor Implementation of a service, usually referred to
* as "handlers", e.g. WeatherReportHandler implementing WeatherReport.Iface.
*/
public void registerProcessor(String serviceName, TProcessor processor) {
SERVICE_PROCESSOR_MAP.put(serviceName, processor);
}
/**
* This implementation of process
performs the following steps:
*
*
* - Read the beginning of the message.
* - Extract the service name from the message.
* - Using the service name to locate the appropriate processor.
* - Dispatch to the processor, with a decorated instance of TProtocol
* that allows readMessageBegin() to return the original TMessage.
*
*
* @throws TException If the message type is not CALL or ONEWAY, if
* the service name was not found in the message, or if the service
* name was not found in the service map. You called {@link #registerProcessor(String, TProcessor) registerProcessor}
* during initialization, right? :)
*/
public boolean process(TProtocol iprot, TProtocol oprot) throws TException {
/*
Use the actual underlying protocol (e.g. TBinaryProtocol) to read the
message header. This pulls the message "off the wire", which we'll
deal with at the end of this method.
*/
TMessage message = iprot.readMessageBegin();
if (message.type != TMessageType.CALL && message.type != TMessageType.ONEWAY) {
// TODO Apache Guys - Can the server ever get an EXCEPTION or REPLY?
// TODO Should we check for this here?
throw new TException("This should not have happened!?");
}
// Extract the service name
int index = message.name.indexOf(TMultiplexedProtocol.SEPARATOR);
if (index < 0) {
throw new TException("Service name not found in message name: " + message.name + ". Did you " +
"forget to use a TMultiplexProtocol in your client?");
}
// Create a new TMessage, something that can be consumed by any TProtocol
String serviceName = message.name.substring(0, index);
TProcessor actualProcessor = SERVICE_PROCESSOR_MAP.get(serviceName);
if (actualProcessor == null) {
throw new TException("Service name not found: " + serviceName + ". Did you forget " +
"to call registerProcessor()?");
}
// Create a new TMessage, removing the service name
TMessage standardMessage = new TMessage(
message.name.substring(serviceName.length()+TMultiplexedProtocol.SEPARATOR.length()),
message.type,
message.seqid
);
// Dispatch processing to the stored processor
return actualProcessor.process(new StoredMessageProtocol(iprot, standardMessage), oprot);
}
/**
* Our goal was to work with any protocol. In order to do that, we needed
* to allow them to call readMessageBegin() and get a TMessage in exactly
* the standard format, without the service name prepended to TMessage.name.
*/
private static class StoredMessageProtocol extends TProtocolDecorator {
TMessage messageBegin;
public StoredMessageProtocol(TProtocol protocol, TMessage messageBegin) {
super(protocol);
this.messageBegin = messageBegin;
}
@Override
public TMessage readMessageBegin() throws TException {
return messageBegin;
}
}
}