javax.net.websocket.Endpoint Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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//
// ========================================================================
// Copyright (c) 1995-2012 Mort Bay Consulting Pty. Ltd.
// ------------------------------------------------------------------------
// All rights reserved. This program and the accompanying materials
// are made available under the terms of the Eclipse Public License v1.0
// and Apache License v2.0 which accompanies this distribution.
//
// The Eclipse Public License is available at
// http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html
//
// The Apache License v2.0 is available at
// http://www.opensource.org/licenses/apache2.0.php
//
// You may elect to redistribute this code under either of these licenses.
// ========================================================================
//
package javax.net.websocket;
/**
* The Web Socket Endpoint represents and object that can handle web socket
* conversations. If deployed as a server, that is to say, the endpoint is
* registered to a URL, the endpoint may handle one or more web socket
* conversations, one for each client that establishes a connection. If deployed
* as a client, the endpoint will participate in only one conversation: that
* with the server to which it connects. If the endpoint is a server which will
* cater to multiple clients, the endpoint may be called by multiple threads, no
* more than one per client, at any one time. This means that when
* implementing/overriding the methods of Endpoint, the developer should be
* aware that any state management must be carefully synchronized with this in
* mine.
*
* @since DRAFT 001
*/
public abstract class Endpoint {
public Endpoint() {
/* default constructor */
}
/**
* Developers may implement this method to be notified when an active
* conversation has just been terminated.
*/
public void onClose(Session session, CloseReason closeReason) {
return;
}
/**
* Developers may implement this method when a web socket connection,
* represented by the session, creates some kind of error that is not
* modeled in the web socket protocol. This may for example be a
* notification that an incoming message is too big to handle, or that the
* incoming message could not be encoded.
*
* There are a number of categories of exception that this method is
* (currently) defined to handle:-
*
* - connection problems, for example, a socket failure that occurs before
* the web socket connection can be formally closed.
* - errors thrown by developer create message handlers calls.
* - conversion errors encoding incoming messages before any message
* handler has been called.
*
* TBD We may come up with less of a 'catch-all' mechanism for handling
* exceptions, especially given the varying nature of these categories of
* exception.
*/
public void onError(Throwable thr, Session s) {
return;
}
/**
* Developers may implement this method to be notified when a new
* conversation has just begun.
*/
public abstract void onOpen(Session session);
}