Http-server: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 23: | Line 23: | ||
=Features= | =Features= | ||
The server assumes HTTP/1.1 ''persistent connections'', as described in [[HTTP Persistent Connections]]. The server can be configured to close the connection after the initial request/response sequence by specifying "persistent-connection=false" on the command line. | * The server assumes HTTP/1.1 ''persistent connections'', as described in [[HTTP Persistent Connections]]. The server can be configured to close the connection after the initial request/response sequence by specifying "persistent-connection=false" on the command line. | ||
* The "listConnections()" JMX management operation lists the active connections and the closed connections, giving information such as remote and local address, creation timestamp, time alive, User-Agent, etc. |
Revision as of 20:55, 8 January 2017
Internal
Overview
A simple, multithreaded experimental HTTP/1.1 (RFC 2616) web server. Developed to experiment with the behavior of user agents and proxies.
The server registers itself with the JVM as an MBean, as "novaordis:service=http-server", so it can be managed via a standard JMX client such as VisualVM or JConsole.
GitHub
Run
./bin/http-server <port> [document-root]
The document-root is optional, it will sever the current directory if not specified.
Features
- The server assumes HTTP/1.1 persistent connections, as described in HTTP Persistent Connections. The server can be configured to close the connection after the initial request/response sequence by specifying "persistent-connection=false" on the command line.
- The "listConnections()" JMX management operation lists the active connections and the closed connections, giving information such as remote and local address, creation timestamp, time alive, User-Agent, etc.