Writing HTTP servers and clients

Vert.x allows you to easily write non blocking HTTP clients and servers.

Vert.x supports the HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2 protocols.

The base API for HTTP is the same for HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2, specific API features are available for dealing with the HTTP/2 protocol.

Creating an HTTP Server

The simplest way to create an HTTP server, using all default options is as follows:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer();

Configuring an HTTP server

If you don’t want the default, a server can be configured by passing in a HttpServerOptions instance when creating it:

HttpServerOptions options = new HttpServerOptions().setMaxWebSocketFrameSize(1000000);

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(options);

Configuring an HTTP/2 server

Vert.x supports HTTP/2 over TLS h2 and over TCP h2c.

  • h2 identifies the HTTP/2 protocol when used over TLS negotiated by Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation (ALPN)

  • h2c identifies the HTTP/2 protocol when using in clear text over TCP, such connections are established either with an HTTP/1.1 upgraded request or directly

To handle h2 requests, TLS must be enabled along with setUseAlpn:

HttpServerOptions options = new HttpServerOptions()
    .setUseAlpn(true)
    .setSsl(true)
    .setKeyStoreOptions(new JksOptions().setPath("/path/to/my/keystore"));

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(options);

ALPN is a TLS extension that negotiates the protocol before the client and the server start to exchange data.

Clients that don’t support ALPN will still be able to do a classic SSL handshake.

ALPN will usually agree on the h2 protocol, although http/1.1 can be used if the server or the client decides so.

To handle h2c requests, TLS must be disabled, the server will upgrade to HTTP/2 any request HTTP/1.1 that wants to upgrade to HTTP/2. It will also accept a direct h2c connection beginning with the PRI * HTTP/2.0\r\nSM\r\n preface.

Warning
most browsers won’t support h2c, so for serving web sites you should use h2 and not h2c.

When a server accepts an HTTP/2 connection, it sends to the client its initial settings. The settings define how the client can use the connection, the default initial settings for a server are:

Logging network server activity

For debugging purposes, network activity can be logged.

HttpServerOptions options = new HttpServerOptions().setLogActivity(true);

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(options);

See the chapter on logging network activity for a detailed explanation.

Start the Server Listening

To tell the server to listen for incoming requests you use one of the listen alternatives.

To tell the server to listen at the host and port as specified in the options:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer();
server.listen();

Or to specify the host and port in the call to listen, ignoring what is configured in the options:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer();
server.listen(8080, "myhost.com");

The default host is 0.0.0.0 which means 'listen on all available addresses' and the default port is 80.

The actual bind is asynchronous so the server might not actually be listening until some time after the call to listen has returned.

If you want to be notified when the server is actually listening you can provide a handler to the listen call. For example:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer();
server.listen(8080, "myhost.com", res -> {
  if (res.succeeded()) {
    System.out.println("Server is now listening!");
  } else {
    System.out.println("Failed to bind!");
  }
});

Getting notified of incoming requests

To be notified when a request arrives you need to set a requestHandler:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer();
server.requestHandler(request -> {
  // Handle the request in here
});

Handling requests

When a request arrives, the request handler is called passing in an instance of HttpServerRequest. This object represents the server side HTTP request.

The handler is called when the headers of the request have been fully read.

If the request contains a body, that body will arrive at the server some time after the request handler has been called.

The server request object allows you to retrieve the uri, path, params and headers, amongst other things.

Each server request object is associated with one server response object. You use response to get a reference to the HttpServerResponse object.

Here’s a simple example of a server handling a request and replying with "hello world" to it.

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  request.response().end("Hello world");
}).listen(8080);

Request version

The version of HTTP specified in the request can be retrieved with version

Request method

Use method to retrieve the HTTP method of the request. (i.e. whether it’s GET, POST, PUT, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS, etc).

Request URI

Use uri to retrieve the URI of the request.

Note that this is the actual URI as passed in the HTTP request, and it’s almost always a relative URI.

Request path

Use path to return the path part of the URI

For example, if the request URI was:

a/b/c/page.html?param1=abc&param2=xyz

Then the path would be

/a/b/c/page.html

Request query

Use query to return the query part of the URI

For example, if the request URI was:

a/b/c/page.html?param1=abc&param2=xyz

Then the query would be

param1=abc&param2=xyz

Request headers

Use headers to return the headers of the HTTP request.

This returns an instance of MultiMap - which is like a normal Map or Hash but allows multiple values for the same key - this is because HTTP allows multiple header values with the same key.

It also has case-insensitive keys, that means you can do the following:

MultiMap headers = request.headers();

// Get the User-Agent:
System.out.println("User agent is " + headers.get("user-agent"));

// You can also do this and get the same result:
System.out.println("User agent is " + headers.get("User-Agent"));

Request host

Use host to return the host of the HTTP request.

For HTTP/1.x requests the host header is returned, for HTTP/1 requests the :authority pseudo header is returned.

Request parameters

Use params to return the parameters of the HTTP request.

Just like headers this returns an instance of MultiMap as there can be more than one parameter with the same name.

Request parameters are sent on the request URI, after the path. For example if the URI was:

/page.html?param1=abc&param2=xyz

Then the parameters would contain the following:

param1: 'abc'
param2: 'xyz

Note that these request parameters are retrieved from the URL of the request. If you have form attributes that have been sent as part of the submission of an HTML form submitted in the body of a multi-part/form-data request then they will not appear in the params here.

Remote address

The address of the sender of the request can be retrieved with remoteAddress.

Absolute URI

The URI passed in an HTTP request is usually relative. If you wish to retrieve the absolute URI corresponding to the request, you can get it with absoluteURI

End handler

The endHandler of the request is invoked when the entire request, including any body has been fully read.

Reading Data from the Request Body

Often an HTTP request contains a body that we want to read. As previously mentioned the request handler is called when just the headers of the request have arrived so the request object does not have a body at that point.

This is because the body may be very large (e.g. a file upload) and we don’t generally want to buffer the entire body in memory before handing it to you, as that could cause the server to exhaust available memory.

To receive the body, you can use the handler on the request, this will get called every time a chunk of the request body arrives. Here’s an example:

request.handler(buffer -> {
  System.out.println("I have received a chunk of the body of length " + buffer.length());
});

The object passed into the handler is a Buffer, and the handler can be called multiple times as data arrives from the network, depending on the size of the body.

In some cases (e.g. if the body is small) you will want to aggregate the entire body in memory, so you could do the aggregation yourself as follows:

Buffer totalBuffer = Buffer.buffer();

request.handler(buffer -> {
  System.out.println("I have received a chunk of the body of length " + buffer.length());
  totalBuffer.appendBuffer(buffer);
});

request.endHandler(v -> {
  System.out.println("Full body received, length = " + totalBuffer.length());
});

This is such a common case, that Vert.x provides a bodyHandler to do this for you. The body handler is called once when all the body has been received:

request.bodyHandler(totalBuffer -> {
  System.out.println("Full body received, length = " + totalBuffer.length());
});

Streaming requests

The request object is a ReadStream so you can pipe the request body to any WriteStream instance.

See the chapter on streams for a detailed explanation.

Handling HTML forms

HTML forms can be submitted with either a content type of application/x-www-form-urlencoded or multipart/form-data.

For url encoded forms, the form attributes are encoded in the url, just like normal query parameters.

For multi-part forms they are encoded in the request body, and as such are not available until the entire body has been read from the wire.

Multi-part forms can also contain file uploads.

If you want to retrieve the attributes of a multi-part form you should tell Vert.x that you expect to receive such a form before any of the body is read by calling setExpectMultipart with true, and then you should retrieve the actual attributes using formAttributes once the entire body has been read:

server.requestHandler(request -> {
  request.setExpectMultipart(true);
  request.endHandler(v -> {
    // The body has now been fully read, so retrieve the form attributes
    MultiMap formAttributes = request.formAttributes();
  });
});

Handling form file uploads

Vert.x can also handle file uploads which are encoded in a multi-part request body.

To receive file uploads you tell Vert.x to expect a multi-part form and set an uploadHandler on the request.

This handler will be called once for every upload that arrives on the server.

The object passed into the handler is a HttpServerFileUpload instance.

server.requestHandler(request -> {
  request.setExpectMultipart(true);
  request.uploadHandler(upload -> {
    System.out.println("Got a file upload " + upload.name());
  });
});

File uploads can be large we don’t provide the entire upload in a single buffer as that might result in memory exhaustion, instead, the upload data is received in chunks:

request.uploadHandler(upload -> {
  upload.handler(chunk -> {
    System.out.println("Received a chunk of the upload of length " + chunk.length());
  });
});

The upload object is a ReadStream so you can pipe the request body to any WriteStream instance. See the chapter on streams for a detailed explanation.

If you just want to upload the file to disk somewhere you can use streamToFileSystem:

request.uploadHandler(upload -> {
  upload.streamToFileSystem("myuploads_directory/" + upload.filename());
});
Warning
Make sure you check the filename in a production system to avoid malicious clients uploading files to arbitrary places on your filesystem. See security notes for more information.

Handling cookies

You use getCookie to retrieve a cookie by name, or use cookieMap to retrieve all the cookies.

To remove a cookie, use removeCookie.

To add a cookie use addCookie.

The set of cookies will be written back in the response automatically when the response headers are written so the browser can store them.

Cookies are described by instances of Cookie. This allows you to retrieve the name, value, domain, path and other normal cookie properties.

Same Site Cookies let servers require that a cookie shouldn’t be sent with cross-site (where Site is defined by the registrable domain) requests, which provides some protection against cross-site request forgery attacks. This kind of cookies are enabled using the setter: setSameSite.

Same site cookies can have one of 3 values:

  • None - The browser will send cookies with both cross-site requests and same-site requests.

  • Strict - he browser will only send cookies for same-site requests (requests originating from the site that set the cookie). If the request originated from a different URL than the URL of the current location, none of the cookies tagged with the Strict attribute will be included.

  • Lax - Same-site cookies are withheld on cross-site subrequests, such as calls to load images or frames, but will be sent when a user navigates to the URL from an external site; for example, by following a link.

Here’s an example of querying and adding cookies:

Cookie someCookie = request.getCookie("mycookie");
String cookieValue = someCookie.getValue();

// Do something with cookie...

// Add a cookie - this will get written back in the response automatically
request.response().addCookie(Cookie.cookie("othercookie", "somevalue"));

Handling compressed body

Vert.x can handle compressed body payloads which are encoded by the client with the deflate or gzip algorithms.

To enable decompression set setDecompressionSupported on the options when creating the server.

By default decompression is disabled.

Receiving custom HTTP/2 frames

HTTP/2 is a framed protocol with various frames for the HTTP request/response model. The protocol allows other kind of frames to be sent and received.

To receive custom frames, you can use the customFrameHandler on the request, this will get called every time a custom frame arrives. Here’s an example:

request.customFrameHandler(frame -> {

  System.out.println("Received a frame type=" + frame.type() +
      " payload" + frame.payload().toString());
});

HTTP/2 frames are not subject to flow control - the frame handler will be called immediatly when a custom frame is received whether the request is paused or is not

Sending back responses

The server response object is an instance of HttpServerResponse and is obtained from the request with response.

You use the response object to write a response back to the HTTP client.

Setting status code and message

The default HTTP status code for a response is 200, representing OK.

Use setStatusCode to set a different code.

You can also specify a custom status message with setStatusMessage.

If you don’t specify a status message, the default one corresponding to the status code will be used.

Note
for HTTP/2 the status won’t be present in the response since the protocol won’t transmit the message to the client

Writing HTTP responses

To write data to an HTTP response, you use one of the write operations.

These can be invoked multiple times before the response is ended. They can be invoked in a few ways:

With a single buffer:

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.write(buffer);

With a string. In this case the string will encoded using UTF-8 and the result written to the wire.

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.write("hello world!");

With a string and an encoding. In this case the string will encoded using the specified encoding and the result written to the wire.

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.write("hello world!", "UTF-16");

Writing to a response is asynchronous and always returns immediately after the write has been queued.

If you are just writing a single string or buffer to the HTTP response you can write it and end the response in a single call to the end

The first call to write results in the response header being written to the response. Consequently, if you are not using HTTP chunking then you must set the Content-Length header before writing to the response, since it will be too late otherwise. If you are using HTTP chunking you do not have to worry.

Ending HTTP responses

Once you have finished with the HTTP response you should end it.

This can be done in several ways:

With no arguments, the response is simply ended.

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.write("hello world!");
response.end();

It can also be called with a string or buffer in the same way write is called. In this case it’s just the same as calling write with a string or buffer followed by calling end with no arguments. For example:

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.end("hello world!");

Closing the underlying connection

You can close the underlying TCP connection with close.

Non keep-alive connections will be automatically closed by Vert.x when the response is ended.

Keep-alive connections are not automatically closed by Vert.x by default. If you want keep-alive connections to be closed after an idle time, then you configure setIdleTimeout.

HTTP/2 connections send a {@literal GOAWAY} frame before closing the response.

Setting response headers

HTTP response headers can be added to the response by adding them directly to the headers:

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
MultiMap headers = response.headers();
headers.set("content-type", "text/html");
headers.set("other-header", "wibble");

Or you can use putHeader

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.putHeader("content-type", "text/html").putHeader("other-header", "wibble");

Headers must all be added before any parts of the response body are written.

Chunked HTTP responses and trailers

This allows the HTTP response body to be written in chunks, and is normally used when a large response body is being streamed to a client and the total size is not known in advance.

You put the HTTP response into chunked mode as follows:

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.setChunked(true);

Default is non-chunked. When in chunked mode, each call to one of the write methods will result in a new HTTP chunk being written out.

When in chunked mode you can also write HTTP response trailers to the response. These are actually written in the final chunk of the response.

Note
chunked response has no effect for an HTTP/2 stream

To add trailers to the response, add them directly to the trailers.

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.setChunked(true);
MultiMap trailers = response.trailers();
trailers.set("X-wibble", "woobble").set("X-quux", "flooble");

Or use putTrailer.

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
response.setChunked(true);
response.putTrailer("X-wibble", "woobble").putTrailer("X-quux", "flooble");

Serving files directly from disk or the classpath

If you were writing a web server, one way to serve a file from disk would be to open it as an AsyncFile and pipe it to the HTTP response.

Or you could load it it one go using readFile and write it straight to the response.

Alternatively, Vert.x provides a method which allows you to serve a file from disk or the filesystem to an HTTP response in one operation. Where supported by the underlying operating system this may result in the OS directly transferring bytes from the file to the socket without being copied through user-space at all.

This is done by using sendFile, and is usually more efficient for large files, but may be slower for small files.

Here’s a very simple web server that serves files from the file system using sendFile:

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  String file = "";
  if (request.path().equals("/")) {
    file = "index.html";
  } else if (!request.path().contains("..")) {
    file = request.path();
  }
  request.response().sendFile("web/" + file);
}).listen(8080);

Sending a file is asynchronous and may not complete until some time after the call has returned. If you want to be notified when the file has been writen you can use sendFile

Please see the chapter about serving files from the classpath for restrictions about the classpath resolution or disabling it.

Note
If you use sendFile while using HTTPS it will copy through user-space, since if the kernel is copying data directly from disk to socket it doesn’t give us an opportunity to apply any encryption.
Warning
If you’re going to write web servers directly using Vert.x be careful that users cannot exploit the path to access files outside the directory from which you want to serve them or the classpath It may be safer instead to use Vert.x Web.

When there is a need to serve just a segment of a file, say starting from a given byte, you can achieve this by doing:

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  long offset = 0;
  try {
    offset = Long.parseLong(request.getParam("start"));
  } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
    // error handling...
  }

  long end = Long.MAX_VALUE;
  try {
    end = Long.parseLong(request.getParam("end"));
  } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
    // error handling...
  }

  request.response().sendFile("web/mybigfile.txt", offset, end);
}).listen(8080);

You are not required to supply the length if you want to send a file starting from an offset until the end, in this case you can just do:

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  long offset = 0;
  try {
    offset = Long.parseLong(request.getParam("start"));
  } catch (NumberFormatException e) {
    // error handling...
  }

  request.response().sendFile("web/mybigfile.txt", offset);
}).listen(8080);

Piping responses

The server response is a WriteStream so you can pipe to it from any ReadStream, e.g. AsyncFile, NetSocket, WebSocket or HttpServerRequest.

Here’s an example which echoes the request body back in the response for any PUT methods. It uses a pipe for the body, so it will work even if the HTTP request body is much larger than can fit in memory at any one time:

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
  if (request.method() == HttpMethod.PUT) {
    response.setChunked(true);
    request.pipeTo(response);
  } else {
    response.setStatusCode(400).end();
  }
}).listen(8080);

You can also use the send method to send a ReadStream.

Sending a stream is a pipe operation, however as this is a method of HttpServerResponse, it will also take care of chunking the response when the content-length is not set.

vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  HttpServerResponse response = request.response();
  if (request.method() == HttpMethod.PUT) {
    response.send(request);
  } else {
    response.setStatusCode(400).end();
  }
}).listen(8080);

Writing HTTP/2 frames

HTTP/2 is a framed protocol with various frames for the HTTP request/response model. The protocol allows other kind of frames to be sent and received.

To send such frames, you can use the writeCustomFrame on the response. Here’s an example:

int frameType = 40;
int frameStatus = 10;
Buffer payload = Buffer.buffer("some data");

// Sending a frame to the client
response.writeCustomFrame(frameType, frameStatus, payload);

These frames are sent immediately and are not subject to flow control - when such frame is sent there it may be done before other {@literal DATA} frames.

Stream reset

HTTP/1.x does not allow a clean reset of a request or a response stream, for example when a client uploads a resource already present on the server, the server needs to accept the entire response.

HTTP/2 supports stream reset at any time during the request/response:

request.response().reset();

By default the NO_ERROR (0) error code is sent, another code can sent instead:

request.response().reset(8);

The HTTP/2 specification defines the list of error codes one can use.

The request handler are notified of stream reset events with the request handler and response handler:

request.response().exceptionHandler(err -> {
  if (err instanceof StreamResetException) {
    StreamResetException reset = (StreamResetException) err;
    System.out.println("Stream reset " + reset.getCode());
  }
});

Server push

Server push is a new feature of HTTP/2 that enables sending multiple responses in parallel for a single client request.

When a server process a request, it can push a request/response to the client:

HttpServerResponse response = request.response();

// Push main.js to the client
response.push(HttpMethod.GET, "/main.js", ar -> {

  if (ar.succeeded()) {

    // The server is ready to push the response
    HttpServerResponse pushedResponse = ar.result();

    // Send main.js response
    pushedResponse.
        putHeader("content-type", "application/json").
        end("alert(\"Push response hello\")");
  } else {
    System.out.println("Could not push client resource " + ar.cause());
  }
});

// Send the requested resource
response.sendFile("<html><head><script src=\"/main.js\"></script></head><body></body></html>");

When the server is ready to push the response, the push response handler is called and the handler can send the response.

The push response handler may receive a failure, for instance the client may cancel the push because it already has main.js in its cache and does not want it anymore.

The push method must be called before the initiating response ends, however the pushed response can be written after.

Handling exceptions

You can set an exceptionHandler to receive any exceptions that happens before the connection is passed to the requestHandler or to the webSocketHandler, e.g during the TLS handshake.

HTTP Compression

Vert.x comes with support for HTTP Compression out of the box.

This means you are able to automatically compress the body of the responses before they are sent back to the client.

If the client does not support HTTP compression the responses are sent back without compressing the body.

This allows to handle Client that support HTTP Compression and those that not support it at the same time.

To enable compression use can configure it with setCompressionSupported.

By default compression is not enabled.

When HTTP compression is enabled the server will check if the client includes an Accept-Encoding header which includes the supported compressions. Commonly used are deflate and gzip. Both are supported by Vert.x.

If such a header is found the server will automatically compress the body of the response with one of the supported compressions and send it back to the client.

Whenever the response needs to be sent without compression you can set the header content-encoding to identity:

request.response()
  .putHeader(HttpHeaders.CONTENT_ENCODING, HttpHeaders.IDENTITY)
  .sendFile("/path/to/image.jpg");

Be aware that compression may be able to reduce network traffic but is more CPU-intensive.

To address this latter issue Vert.x allows you to tune the 'compression level' parameter that is native of the gzip/deflate compression algorithms.

Compression level allows to configure gizp/deflate algorithms in terms of the compression ratio of the resulting data and the computational cost of the compress/decompress operation.

The compression level is an integer value ranged from '1' to '9', where '1' means lower compression ratio but fastest algorithm and '9' means maximum compression ratio available but a slower algorithm.

Using compression levels higher that 1-2 usually allows to save just some bytes in size - the gain is not linear, and depends on the specific data to be compressed - but it comports a non-trascurable cost in term of CPU cycles required to the server while generating the compressed response data ( Note that at moment Vert.x doesn’t support any form caching of compressed response data, even for static files, so the compression is done on-the-fly at every request body generation ) and in the same way it affects client(s) while decoding (inflating) received responses, operation that becomes more CPU-intensive the more the level increases.

By default - if compression is enabled via setCompressionSupported - Vert.x will use '6' as compression level, but the parameter can be configured to address any case with setCompressionLevel.

Creating an HTTP client

You create an HttpClient instance with default options as follows:

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient();

If you want to configure options for the client, you create it as follows:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions().setKeepAlive(false);
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

Vert.x supports HTTP/2 over TLS h2 and over TCP h2c.

By default the http client performs HTTP/1.1 requests, to perform HTTP/2 requests the setProtocolVersion must be set to HTTP_2.

For h2 requests, TLS must be enabled with Application-Layer Protocol Negotiation:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions().
    setProtocolVersion(HttpVersion.HTTP_2).
    setSsl(true).
    setUseAlpn(true).
    setTrustAll(true);

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

For h2c requests, TLS must be disabled, the client will do an HTTP/1.1 requests and try an upgrade to HTTP/2:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions().setProtocolVersion(HttpVersion.HTTP_2);

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

h2c connections can also be established directly, i.e connection started with a prior knowledge, when setHttp2ClearTextUpgrade options is set to false: after the connection is established, the client will send the HTTP/2 connection preface and expect to receive the same preface from the server.

The http server may not support HTTP/2, the actual version can be checked with version when the response arrives.

When a clients connects to an HTTP/2 server, it sends to the server its initial settings. The settings define how the server can use the connection, the default initial settings for a client are the default values defined by the HTTP/2 RFC.

Logging network client activity

For debugging purposes, network activity can be logged.

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions().setLogActivity(true);
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

See the chapter on logging network activity for a detailed explanation.

Making requests

The http client is very flexible and there are various ways you can make requests with it.

The first step when making a request is obtaining an HTTP connection to the remote server:

client.request(HttpMethod.GET,8080, "myserver.mycompany.com", "/some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    // Connected to the server
  }
});

The client will connect to the remote server or reuse an available connection from the client connection pool.

Default host and port

Often you want to make many requests to the same host/port with an http client. To avoid you repeating the host/port every time you make a request you can configure the client with a default host/port:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions().setDefaultHost("wibble.com");

// Can also set default port if you want...
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);
client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "/some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      if (ar2.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      }
    });
  }
});

Writing request headers

You can write headers to a request using the HttpHeaders as follows:

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient();

// Write some headers using the headers multi-map
MultiMap headers = HttpHeaders.set("content-type", "application/json").set("other-header", "foo");

client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    if (ar1.succeeded()) {
      HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
      request.headers().addAll(headers);
      request.send(ar2 -> {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      });
    }
  }
});

The headers are an instance of MultiMap which provides operations for adding, setting and removing entries. Http headers allow more than one value for a specific key.

You can also write headers using putHeader

request.putHeader("content-type", "application/json")
       .putHeader("other-header", "foo");

If you wish to write headers to the request you must do so before any part of the request body is written.

Writing request and processing response

The HttpClientRequest request methods connects to the remote server or reuse an existing connection. The request instance obtained is pre-populated with some data such like the host or the request URI, but you need to send this request to the server.

You can call send to send a request such as an HTTP GET and process the asynchronous HttpClientResponse.

client.request(HttpMethod.GET,8080, "myserver.mycompany.com", "/some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();

    // Send the request and process the response
    request.send(ar -> {
      if (ar.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      } else {
        System.out.println("Something went wrong " + ar.cause().getMessage());
      }
    });
  }
});

You can also send the request with a body.

send with a string, the Content-Length header will be set for you if it was not previously set.

client.request(HttpMethod.GET,8080, "myserver.mycompany.com", "/some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();

    // Send the request and process the response
    request.send("Hello World", ar -> {
      if (ar.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      } else {
        System.out.println("Something went wrong " + ar.cause().getMessage());
      }
    });
  }
});

send with a buffer, the Content-Length header will be set for you if it was not previously set.

request.send(Buffer.buffer("Hello World"), ar -> {
  if (ar.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientResponse response = ar.result();
    System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
  } else {
    System.out.println("Something went wrong " + ar.cause().getMessage());
  }
});

send with a stream, if the Content-Length header was not previously set, the request is sent with a chunked Content-Encoding.

request
  .putHeader(HttpHeaders.CONTENT_LENGTH, "1000")
  .send(stream, ar -> {
  if (ar.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientResponse response = ar.result();
    System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
  } else {
    System.out.println("Something went wrong " + ar.cause().getMessage());
  }
});

Streaming Request body

The send method send requests at once.

Sometimes you’ll want to have low level control on how you write requests bodies.

The HttpClientRequest can be used to write the request body.

Here are some examples of writing a POST request with a body:

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient();

client.request(HttpMethod.POST, "some-uri")
  .onSuccess(request -> {
    request.onSuccess(response -> {
      System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
    });

    // Now do stuff with the request
    request.putHeader("content-length", "1000");
    request.putHeader("content-type", "text/plain");
    request.write(body);

    // Make sure the request is ended when you're done with it
    request.end();
});

// Or fluently:

client.request(HttpMethod.POST, "some-uri")
  .onSuccess(request -> {
    request
      .onSuccess(response -> {
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      })
      .putHeader("content-length", "1000")
      .putHeader("content-type", "text/plain")
      .end(body);
});

Methods exist to write strings in UTF-8 encoding and in any specific encoding and to write buffers:

request.write("some data");

// Write string encoded in specific encoding
request.write("some other data", "UTF-16");

// Write a buffer
Buffer buffer = Buffer.buffer();
buffer.appendInt(123).appendLong(245l);
request.write(buffer);

If you are just writing a single string or buffer to the HTTP request you can write it and end the request in a single call to the end function.

request.end("some simple data");

// Write buffer and end the request (send it) in a single call
Buffer buffer = Buffer.buffer().appendDouble(12.34d).appendLong(432l);
request.end(buffer);

When you’re writing to a request, the first call to write will result in the request headers being written out to the wire.

The actual write is asynchronous and might not occur until some time after the call has returned.

Non-chunked HTTP requests with a request body require a Content-Length header to be provided.

Consequently, if you are not using chunked HTTP then you must set the Content-Length header before writing to the request, as it will be too late otherwise.

If you are calling one of the end methods that take a string or buffer then Vert.x will automatically calculate and set the Content-Length header before writing the request body.

If you are using HTTP chunking a a Content-Length header is not required, so you do not have to calculate the size up-front.

Ending streamed HTTP requests

Once you have finished with the HTTP request you must end it with one of the end operations.

Ending a request causes any headers to be written, if they have not already been written and the request to be marked as complete.

Requests can be ended in several ways. With no arguments the request is simply ended:

request.end();

Or a string or buffer can be provided in the call to end. This is like calling write with the string or buffer before calling end with no arguments

request.end("some-data");

// End it with a buffer
Buffer buffer = Buffer.buffer().appendFloat(12.3f).appendInt(321);
request.end(buffer);

Using the request as a stream

An HttpClientRequest instance is also a WriteStream instance.

You can pipe to it from any ReadStream instance.

For, example, you could pipe a file on disk to a http request body as follows:

request.setChunked(true);
file.pipeTo(request);

Chunked HTTP requests

Vert.x supports HTTP Chunked Transfer Encoding for requests.

This allows the HTTP request body to be written in chunks, and is normally used when a large request body is being streamed to the server, whose size is not known in advance.

You put the HTTP request into chunked mode using setChunked.

In chunked mode each call to write will cause a new chunk to be written to the wire. In chunked mode there is no need to set the Content-Length of the request up-front.

request.setChunked(true);

// Write some chunks
for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
  request.write("this-is-chunk-" + i);
}

request.end();

Request timeouts

You can set a timeout for a specific http request using setTimeout or setTimeout.

If the request does not return any data within the timeout period an exception will be passed to the exception handler (if provided) and the request will be closed.

Writing HTTP/2 frames

HTTP/2 is a framed protocol with various frames for the HTTP request/response model. The protocol allows other kind of frames to be sent and received.

To send such frames, you can use the write on the request. Here’s an example:

int frameType = 40;
int frameStatus = 10;
Buffer payload = Buffer.buffer("some data");

// Sending a frame to the server
request.writeCustomFrame(frameType, frameStatus, payload);

Stream reset

HTTP/1.x does not allow a clean reset of a request or a response stream, for example when a client uploads a resource already present on the server, the server needs to accept the entire response.

HTTP/2 supports stream reset at any time during the request/response:

request.reset();

By default the NO_ERROR (0) error code is sent, another code can sent instead:

request.reset(8);

The HTTP/2 specification defines the list of error codes one can use.

The request handler are notified of stream reset events with the request handler and response handler:

request.exceptionHandler(err -> {
  if (err instanceof StreamResetException) {
    StreamResetException reset = (StreamResetException) err;
    System.out.println("Stream reset " + reset.getCode());
  }
});

Handling HTTP responses

You receive an instance of HttpClientResponse into the handler that you specify in of the request methods or by setting a handler directly on the HttpClientRequest object.

You can query the status code and the status message of the response with statusCode and statusMessage.

request.send(ar2 -> {
  if (ar2.succeeded()) {

    HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();

    // the status code - e.g. 200 or 404
    System.out.println("Status code is " + response.statusCode());

    // the status message e.g. "OK" or "Not Found".
    System.out.println("Status message is " + response.statusMessage());
  }
});

// Similar to above, set a completion handler and end the request
request
  .onComplete(ar2 -> {
    if (ar2.succeeded()) {

      HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();

      // the status code - e.g. 200 or 404
      System.out.println("Status code is " + response.statusCode());

      // the status message e.g. "OK" or "Not Found".
      System.out.println("Status message is " + response.statusMessage());
    }
  })
  .end();

Using the response as a stream

The HttpClientResponse instance is also a ReadStream which means you can pipe it to any WriteStream instance.

Response headers and trailers

Http responses can contain headers. Use headers to get the headers.

The object returned is a MultiMap as HTTP headers can contain multiple values for single keys.

String contentType = response.headers().get("content-type");
String contentLength = response.headers().get("content-lengh");

Chunked HTTP responses can also contain trailers - these are sent in the last chunk of the response body.

You use trailers to get the trailers. Trailers are also a MultiMap.

Reading the request body

The response handler is called when the headers of the response have been read from the wire.

If the response has a body this might arrive in several pieces some time after the headers have been read. We don’t wait for all the body to arrive before calling the response handler as the response could be very large and we might be waiting a long time, or run out of memory for large responses.

As parts of the response body arrive, the handler is called with a Buffer representing the piece of the body:

client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri", ar1 -> {

  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
      response.handler(buffer -> {
        System.out.println("Received a part of the response body: " + buffer);
      });
    });
  }
});

If you know the response body is not very large and want to aggregate it all in memory before handling it, you can either aggregate it yourself:

request.send(ar2 -> {

  if (ar2.succeeded()) {

    HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();

    // Create an empty buffer
    Buffer totalBuffer = Buffer.buffer();

    response.handler(buffer -> {
      System.out.println("Received a part of the response body: " + buffer.length());

      totalBuffer.appendBuffer(buffer);
    });

    response.endHandler(v -> {
      // Now all the body has been read
      System.out.println("Total response body length is " + totalBuffer.length());
    });
  }
});

Or you can use the convenience body which is called with the entire body when the response has been fully read:

request.send(ar1 -> {

  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientResponse response = ar1.result();
    response.body(ar2 -> {

      if (ar2.succeeded()) {
        Buffer body = ar2.result();
        // Now all the body has been read
        System.out.println("Total response body length is " + body.length());
      }
    });
  }
});

Response end handler

The response endHandler is called when the entire response body has been read or immediately after the headers have been read and the response handler has been called if there is no body.

Request and response composition

The client interface is very simple and follows this pattern:

  1. request a connection

  2. send or write/end the request to the server

  3. handle the beginning of the HttpClientResponse

  4. process the response events

You can use Vert.x future composition methods to make your code simpler, however the API is event driven and you need to understand it otherwise you might experience possible data races (i.e loosing events leading to corrupted data).

Note
Vert.x Web Client is a higher level API alternative (in fact it is built on top of this client) you might consider if this client is too low level for your use cases

The client API intentionally does not return a Future<HttpClientResponse> because setting a completion handler on the future can be racy when this is set outside of the event-loop.

Future<HttpClientResponse> get = client.get("some-uri");

// Assuming we have a client that returns a future response
// assuging this is *not* on the event-loop
// introduce a potential data race for the sake of this example
Thread.sleep(100);

get.onSuccess(response -> {

  // Response events might have happen already
  response.body(ar -> {

  });
});

Confining the HttpClientRequest usage within a verticle is the easiest solution as the Verticle will ensure that events are processed sequentially avoiding races.

vertx.deployVerticle(() -> new AbstractVerticle() {
 @Override
 public void start() {

   HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient();

   Future<HttpClientRequest> future = client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri");
 }
}, new DeploymentOptions());

When you interacting with the client possibly outside a verticle then you you can safely perform composition as long as you do not delay the response events, e.g processing directly the response on the event-loop.

Future<JsonObject> future = client
  .request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri")
  .compose(request -> request
    .send()
    .compose(response -> {
      // Process the response on the event-loop which guarantees no races
      if (response.statusCode() == 200 &&
          response.getHeader(HttpHeaders.CONTENT_TYPE).equals("application/json")) {
        return response
          .body()
          .map(buffer -> buffer.toJsonObject());
      } else {
        return Future.failedFuture("Incorrect HTTP response");
      }
    }));

// Listen to the composed final json result
future.onSuccess(json -> {
  System.out.println("Received json result " + json);
}).onFailure(err -> {
  System.out.println("Something went wrong " + err.getMessage());
});

If you need to delay the response processing then you need to pause the response or use a pipe, this might be necessary when another asynchronous operation is involved.

Future<Void> future = client
  .request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri")
  .compose(request -> request
    .send()
    .compose(response -> {
      // Process the response on the event-loop which guarantees no races
      if (response.statusCode() == 200) {

        // Create a pipe, this pauses the response
        Pipe<Buffer> pipe = response.pipe();

        // Write the file on the disk
        return fileSystem
          .open("/some/large/file", new OpenOptions().setWrite(true))
          .onFailure(err -> pipe.close())
          .compose(file -> pipe.to(file));
      } else {
        return Future.failedFuture("Incorrect HTTP response");
      }
    }));

Reading cookies from the response

You can retrieve the list of cookies from a response using cookies.

Alternatively you can just parse the Set-Cookie headers yourself in the response.

30x redirection handling

The client can be configured to follow HTTP redirections provided by the Location response header when the client receives:

  • a 301, 302, 307 or 308 status code along with a HTTP GET or HEAD method

  • a 303 status code, in addition the directed request perform an HTTP GET methodn

Here’s an example:

client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {

    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
    request.setFollowRedirects(true);
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      if (ar2.succeeded()) {

        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      }
    });
  }
});

The maximum redirects is 16 by default and can be changed with setMaxRedirects.

HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(
    new HttpClientOptions()
        .setMaxRedirects(32));

client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "some-uri", ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {

    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
    request.setFollowRedirects(true);
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      if (ar2.succeeded()) {

        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      }
    });
  }
});

One size does not fit all and the default redirection policy may not be adapted to your needs.

The default redirection policy can changed with a custom implementation:

client.redirectHandler(response -> {

  // Only follow 301 code
  if (response.statusCode() == 301 && response.getHeader("Location") != null) {

    // Compute the redirect URI
    String absoluteURI = resolveURI(response.request().absoluteURI(), response.getHeader("Location"));

    // Create a new ready to use request that the client will use
    return Future.succeededFuture(new RequestOptions().setAbsoluteURI(absoluteURI));
  }

  // We don't redirect
  return null;
});

The policy handles the original HttpClientResponse received and returns either null or a Future<HttpClientRequest>.

  • when null is returned, the original response is processed

  • when a future is returned, the request will be sent on its successful completion

  • when a future is returned, the exception handler set on the request is called on its failure

The returned request must be unsent so the original request handlers can be sent and the client can send it after.

Most of the original request settings will be propagated to the new request:

  • request headers, unless if you have set some headers

  • request body unless the returned request uses a GET method

  • response handler

  • request exception handler

  • request timeout

100-Continue handling

According to the HTTP 1.1 specification a client can set a header Expect: 100-Continue and send the request header before sending the rest of the request body.

The server can then respond with an interim response status Status: 100 (Continue) to signify to the client that it is ok to send the rest of the body.

The idea here is it allows the server to authorise and accept/reject the request before large amounts of data are sent. Sending large amounts of data if the request might not be accepted is a waste of bandwidth and ties up the server in reading data that it will just discard.

Vert.x allows you to set a continueHandler on the client request object

This will be called if the server sends back a Status: 100 (Continue) response to signify that it is ok to send the rest of the request.

This is used in conjunction with `sendHead`to send the head of the request.

Here’s an example:

client.request(HttpMethod.PUT, "some-uri")
  .onSuccess(request -> {
    request.onSuccess(response -> {
      System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
    });

    request.putHeader("Expect", "100-Continue");

    request.continueHandler(v -> {
      // OK to send rest of body
      request.write("Some data");
      request.write("Some more data");
      request.end();
    });

    request.sendHead();
});

On the server side a Vert.x http server can be configured to automatically send back 100 Continue interim responses when it receives an Expect: 100-Continue header.

This is done by setting the option setHandle100ContinueAutomatically.

If you’d prefer to decide whether to send back continue responses manually, then this property should be set to false (the default), then you can inspect the headers and call writeContinue to have the client continue sending the body:

httpServer.requestHandler(request -> {
  if (request.getHeader("Expect").equalsIgnoreCase("100-Continue")) {

    // Send a 100 continue response
    request.response().writeContinue();

    // The client should send the body when it receives the 100 response
    request.bodyHandler(body -> {
      // Do something with body
    });

    request.endHandler(v -> {
      request.response().end();
    });
  }
});

You can also reject the request by sending back a failure status code directly: in this case the body should either be ignored or the connection should be closed (100-Continue is a performance hint and cannot be a logical protocol constraint):

httpServer.requestHandler(request -> {
  if (request.getHeader("Expect").equalsIgnoreCase("100-Continue")) {

    //
    boolean rejectAndClose = true;
    if (rejectAndClose) {

      // Reject with a failure code and close the connection
      // this is probably best with persistent connection
      request.response()
          .setStatusCode(405)
          .putHeader("Connection", "close")
          .end();
    } else {

      // Reject with a failure code and ignore the body
      // this may be appropriate if the body is small
      request.response()
          .setStatusCode(405)
          .end();
    }
  }
});

Creating HTTP tunnels

HTTP tunnels can be created with connect:

client.request(HttpMethod.CONNECT, "some-uri")
  .onSuccess(request -> {

    // Connect to the server
    request.connect(ar -> {
      if (ar.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar.result();

        if (response.statusCode() != 200) {
          // Connect failed for some reason
        } else {
          // Tunnel created, raw buffers are transmitted on the wire
          NetSocket socket = response.netSocket();
        }
      }
    });
});

The handler will be called after the HTTP response header is received, the socket will be ready for tunneling and will send and receive buffers.

connect works like send, but it reconfigures the transport to exchange raw buffers.

Client push

Server push is a new feature of HTTP/2 that enables sending multiple responses in parallel for a single client request.

A push handler can be set on a request to receive the request/response pushed by the server:

client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "/index.html")
  .onSuccess(request -> {

    request
      .onComplete(response -> {
        // Process index.html response
      });

    // Set a push handler to be aware of any resource pushed by the server
    request.pushHandler(pushedRequest -> {

      // A resource is pushed for this request
      System.out.println("Server pushed " + pushedRequest.path());

      // Set an handler for the response
      pushedRequest.onComplete(pushedResponse -> {
        System.out.println("The response for the pushed request");
      });
    });

    // End the request
    request.end();
});

If the client does not want to receive a pushed request, it can reset the stream:

request.pushHandler(pushedRequest -> {
  if (pushedRequest.path().equals("/main.js")) {
    pushedRequest.reset();
  } else {
    // Handle it
  }
});

When no handler is set, any stream pushed will be automatically cancelled by the client with a stream reset (8 error code).

Receiving custom HTTP/2 frames

HTTP/2 is a framed protocol with various frames for the HTTP request/response model. The protocol allows other kind of frames to be sent and received.

To receive custom frames, you can use the customFrameHandler on the request, this will get called every time a custom frame arrives. Here’s an example:

response.customFrameHandler(frame -> {

  System.out.println("Received a frame type=" + frame.type() +
      " payload" + frame.payload().toString());
});

Enabling compression on the client

The http client comes with support for HTTP Compression out of the box.

This means the client can let the remote http server know that it supports compression, and will be able to handle compressed response bodies.

An http server is free to either compress with one of the supported compression algorithms or to send the body back without compressing it at all. So this is only a hint for the Http server which it may ignore at will.

To tell the http server which compression is supported by the client it will include an Accept-Encoding header with the supported compression algorithm as value. Multiple compression algorithms are supported. In case of Vert.x this will result in the following header added:

Accept-Encoding: gzip, deflate

The server will choose then from one of these. You can detect if a server ompressed the body by checking for the Content-Encoding header in the response sent back from it.

If the body of the response was compressed via gzip it will include for example the following header:

Content-Encoding: gzip

To enable compression set setTryUseCompression on the options used when creating the client.

By default compression is disabled.

HTTP/1.x pooling and keep alive

Http keep alive allows http connections to be used for more than one request. This can be a more efficient use of connections when you’re making multiple requests to the same server.

For HTTP/1.x versions, the http client supports pooling of connections, allowing you to reuse connections between requests.

For pooling to work, keep alive must be true using setKeepAlive on the options used when configuring the client. The default value is true.

When keep alive is enabled. Vert.x will add a Connection: Keep-Alive header to each HTTP/1.0 request sent. When keep alive is disabled. Vert.x will add a Connection: Close header to each HTTP/1.1 request sent to signal that the connection will be closed after completion of the response.

The maximum number of connections to pool for each server is configured using setMaxPoolSize

When making a request with pooling enabled, Vert.x will create a new connection if there are less than the maximum number of connections already created for that server, otherwise it will add the request to a queue.

Keep alive connections will be closed by the client automatically after a timeout. The timeout can be specified by the server using the keep-alive header:

keep-alive: timeout=30

You can set the default timeout using setKeepAliveTimeout - any connections not used within this timeout will be closed. Please note the timeout value is in seconds not milliseconds.

HTTP/1.1 pipe-lining

The client also supports pipe-lining of requests on a connection.

Pipe-lining means another request is sent on the same connection before the response from the preceding one has returned. Pipe-lining is not appropriate for all requests.

To enable pipe-lining, it must be enabled using setPipelining. By default pipe-lining is disabled.

When pipe-lining is enabled requests will be written to connections without waiting for previous responses to return.

The number of pipe-lined requests over a single connection is limited by setPipeliningLimit. This option defines the maximum number of http requests sent to the server awaiting for a response. This limit ensures the fairness of the distribution of the client requests over the connections to the same server.

HTTP/2 multiplexing

HTTP/2 advocates to use a single connection to a server, by default the http client uses a single connection for each server, all the streams to the same server are multiplexed over the same connection.

When the clients needs to use more than a single connection and use pooling, the setHttp2MaxPoolSize shall be used.

When it is desirable to limit the number of multiplexed streams per connection and use a connection pool instead of a single connection, setHttp2MultiplexingLimit can be used.

HttpClientOptions clientOptions = new HttpClientOptions().
    setHttp2MultiplexingLimit(10).
    setHttp2MaxPoolSize(3);

// Uses up to 3 connections and up to 10 streams per connection
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(clientOptions);

The multiplexing limit for a connection is a setting set on the client that limits the number of streams of a single connection. The effective value can be even lower if the server sets a lower limit with the SETTINGS_MAX_CONCURRENT_STREAMS setting.

HTTP/2 connections will not be closed by the client automatically. To close them you can call close or close the client instance.

Alternatively you can set idle timeout using setIdleTimeout - any connections not used within this timeout will be closed. Please note the idle timeout value is in seconds not milliseconds.

HTTP connections

The HttpConnection offers the API for dealing with HTTP connection events, lifecycle and settings.

HTTP/2 implements fully the HttpConnection API.

HTTP/1.x implements partially the HttpConnection API: only the close operation, the close handler and exception handler are implemented. This protocol does not provide semantics for the other operations.

Server connections

The connection method returns the request connection on the server:

HttpConnection connection = request.connection();

A connection handler can be set on the server to be notified of any incoming connection:

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(http2Options);

server.connectionHandler(connection -> {
  System.out.println("A client connected");
});

Client connections

The connection method returns the request connection on the client:

HttpConnection connection = request.connection();

A connection handler can be set on the client to be notified when a connection has been established happens:

client.connectionHandler(connection -> {
  System.out.println("Connected to the server");
});

Connection settings

The configuration of an HTTP/2 is configured by the Http2Settings data object.

Each endpoint must respect the settings sent by the other side of the connection.

When a connection is established, the client and the server exchange initial settings. Initial settings are configured by setInitialSettings on the client and setInitialSettings on the server.

The settings can be changed at any time after the connection is established:

connection.updateSettings(new Http2Settings().setMaxConcurrentStreams(100));

As the remote side should acknowledge on reception of the settings update, it’s possible to give a callback to be notified of the acknowledgment:

connection.updateSettings(new Http2Settings().setMaxConcurrentStreams(100), ar -> {
  if (ar.succeeded()) {
    System.out.println("The settings update has been acknowledged ");
  }
});

Conversely the remoteSettingsHandler is notified when the new remote settings are received:

connection.remoteSettingsHandler(settings -> {
  System.out.println("Received new settings");
});
Note
this only applies to the HTTP/2 protocol

Connection ping

HTTP/2 connection ping is useful for determining the connection round-trip time or check the connection validity: ping sends a {@literal PING} frame to the remote endpoint:

Buffer data = Buffer.buffer();
for (byte i = 0;i < 8;i++) {
  data.appendByte(i);
}
connection.ping(data, pong -> {
  System.out.println("Remote side replied");
});

Vert.x will send automatically an acknowledgement when a {@literal PING} frame is received, an handler can be set to be notified for each ping received:

connection.pingHandler(ping -> {
  System.out.println("Got pinged by remote side");
});

The handler is just notified, the acknowledgement is sent whatsoever. Such feature is aimed for implementing protocols on top of HTTP/2.

Note
this only applies to the HTTP/2 protocol

Connection shutdown and go away

Calling shutdown will send a {@literal GOAWAY} frame to the remote side of the connection, asking it to stop creating streams: a client will stop doing new requests and a server will stop pushing responses. After the {@literal GOAWAY} frame is sent, the connection waits some time (30 seconds by default) until all current streams closed and close the connection:

connection.shutdown();

The shutdownHandler notifies when all streams have been closed, the connection is not yet closed.

It’s possible to just send a {@literal GOAWAY} frame, the main difference with a shutdown is that it will just tell the remote side of the connection to stop creating new streams without scheduling a connection close:

connection.goAway(0);

Conversely, it is also possible to be notified when {@literal GOAWAY} are received:

connection.goAwayHandler(goAway -> {
  System.out.println("Received a go away frame");
});

The shutdownHandler will be called when all current streams have been closed and the connection can be closed:

connection.goAway(0);
connection.shutdownHandler(v -> {

  // All streams are closed, close the connection
  connection.close();
});

This applies also when a {@literal GOAWAY} is received.

Note
this only applies to the HTTP/2 protocol

Connection close

Connection close closes the connection:

  • it closes the socket for HTTP/1.x

  • a shutdown with no delay for HTTP/2, the {@literal GOAWAY} frame will still be sent before the connection is closed. *

The closeHandler notifies when a connection is closed.

HttpClient usage

The HttpClient can be used in a Verticle or embedded.

When used in a Verticle, the Verticle should use its own client instance.

More generally a client should not be shared between different Vert.x contexts as it can lead to unexpected behavior.

For example a keep-alive connection will call the client handlers on the context of the request that opened the connection, subsequent requests will use the same context.

When this happen Vert.x detects it and log a warn:

Reusing a connection with a different context: an HttpClient is probably shared between different Verticles

The HttpClient can be embedded in a non Vert.x thread like a unit test or a plain java main: the client handlers will be called by different Vert.x threads and contexts, such contexts are created as needed. For production this usage is not recommended.

Server sharing

When several HTTP servers listen on the same port, vert.x orchestrates the request handling using a round-robin strategy.

Let’s take a verticle creating a HTTP server such as:

io.vertx.examples.http.sharing.HttpServerVerticle
vertx.createHttpServer().requestHandler(request -> {
  request.response().end("Hello from server " + this);
}).listen(8080);

This service is listening on the port 8080. So, when this verticle is instantiated multiple times as with: vertx run io.vertx.examples.http.sharing.HttpServerVerticle -instances 2, what’s happening ? If both verticles would bind to the same port, you would receive a socket exception. Fortunately, vert.x is handling this case for you. When you deploy another server on the same host and port as an existing server it doesn’t actually try and create a new server listening on the same host/port. It binds only once to the socket. When receiving a request it calls the server handlers following a round robin strategy.

Let’s now imagine a client such as:

vertx.setPeriodic(100, (l) -> {
  vertx.createHttpClient().request(HttpMethod.GET, 8080, "localhost", "/", ar1 -> {
    if (ar1.succeeded()) {
      HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
      request.send(ar2 -> {
        if (ar2.succeeded()) {
          HttpClientResponse resp = ar2.result();
          resp.bodyHandler(body -> {
            System.out.println(body.toString("ISO-8859-1"));
          });
        }
      });
    }
  });
});

Vert.x delegates the requests to one of the server sequentially:

Hello from i.v.e.h.s.HttpServerVerticle@1
Hello from i.v.e.h.s.HttpServerVerticle@2
Hello from i.v.e.h.s.HttpServerVerticle@1
Hello from i.v.e.h.s.HttpServerVerticle@2
...

Consequently the servers can scale over available cores while each Vert.x verticle instance remains strictly single threaded, and you don’t have to do any special tricks like writing load-balancers in order to scale your server on your multi-core machine.

Using HTTPS with Vert.x

Vert.x http servers and clients can be configured to use HTTPS in exactly the same way as net servers.

Please see configuring net servers to use SSL for more information.

SSL can also be enabled/disabled per request with RequestOptions or when specifying a scheme with setAbsoluteURI method.

client.request(new RequestOptions()
    .setHost("localhost")
    .setPort(8080)
    .setURI("/")
    .setSsl(true), ar1 -> {
  if (ar1.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar1.result();
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      if (ar2.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      }
    });
  }
});

The setSsl setting acts as the default client setting.

The setSsl overrides the default client setting

  • setting the value to false will disable SSL/TLS even if the client is configured to use SSL/TLS

  • setting the value to true will enable SSL/TLS even if the client is configured to not use SSL/TLS, the actual client SSL/TLS (such as trust, key/certificate, ciphers, ALPN, …​) will be reused

Likewise setAbsoluteURI scheme also overrides the default client setting.

Server Name Indication (SNI)

Vert.x http servers can be configured to use SNI in exactly the same way as {@linkplain io.vertx.core.net net servers}.

Vert.x http client will present the actual hostname as server name during the TLS handshake.

WebSockets

WebSockets are a web technology that allows a full duplex socket-like connection between HTTP servers and HTTP clients (typically browsers).

Vert.x supports WebSockets on both the client and server-side.

WebSockets on the server

There are two ways of handling WebSockets on the server side.

WebSocket handler

The first way involves providing a webSocketHandler on the server instance.

When a WebSocket connection is made to the server, the handler will be called, passing in an instance of ServerWebSocket.

server.webSocketHandler(webSocket -> {
  System.out.println("Connected!");
});

You can choose to reject the WebSocket by calling reject.

server.webSocketHandler(webSocket -> {
  if (webSocket.path().equals("/myapi")) {
    webSocket.reject();
  } else {
    // Do something
  }
});

You can perform an asynchronous handshake by calling setHandshake with a Future:

server.webSocketHandler(webSocket -> {
  Promise<Integer> promise = Promise.promise();
  webSocket.setHandshake(promise.future());
  authenticate(webSocket.headers(), ar -> {
    if (ar.succeeded()) {
      // Terminate the handshake with the status code 101 (Switching Protocol)
      // Reject the handshake with 401 (Unauthorized)
      promise.complete(ar.succeeded() ? 101 : 401);
    } else {
      // Will send a 500 error
      promise.fail(ar.cause());
    }
  });
});
Note
the WebSocket will be automatically accepted after the handler is called unless the WebSocket’s handshake has been set
Upgrading to WebSocket

The second way of handling WebSockets is to handle the HTTP Upgrade request that was sent from the client, and call toWebSocket on the server request.

server.requestHandler(request -> {
  if (request.path().equals("/myapi")) {

    Future<ServerWebSocket> fut = request.toWebSocket();
    fut.onSuccess(ws -> {
      // Do something
    });

  } else {
    // Reject
    request.response().setStatusCode(400).end();
  }
});
The server WebSocket

The ServerWebSocket instance enables you to retrieve the headers, path, query and URI of the HTTP request of the WebSocket handshake.

WebSockets on the client

The Vert.x HttpClient supports WebSockets.

You can connect a WebSocket to a server using one of the webSocket operations and providing a handler.

The handler will be called with an instance of WebSocket when the connection has been made:

client.webSocket("/some-uri", res -> {
  if (res.succeeded()) {
    WebSocket ws = res.result();
    System.out.println("Connected!");
  }
});

Writing messages to WebSockets

If you wish to write a single WebSocket message to the WebSocket you can do this with writeBinaryMessage or writeTextMessage :

Buffer buffer = Buffer.buffer().appendInt(123).appendFloat(1.23f);
webSocket.writeBinaryMessage(buffer);

// Write a simple text message
String message = "hello";
webSocket.writeTextMessage(message);

If the WebSocket message is larger than the maximum WebSocket frame size as configured with setMaxWebSocketFrameSize then Vert.x will split it into multiple WebSocket frames before sending it on the wire.

Writing frames to WebSockets

A WebSocket message can be composed of multiple frames. In this case the first frame is either a binary or text frame followed by zero or more continuation frames.

The last frame in the message is marked as final.

To send a message consisting of multiple frames you create frames using WebSocketFrame.binaryFrame , WebSocketFrame.textFrame or WebSocketFrame.continuationFrame and write them to the WebSocket using writeFrame.

Here’s an example for binary frames:

WebSocketFrame frame1 = WebSocketFrame.binaryFrame(buffer1, false);
webSocket.writeFrame(frame1);

WebSocketFrame frame2 = WebSocketFrame.continuationFrame(buffer2, false);
webSocket.writeFrame(frame2);

// Write the final frame
WebSocketFrame frame3 = WebSocketFrame.continuationFrame(buffer2, true);
webSocket.writeFrame(frame3);

In many cases you just want to send a WebSocket message that consists of a single final frame, so we provide a couple of shortcut methods to do that with writeFinalBinaryFrame and writeFinalTextFrame.

Here’s an example:

webSocket.writeFinalTextFrame("Geronimo!");

// Send a WebSocket message consisting of a single final binary frame:

Buffer buff = Buffer.buffer().appendInt(12).appendString("foo");

webSocket.writeFinalBinaryFrame(buff);

Reading frames from WebSockets

To read frames from a WebSocket you use the frameHandler.

The frame handler will be called with instances of WebSocketFrame when a frame arrives, for example:

webSocket.frameHandler(frame -> {
  System.out.println("Received a frame of size!");
});

Closing WebSockets

Use close to close the WebSocket connection when you have finished with it.

Piping WebSockets

The WebSocket instance is also a ReadStream and a WriteStream so it can be used with pipes.

When using a WebSocket as a write stream or a read stream it can only be used with WebSockets connections that are used with binary frames that are no split over multiple frames.

Event bus handlers

Every WebSocket automatically registers two handler on the event bus, and when any data are received in this handler, it writes them to itself. Those are local subscriptions not routed on the cluster.

This enables you to write data to a WebSocket which is potentially in a completely different verticle sending data to the address of that handler.

The addresses of the handlers are given by binaryHandlerID and textHandlerID.

Using a proxy for HTTP/HTTPS connections

The http client supports accessing http/https URLs via a HTTP proxy (e.g. Squid) or SOCKS4a or SOCKS5 proxy. The CONNECT protocol uses HTTP/1.x but can connect to HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2 servers.

Connecting to h2c (unencrypted HTTP/2 servers) is likely not supported by http proxies since they will support HTTP/1.1 only.

The proxy can be configured in the HttpClientOptions by setting a ProxyOptions object containing proxy type, hostname, port and optionally username and password.

Here’s an example of using an HTTP proxy:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions()
    .setProxyOptions(new ProxyOptions().setType(ProxyType.HTTP)
        .setHost("localhost").setPort(3128)
        .setUsername("username").setPassword("secret"));
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

When the client connects to an http URL, it connects to the proxy server and provides the full URL in the HTTP request ("GET http://www.somehost.com/path/file.html HTTP/1.1").

When the client connects to an https URL, it asks the proxy to create a tunnel to the remote host with the CONNECT method.

For a SOCKS5 proxy:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions()
    .setProxyOptions(new ProxyOptions().setType(ProxyType.SOCKS5)
        .setHost("localhost").setPort(1080)
        .setUsername("username").setPassword("secret"));
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);

The DNS resolution is always done on the proxy server, to achieve the functionality of a SOCKS4 client, it is necessary to resolve the DNS address locally.

Handling of other protocols

The HTTP proxy implementation supports getting ftp:// urls if the proxy supports that.

When the HTTP request URI contains contains the full URL then the client will not compute a full HTTP url and instead use the full URL specified in the request URI:

HttpClientOptions options = new HttpClientOptions()
    .setProxyOptions(new ProxyOptions().setType(ProxyType.HTTP));
HttpClient client = vertx.createHttpClient(options);
client.request(HttpMethod.GET, "ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/", ar -> {
  if (ar.succeeded()) {
    HttpClientRequest request = ar.result();
    request.send(ar2 -> {
      if (ar2.succeeded()) {
        HttpClientResponse response = ar2.result();
        System.out.println("Received response with status code " + response.statusCode());
      }
    });
  }
});

Using HA PROXY protocol

HA PROXY protocol provides a convenient way to safely transport connection information such as a client’s address across multiple layers of NAT or TCP proxies.

HA PROXY protocol can be enabled by setting the option setUseProxyProtocol and adding the following dependency in your classpath:

<dependency>
 <groupId>io.netty</groupId>
 <artifactId>netty-codec-haproxy</artifactId>
 <!--<version>Should align with netty version that Vert.x uses</version>-->
</dependency>
HttpServerOptions options = new HttpServerOptions()
  .setUseProxyProtocol(true);

HttpServer server = vertx.createHttpServer(options);
server.requestHandler(request -> {
  // Print the actual client address provided by the HA proxy protocol instead of the proxy address
  System.out.println(request.remoteAddress());

  // Print the address of the proxy
  System.out.println(request.localAddress());
});

Automatic clean-up in verticles

If you’re creating http servers and clients from inside verticles, those servers and clients will be automatically closed when the verticle is undeployed.