The Jetty runtime is used by HTTP service providers and HTTP consumers using a decoupled endpoint. The runtime's thread pool can be configured, and you can also set a number of the security settings for an HTTP service provider through the Jetty runtime.
The elements used to configure the Jetty runtime are defined in the namespace http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http-jetty/configuration
. It is commonly referred to using the prefix httpj
. In order to use the Jetty configuration elements you must add the lines shown in Example 8.14 to the beans
element of your endpoint's configuration file. In addition, you must add the configuration elements' namespace to the xsi:schemaLocation
attribute.
Example 8.14. Jetty Runtime Configuration Namespace
<beans ... xmlns:httpj="http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http-jetty/configuration" ... xsi:schemaLocation="... http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http-jetty/configuration http://cxf.apache.org/schemas/configuration/http-jetty.xsd ...">
The httpj:engine-factory
element is the root element used to configure the Jetty runtime used by an application. It has a single required attribute, bus
, whose value is the name of the Bus
that manages the Jetty instances being configured.
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The value is typically |
The httpj:engine-factory
element has three children that contain the information used to configure the HTTP ports instantiated by the Jetty runtime factory. The children are described in Table 8.7.
Table 8.7. Elements for Configuring a Jetty Runtime Factory
Element | Description |
---|---|
httpj:engine
|
Specifies the configuration for a particular Jetty runtime instance. See The |
httpj:identifiedTLSServerParameters
|
Specifies a reusable set of properties for securing an HTTP service provider. It has a single attribute, |
httpj:identifiedThreadingParameters
|
Specifies a reusable set of properties for controlling a Jetty instance's thread pool. It has a single attribute, |
The httpj:engine
element is used to configure specific instances of the Jetty runtime. It has a single attribute, port
, that specifies the number of the port being managed by the Jetty instance.
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You can specify a value of |
Each httpj:engine
element can have two children: one for configuring security properties and one for configuring the Jetty instance's thread pool. For each type of configuration you can either directly provide the configuration information or you can provide a reference to a set of configuration properties defined in the parent httpj:engine-factory
element.
The child elements used to provide the configuration properties are described in Table 8.8.
Table 8.8. Elements for Configuring a Jetty Runtime Instance
Element | Description |
---|---|
httpj:tlsServerParameters
|
Specifies a set of properties for configuring the security used for the specific Jetty instance. |
httpj:tlsServerParametersRef
|
Refers to a set of security properties defined by a |
httpj:threadingParameters
|
Specifies the size of the thread pool used by the specific Jetty instance. See Configuring the thread pool. |
httpj:threadingParametersRef
|
Refers to a set of properties defined by a |
You can configure the size of a Jetty instance's thread pool by either:
Specifying the size of the thread pool using a
identifiedThreadingParameters
element in theengine-factory
element. You then refer to the element using athreadingParametersRef
element.Specifying the size of the of the thread pool directly using a
threadingParameters
element.
The threadingParameters
has two attributes to specify the size of a thread pool. The attributes are described in Table 8.9.
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The |
Example 8.15 shows a configuration fragment that configures a Jetty instance on port number 9001.
Example 8.15. Configuring a Jetty Instance
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:sec="http://cxf.apache.org/configuration/security" xmlns:http="http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http/configuration" xmlns:httpj="http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http-jetty/configuration" xmlns:jaxws="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/jaxws" xsi:schemaLocation="http://cxf.apache.org/configuration/security http://cxf.apache.org/schemas/configuration/security.xsd http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http/configuration http://cxf.apache.org/schemas/configuration/http-conf.xsd http://cxf.apache.org/transports/http-jetty/configuration http://cxf.apache.org/schemas/configuration/http-jetty.xsd http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-2.0.xsd"> ... <httpj:engine-factory bus="cxf"> <httpj:identifiedTLSServerParameters id="secure"> <sec:keyManagers keyPassword="password"> <sec:keyStore type="JKS" password="password" file="certs/cherry.jks"/> </sec:keyManagers> </httpj:identifiedTLSServerParameters> <httpj:engine port="9001"> <httpj:tlsServerParametersRef id="secure" /> <httpj:threadingParameters minThreads="5" maxThreads="15" /> </httpj:engine> </httpj:engine-factory> </beans>