| Interface | Description | 
|---|---|
| AsyncInvoker | Uniform interface for asynchronous invocation of HTTP methods. | 
| Client | Client is the main entry point to the fluent API used to build and execute client
 requests in order to consume responses returned. | 
| ClientRequestContext | Client request filter context. | 
| ClientRequestFilter | An extension interface implemented by client request filters. | 
| ClientResponseContext | Client response filter context. | 
| ClientResponseFilter | An extension interface implemented by client response filters. | 
| Invocation | A client request invocation. | 
| Invocation.Builder | A client request invocation builder. | 
| InvocationCallback<RESPONSE> | Callback that can be implemented to receive the asynchronous processing
 events from the invocation processing. | 
| SyncInvoker | Uniform interface for synchronous invocation of HTTP methods. | 
| WebTarget | A resource target identified by the resource URI. | 
| Class | Description | 
|---|---|
| ClientBuilder | Main entry point to the client API used to bootstrap  Clientinstances. | 
| Entity<T> | Encapsulates message entity including the associated variant information. | 
| Exception | Description | 
|---|---|
| ResponseProcessingException | JAX-RS client-side runtime processing exception thrown to indicate that
 response processing has failed (e.g. | 
plain HTTP communication API as well as integration with the JAX-RS extension
 providers, in order to enable concise and efficient implementation of
 reusable client-side solutions that leverage existing and well
 established client-side implementations of HTTP-based communication.
 
 The JAX-RS Client API encapsulates the Uniform Interface Constraint –
 a key constraint of the REST architectural style – and associated data
 elements as client-side Java artifacts and supports a pluggable architecture
 by defining multiple extension points.
 ClientBuilder
 that is used to bootstrap Client instances -
 configurable, heavy-weight objects
 that manage the underlying communication infrastructure and serve as the root
 objects for accessing any Web resource. The following example illustrates the
 bootstrapping and configuration of a Client instance:
 
   Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient();
   client.property("MyProperty", "MyValue")
         .register(MyProvider.class)
         .register(MyFeature.class);
 
 text/plain representation of the resource identified by
 "http://example.org/hello":
 
   Client client = ClientBuilder.newClient();
   Response res = client.target("http://example.org/hello").request("text/plain").get();
 
 Conceptually, the steps required to submit a request are the following:
 Client instanceWebTarget pointing at a Web resourcebuild a requestInvocation for later submissionWebTarget instance is bound to a
 concrete URI, e.g. "http://example.org/messages/123",
 or a URI template, e.g. "http://example.org/messages/{id}".
 That way a single target can either point at a particular resource or represent
 a larger group of resources (that e.g. share a common configuration) from which
 concrete resources can be later derived:
 
   // Parent target for all messages
   WebTarget messages = client.target("http://example.org/messages/{id}");
   // New target for http://example.org/messages/123
   WebTarget msg123 = messages.resolveTemplate("id", 123);
   // New target for http://example.org/messages/456
   WebTarget msg456 = messages.resolveTemplate("id", 456);
 
Invocation is a request that has been prepared
 and is ready for execution.
 Invocations provide a generic interface that enables a separation of concerns
 between the creator and the submitter. In particular, the submitter does not
 need to know how the invocation was prepared, but only whether it should be
 executed synchronously or asynchronously.
 
   Invocation inv1 = client.target("http://example.org/atm/balance")
       .queryParam("card", "111122223333").queryParam("pin", "9876")
       .request("text/plain").buildGet();
   Invocation inv2 = client.target("http://example.org/atm/withdrawal")
       .queryParam("card", "111122223333").queryParam("pin", "9876")
       .request().buildPost(text("50.0")));
   Collection invs = Arrays.asList(inv1, inv2);
   // Executed by the submitter
   Collection ress = Collections.transform(invs, new F() {
      public Response apply(Invocation inv) {return inv.invoke(); }
   });
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