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ring-jetty9-adapter (rj9a)

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Ring adapter for Jetty 10 (although named as jetty9), with HTTP/2, WebSocket and experimental HTTP/3 support.

This is a simple and plain wrapper on modern Jetty versions. It doesn't introduce additional thread model or anything else (no unofficial ring variance, no core.async). You are free to add those on top of our base API. This library can be used as a drop-in replacement of original ring-jetty-adapter.

As of Ring 1.6, the official Jetty adapter has been updated to Jetty 9.2. However, rj9a tracks most recent Jetty release and offers additional features like http/2, http/3 and websocket.

JDK 8 support was dropped in Jetty 10 and above. To use JDK 8 and Jetty 9, please use to 0.14.3 of this library.

Usage

Leiningen

latest version on clojars

Code

In the REPL:

(require '[ring.adapter.jetty9 :refer [run-jetty]])
(run-jetty app {:port 50505}) ;; same as the 'official' adapter

In ns declaration:

(ns my.server
  (:require [ring.adapter.jetty9 :refer [run-jetty]]))

Ring 1.6 async handler

(require '[ring.adapter.jetty9 :refer [run-jetty]])

(defn app [request send-response raise-error]
  (send-response {:body "It works!"}))
(run-jetty app {:port 50505 :async? true})

HTTP/2

To enable HTTP/2 on cleartext and secure transport, you can simply add options to run-jetty like:

(jetty/run-jetty dummy-app {:port 5000
                            :h2c? true  ;; enable cleartext http/2
                            :h2? true   ;; enable http/2
                            :ssl? true  ;; ssl is required for http/2
                            :ssl-port 5443
                            :keystore "dev-resources/keystore.jks"
                            :key-password "111111"
                            :keystore-type "jks"})

ALPN dependency is required for secure HTTP/2 transport. For rj9a version 0.17.1 and newer, org.eclipse.jetty/jetty-alpn-java-server is included by default.

For rj9a versions prior to 0.17, you will need additional dependency to enable ALPN. Add following dependencies according to the jdk version you use.

  • For JDK 11 and above, add [org.eclipse.jetty/jetty-alpn-java-server ~jetty-version]
  • For OpenJDK 8u252 and above, add [org.eclipse.jetty/jetty-alpn-openjdk8-server ~jetty-version]
  • For OpenJDK 8 prior to update 252, please check example-http2-legacy profile in project.clj for boot-classpath configuration
  • For any version of JDK users, conscrypt implementation is supported by adding [org.eclipse.jetty/jetty-alpn-conscrypt-server ~jetty-version] but it's not recommended for now because of memory leak issue

Note your will need to replace ~jetty-version with corresponding jetty version that your version of rj9a uses.

HTTP/3

From 10.0.9, Jetty ships an expiremental HTTP/3 implementation based on the quiche library. rj9a 0.17.6 made it an optional feature. To enable HTTP/3 support, you will need to:

  • Install libquiche on your system and make sure libquiche.so can be loaded from the Clojure(Java) application. I've created a docker image with compiled quiche library and JDK ready for use.
  • In addition to rj9a, add dependency [info.sunng/ring-jetty9-adapter-http3 "0.1.0"] to your clojure project to bring in HTTP/3 staff.
  • Provide certficate and key just like HTTPs setup because HTTP/3 is secure by default. There is no plaintext fallback for now.
  • Provide option :http3? true to run-jetty to enable HTTP/3 protocol.
(jetty/run-jetty dummy-app {:port 5000  ;; default clear-text http/1.1 port
                            :http3 true  ;; enable http/3 support
                            :ssl-port 5443 ;; ssl-port is used by http/3
                            :keystore "dev-resources/keystore.jks"
                            :key-password "111111"
                            :keystore-type "jks"})

Since HTTP/3 runs on UDP, it is possible to share the same port with TCP based protocol like HTTP/2 or 1.1.

An example is available in examples folder.

WebSocket

You can define following handlers for websocket events.

(def ws-handler {:on-connect (fn [ws])
                 :on-error (fn [ws e])
                 :on-close (fn [ws status-code reason])
                 :on-text (fn [ws text-message])
                 :on-bytes (fn [ws bytes offset len])
                 :on-ping (fn [ws bytebuffer])
                 :on-pong (fn [ws bytebuffer])})

WebSocketProtocol allows you to read and write data on the ws value:

  • (send! ws msg)
  • (send! ws msg callback)
  • (ping! ws)
  • (ping! ws msg)
  • (close! ws)
  • (remote-addr ws)
  • (idle-timeout! ws timeout)

Notice that we support different type of msg:

  • byte[] and ByteBuffer: send binary websocket message
  • String and other Object: send text websocket message
  • (fn [ws]) (clojure function): Custom function you can operate on Jetty's RemoteEndpoint

A callback can also be specified for send!:

(send! ws msg {:write-failed (fn [throwable]) :write-success (fn [])})

A callback is a map where keys :write-failed and :write-success are optional.

In your ring app, detect a websocket handshake request and upgrade it with a websocket handler.

(require '[ring.adapter.jetty9 :as jetty])

(defn app [req]
  (if (jetty/ws-upgrade-request? req)
    (jetty/ws-upgrade-response ws-handler)))

(run-jetty app)

In the javascript:

// remember to add the trailing slash.
// Otherwise, jetty will return a 302 on websocket upgrade request,
// which is not supported by most browsers.
var ws = new WebSocket("ws://somehost/loc/");
ws.onopen = ....

If you want to omit the trailing slash from your URLs (and not receive a redirect from Jetty), you can start the server like:

(run-jetty app {:allow-null-path-info true})

Websocket Handshake

Sometimes you may have a negotiation with the websocket client on the handshake (upgrade request) phase. You can define a ring like function that returns the websocket handler, or raises an error. You may also select a subprotocol from (:websocket-subprotocol upgrade-request) and configure available (:websocket-extensions upgrade-request) via the websocket handler creator function. See websocket example for detail.

Examples

You can find examples in examples folder. To run example:

  • http: lein with-profile example-http run a very basic example of ring handler
  • async: lein with-profile example-async run ring 1.6 async handler example
  • http2 lein with-profile example-http2 run
  • http3 lein with-profile example-http3 run
  • websocket: lein with-profile example-websocket run

Contributors

License

Copyright © 2013-2022 Sun Ning

Distributed under the Eclipse Public License, the same as Clojure.

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Ning Sun, Sun Ning, Thomas Crowley, Daniel Fitzpatrick, Joe Littlejohn, Dmitri Sotnikov & Michael Klishin
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