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Java Web Server

A simple multi-threaded web server written in Java and implementing the HTTP/1.1 specification.

Build Status SonarQube Coverage Quality Gate

Features

  • Simple file serving
  • Configurable connection thread pooling
  • Keep-alive (persistent) connections
  • Extensible request handlers
  • Access and error logging
  • Automatic directory listings
  • Server info summary

Requirements

  • Java 8
  • Maven 3

Build

To build the project just run the Maven package goal:

mvn clean package

This will produce an executable JAR in the target directory.

Usage

Start the server:

java -jar target/java-webserver-1.0.0.jar

This will start the server using the default settings: a randomly assigned available port, a connection timeout of 10 seconds, up to 20 worker threads, and a document root at ./docroot.

With the server running you can browse the docroot by visiting http://localhost:<port>/ or see an overview of the current configuration at http://localhost:<port>/serverInfo.

You can configure the port, timeout, worker threads and other settings with the corresponding option. For example, to run the server on port 80 with a document root at /var/www/html you would use the following:

java -jar target/java-webserver-1.0.0.jar --port 80 --docroot /var/www/html

To display all the options and usage information:

java -jar target/java-webserver-1.0.0.jar --help

How it works

The server is designed to be extensible and easy to understand and use, and code is written to be expressive and well documented.

The operation of the server can be broken down into a few key components responsible for handling client connections, parsing requests, and generating responses. Besides these there are various utilities to facilitate these functions.

Handling client connections

The centre of connection handling is the WebServerExecutor, which maintains the main server socket bound to the port the server is running on. It continuously listens for new client connections and as soon as one is made it delegates it to a WebWorker. The WebWorkers are queued in a thread pool, to be executed as soon as a thread becomes available.

The WebServerExecutor is designed to do the minimal amount of work needed to delegate a request to a worker to maximise throughput.

Each WebWorker is "disposable" and is only responsible for a single client connection. In some cases the connection might only last for a single request-response cycle, or in the case of persistent or "keep-alive" connections (the default for HTTP/1.1) the worker may service any number of requests. The details of how workers decide how to respond to a request is explained further down.

Parsing requests and generating responses

Client connections are streamed through a RequestReader, which reads a stream of HTTP request data into Request objects for further processing.

To decide how to respond to a request WebWorkers rely on RequestHandlers, which are at the centre of defining the server's behaviour. Each handler indicates if it knows how to handle a given request, and if the handler agrees to handle a request it is then asked to provide a response. Since there could be any number of RequestHandlers registered, WebWorkers deal with handlers via the ResponseFactory, rather than talking to each handler directly.

For the sake of simplicity of the implementation, the default RequestHandlers are hand-defined in the application's "main" class (App). In a commercial scenario they would instead be configured via a configuration file, similar to how Apache HTTPD modules are configured.

After the the worker has generated a response, it streams it back to the client with the help of a ResponseWriter, which is essentially the reverse of RequestReader in that is writes Response to an output stream.

This design makes implementing new server behaviours very easy, since handlers need not be concerned about either the client connection lifecycle, or the logistics of reading or writing HTTP messages.

There are several out-of-the-box Response types for serving files (FileResponse), sending errors (ErrorResponse), redirects (RedirectResponse) and listing directory contents (DirectoryListingResponse). The Response uses a stream-based system for response bodies, which aid performance particularly when serving large files since they do not need to be read into memory and can instead be streamed directly to the client.

Application management

The entry point to the application is App, which handles the reading of CLI options and uses them to create a new WebServer instance. It also creates and configures the default RequestHandlers (see above for rationale).

Superficially, WebServer and WebServerExecutor may seem similar, however WebServer is actually the controller for WebServerExecutor, since listening for client connections is a blocking operation and WebServer and is designed to be non-blocking so consumers can easily start and stop individual servers without worrying spawning and managing the threads to run them in. Starting and stopping a new server is as simple as:

WebServer server = new WebServer(port, timeout, threads, handlers);
server.start();
// do something
server.stop();

Extending

The server handles requests by delegating them to various RequestHandlers, which are registered at startup time. The server behaviour can be readily extended by adding new handlers and registering them. For more information about how handlers are used see "How it works" above.

The handler specification is simple:

public interface RequestHandler {

	/**
	 * Checks if the handler is able to provide a response to a particular request.
	 *
	 * @param request the request to be handled.
	 * @return Returns true if the handler can provide a response to this request, or false if it cannot.
	 */
	boolean canHandle(Request request);

	/**
	 * Provides a response to a request.
	 *
	 * @param request the request to provide a response for
	 * @return Returns the response to the request.
	 */
	Response handle(Request request);
}

Implementations simply answer "yes" or "no" when asked if they know how to handle a particular request, then provide a response.

There are several out-the-box Response types like FileResponse, RedirectResponse and ErrorResponse, and it is straightforward to add others for more specific applications.

The handlers are registered in the main loop of App in order of priority (highest first).

Example

Let's create a new handler that will print the current server time when someone visits /time.

First, we'll create a new Response type that outputs the current time as plain text. We could use HttpResponse directly, but this way we can keep the code cleaner and easier to test.

import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.HttpStatus;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.HttpVersion;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.Response;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.headers.Headers;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.headers.HttpHeader;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.headers.HttpHeaders;

import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.time.LocalDateTime;
import java.time.format.DateTimeFormatter;

public class CurrentTimeResponse implements Response {

	private final String timeString;

	public CurrentTimeResponse() {
		// Convert the current time into a string
		DateTimeFormatter formatter = DateTimeFormatter.ofPattern("h:mm a");
		timeString = "The time is " + LocalDateTime.now().format(formatter);
	}

	@Override
	public HttpStatus status() {
		return HttpStatus.OK_200;
	}

	@Override
	public InputStream stream() {
		return new ByteArrayInputStream(timeString.getBytes());
	}

	@Override
	public Headers headers() {
		return new HttpHeaders(
				new HttpHeader("Content-type", "text/plain"),
				new HttpHeader("Content-length", String.valueOf(timeString.length())));
	}

	@Override
	public HttpVersion version() {
		return HttpVersion.HTTP_1_0;
	}
}

Now we'll create a RequestHandler to capture requests to /time and respond using our new response type:

import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.HttpMethod;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.Request;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.RequestHandler;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.api.Response;
import au.id.deejay.webserver.response.CurrentTimeResponse;

public class CurrentTimeHandler implements RequestHandler {

	private static final String PATH = "/time";

	@Override
	public boolean canHandle(Request request) {
		return request.method() == HttpMethod.GET && PATH.equals(request.uri().getPath());
	}

	@Override
	public Response handle(Request request) {
		return new CurrentTimeResponse();
	}
}

Finally, we'll register the new handler in App#main(), along with the handlers already there:

// Configure request handlers
RequestHandler serverInfoHandler = new ServerInfoHandler(...);
RequestHandler docrootHandler = new DocrootHandler(...);
RequestHandler timeHandler = new CurrentTimeHandler(); // our new handler

List<RequestHandler> requestHandlers = Arrays.asList(timeHandler, serverInfoHandler, docrootHandler);

Now if we start the server and visit http://localhost/time we should see something like:

The time is 5:35 PM

And that's all there to adding new server functionality. For a more full-featured example, check out DocrootHandler.

Acknowledgements

  • Sample content courtesy of Twitter Bootstrap, licensed under The MIT License.
  • Favicon courtesy of FamFamFam Silk icons collection, licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License
  • And, of course, all Maven dependencies are courtesy of their respective owners.

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A simple multi-threaded web server written in Java and implementing the HTTP/1.1 specification.

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