This library provides APIs for connecting and interacting with HTTP and HTTP2 endpoints. It
facilitates two types of network entry points as the Client
and Listener
.
The Client
is used to connect to and interact with HTTP endpoints. They support connection pooling and can be
configured to have a maximum number of active connections that can be made with the remote endpoint. The Client
activates connection eviction after a given idle period and also supports follow-redirects so that you do not
have to manually handle 3xx HTTP status codes.
The Client
handles resilience in multiple ways such as load balancing, circuit breaking, endpoint timeouts, and via a
retry mechanism.
Load balancing is used in the round-robin or failover manner.
When a failure occurs in the remote service, the client connections might wait for some time before a timeout occurs. Awaiting requests consume resources in the system. Circuit Breakers are used to trip after a certain number of failed requests to the remote service. Once a circuit breaker trips, it does not allow the client to send requests to the remote service for a period of time.
The Ballerina circuit breaker supports tripping on HTTP error status codes and I/O errors. Failure thresholds can be
configured based on a sliding window (e.g., 5 failures within 10 seconds). The Client
also supports a retry
mechanism that allows it to resend failed requests periodically for a given number of times.
The Client
supports Server Name Indication (SNI), Certificate Revocation List (CRL), Online Certificate Status
Protocol (OCSP), and OCSP Stapling for SSL/TLS connections.
Also, the Client
can be configured to send authentication information to the endpoint being invoked. Ballerina has
built-in support for Basic authentication, JWT authentication, and OAuth2 authentication.
In addition to that, it supports both HTTP/1.1 and HTTP2 protocols and connection keep-alive, content
chunking, HTTP caching, data compression/decompression, response payload binding, and authorization can be highlighted as the features of the Clients
.
A Client
can be defined using the URL of the remote service that it needs to connect with as shown below:
http:Client clientEndpoint = check new("https://my-simple-backend.com");
The defined Client
endpoint can be used to call a remote service as follows:
// Send a GET request to the specified endpoint.
http:Response response = check clientEndpoint->get("/get?id=123");
The payload can be retrieved as the return value from the remote function as follows:
// Retrieve payload as json.
json payload = check clientEndpoint->post("/backend/Json", "foo");
The Listener
is the underneath server connector that binds the given IP/Port to the network and it's behavior can
be changed using the http:ListenerConfiguration
. In HTTP, the http:Service
-typed services can be attached to
the Listener
. The service type precisely describes the syntax for both the service and resource.
A Service
represents a collection of network-accessible entry points and can be exposed via a Listener
endpoint.
A resource represents one such entry point and can have its own path, HTTP methods, body format, consumes
and
produces
content types, CORS headers, etc. In resources, the HTTP method and resource path are mandatory parameters and
the String literal and path parameters can be stated as the path. The resource function accepts the http:Caller
, http:Request
,
http:Headers
, query parameters, header parameters, and payload parameters as arguments. However, they are optional.
When a Service
receives a request, it is dispatched to the best-matched resource.
A Listener
endpoint can be defined as follows:
// Attributes associated with the `Listener` endpoint are defined here.
listener http:Listener helloWorldEP = new(9090);
Then a Service
can be defined and attached to the above Listener
endpoint as shown below:
// By default, Ballerina assumes that the service is to be exposed via HTTP/1.1.
service /helloWorld on helloWorldEP {
resource function post [string name](@http:Payload string message) returns string {
// Sends the response back to the client along with a string payload.
return "Hello, World! I’m " + name + ". " + message;
}
}
Listener
endpoints can be exposed via SSL. They support Mutual SSL, Hostname Verification, and Application Layer
Protocol Negotiation (ALPN) for HTTP2. Listener
endpoints also support Certificate Revocation List (CRL), Online
Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP), and OCSP Stapling.
Also, The listener
can be configured to authenticate and authorize the inbound requests. Ballerina has
built-in support for basic authentication, JWT authentication, and OAuth2 authentication.
In addition to that, supports both the HTTP/1.1 and HTTP2 protocols and connection keep-alive, content
chunking, HTTP caching, data compression/decompression, payload binding, and authorization can be highlighted as the features of a Service
.
Issues and Projects tabs are disabled for this repository as this is part of the Ballerina Standard Library. To report bugs, request new features, start new discussions, view project boards, etc. please visit Ballerina Standard Library parent repository.
This repository only contains the source code for the package.
-
Download and install Java SE Development Kit (JDK) version 11 (from one of the following locations).
-
Export GitHub Personal access token with read package permissions as follows,
export packageUser=<Username> export packagePAT=<Personal access token>
-
Download and install Docker.
Execute the commands below to build from source.
-
To build the library:
./gradlew clean build
-
To run the integration tests:
./gradlew clean test
-
To run a group of tests
./gradlew clean test -Pgroups=<test_group_names>
-
To build the package without the tests:
./gradlew clean build -x test
-
To debug the tests:
./gradlew clean test -Pdebug=<port>
-
To debug with Ballerina language:
./gradlew clean build -PbalJavaDebug=<port>
-
Publish the generated artifacts to the local Ballerina central repository:
./gradlew clean build -PpublishToLocalCentral=true
-
Publish the generated artifacts to the Ballerina central repository:
./gradlew clean build -PpublishToCentral=true
As an open source project, Ballerina welcomes contributions from the community.
For more information, go to the contribution guidelines.
All contributors are encouraged to read the Ballerina Code of Conduct.
- For more information go to the
HTTP
library. - For example demonstrations of the usage, go to Ballerina By Examples.
- Chat live with us via our Slack channel.
- Post all technical questions on Stack Overflow with the #ballerina tag.
- View the Ballerina performance test results.