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HttpComponents Client Source Code Files
HttpComponents Client Source Code Files are provided in the source package file, httpcomponents-client-5.2-src.zip.
You can download httpcomponents-client-5.2-src.zip as described in the previous tutorial and go to the "httpclient5/src" sub-folder to view Source Code files.
You can also browse HttpComponents Client Source Code below:
✍: FYIcenter.com
⏎ org/apache/hc/client5/http/impl/classic/CloseableHttpClient.java
/* * ==================================================================== * Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one * or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file * distributed with this work for additional information * regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file * to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the * "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance * with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, * software distributed under the License is distributed on an * "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY * KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the * specific language governing permissions and limitations * under the License. * ==================================================================== * * This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many * individuals on behalf of the Apache Software Foundation. For more * information on the Apache Software Foundation, please see * <http://www.apache.org/>. * */ package org.apache.hc.client5.http.impl.classic; import java.io.IOException; import org.apache.hc.client5.http.ClientProtocolException; import org.apache.hc.client5.http.classic.HttpClient; import org.apache.hc.client5.http.routing.RoutingSupport; import org.apache.hc.core5.annotation.Contract; import org.apache.hc.core5.annotation.ThreadingBehavior; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.ClassicHttpRequest; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.ClassicHttpResponse; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.HttpEntity; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.HttpException; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.HttpHost; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.io.HttpClientResponseHandler; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.io.entity.EntityUtils; import org.apache.hc.core5.http.protocol.HttpContext; import org.apache.hc.core5.io.ModalCloseable; import org.apache.hc.core5.util.Args; import org.slf4j.Logger; import org.slf4j.LoggerFactory; /** * Base implementation of {@link HttpClient} that also implements {@link ModalCloseable}. * * @since 4.3 */ @Contract(threading = ThreadingBehavior.SAFE) public abstract class CloseableHttpClient implements HttpClient, ModalCloseable { private static final Logger LOG = LoggerFactory.getLogger(CloseableHttpClient.class); protected abstract CloseableHttpResponse doExecute(HttpHost target, ClassicHttpRequest request, HttpContext context) throws IOException; private static HttpHost determineTarget(final ClassicHttpRequest request) throws ClientProtocolException { try { return RoutingSupport.determineHost(request); } catch (final HttpException ex) { throw new ClientProtocolException(ex); } } /** * @deprecated It is strongly recommended to use execute methods with {@link HttpClientResponseHandler} * such as {@link #execute(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext, HttpClientResponseHandler)} in order * to ensure automatic resource deallocation by the client. * For special cases one can still use {@link #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext)} * to keep the response object open after the request execution. * * @see #execute(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext, HttpClientResponseHandler) * @see #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext) */ @Deprecated @Override public CloseableHttpResponse execute( final HttpHost target, final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpContext context) throws IOException { return doExecute(target, request, context); } /** * @deprecated It is strongly recommended to use execute methods with {@link HttpClientResponseHandler} * such as {@link #execute(ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext, HttpClientResponseHandler)} in order * to ensure automatic resource deallocation by the client. * For special cases one can still use {@link #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext)} * to keep the response object open after the request execution. * * @see #execute(ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext, HttpClientResponseHandler) * @see #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext) */ @Deprecated @Override public CloseableHttpResponse execute( final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpContext context) throws IOException { Args.notNull(request, "HTTP request"); return doExecute(determineTarget(request), request, context); } /** * @deprecated It is strongly recommended to use execute methods with {@link HttpClientResponseHandler} * such as {@link #execute(ClassicHttpRequest, HttpClientResponseHandler)} in order * to ensure automatic resource deallocation by the client. * For special cases one can still use {@link #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext)} * to keep the response object open after the request execution. * * @see #execute(ClassicHttpRequest, HttpClientResponseHandler) * @see #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext) */ @Deprecated @Override public CloseableHttpResponse execute( final ClassicHttpRequest request) throws IOException { return doExecute(determineTarget(request), request, null); } /** * @deprecated It is strongly recommended to use execute methods with {@link HttpClientResponseHandler} * such as {@link #execute(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpClientResponseHandler)} in order * to ensure automatic resource deallocation by the client. * For special cases one can still use {@link #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext)} * to keep the response object open after the request execution. * * @see #execute(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpClientResponseHandler) * @see #executeOpen(HttpHost, ClassicHttpRequest, HttpContext) */ @Deprecated @Override public CloseableHttpResponse execute( final HttpHost target, final ClassicHttpRequest request) throws IOException { return doExecute(target, request, null); } /** * Executes a request using the default context and processes the * response using the given response handler. The content entity associated * with the response is fully consumed and the underlying connection is * released back to the connection manager automatically in all cases * relieving individual {@link HttpClientResponseHandler}s from having to manage * resource deallocation internally. * * @param request the request to execute * @param responseHandler the response handler * * @return the response object as generated by the response handler. * @throws IOException in case of a problem or the connection was aborted * @throws ClientProtocolException in case of an http protocol error */ @Override public <T> T execute(final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpClientResponseHandler<? extends T> responseHandler) throws IOException { return execute(request, null, responseHandler); } /** * Executes a request using the default context and processes the * response using the given response handler. The content entity associated * with the response is fully consumed and the underlying connection is * released back to the connection manager automatically in all cases * relieving individual {@link HttpClientResponseHandler}s from having to manage * resource deallocation internally. * * @param request the request to execute * @param responseHandler the response handler * @param context the context to use for the execution, or * {@code null} to use the default context * * @return the response object as generated by the response handler. * @throws IOException in case of a problem or the connection was aborted * @throws ClientProtocolException in case of an http protocol error */ @Override public <T> T execute( final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpContext context, final HttpClientResponseHandler<? extends T> responseHandler) throws IOException { final HttpHost target = determineTarget(request); return execute(target, request, context, responseHandler); } /** * Executes a request using the default context and processes the * response using the given response handler. The content entity associated * with the response is fully consumed and the underlying connection is * released back to the connection manager automatically in all cases * relieving individual {@link HttpClientResponseHandler}s from having to manage * resource deallocation internally. * * @param target the target host for the request. * Implementations may accept {@code null} * if they can still determine a route, for example * to a default target or by inspecting the request. * @param request the request to execute * @param responseHandler the response handler * * @return the response object as generated by the response handler. * @throws IOException in case of a problem or the connection was aborted * @throws ClientProtocolException in case of an http protocol error */ @Override public <T> T execute(final HttpHost target, final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpClientResponseHandler<? extends T> responseHandler) throws IOException { return execute(target, request, null, responseHandler); } /** * Executes a request using the default context and processes the * response using the given response handler. The content entity associated * with the response is fully consumed and the underlying connection is * released back to the connection manager automatically in all cases * relieving individual {@link HttpClientResponseHandler}s from having to manage * resource deallocation internally. * * @param target the target host for the request. * Implementations may accept {@code null} * if they can still determine a route, for example * to a default target or by inspecting the request. * @param request the request to execute * @param context the context to use for the execution, or * {@code null} to use the default context * @param responseHandler the response handler * * @return the response object as generated by the response handler. * @throws IOException in case of a problem or the connection was aborted * @throws ClientProtocolException in case of an http protocol error */ @Override public <T> T execute( final HttpHost target, final ClassicHttpRequest request, final HttpContext context, final HttpClientResponseHandler<? extends T> responseHandler) throws IOException { Args.notNull(responseHandler, "Response handler"); try (final ClassicHttpResponse response = doExecute(target, request, context)) { try { final T result = responseHandler.handleResponse(response); final HttpEntity entity = response.getEntity(); EntityUtils.consume(entity); return result; } catch (final HttpException t) { // Try to salvage the underlying connection in case of a protocol exception final HttpEntity entity = response.getEntity(); try { EntityUtils.consume(entity); } catch (final Exception t2) { // Log this exception. The original exception is more // important and will be thrown to the caller. LOG.warn("Error consuming content after an exception.", t2); } throw new ClientProtocolException(t); } } } }
⏎ org/apache/hc/client5/http/impl/classic/CloseableHttpClient.java
Or download all them as a single archive file:
File name: httpclient5-5.2-fyi.zip File size: 625318 bytes Release date: 2022-11-10 Download
⇒ Download and Install HttpComponents Core Binary Package
⇐ Download and Install HttpComponents Client Source Package
2023-03-26, 23024👍, 1💬
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