Understanding WebSockets versus Ajax/REST for Java EE Developers

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===WebSocket Handler for Chat example prototype===
 
===WebSocket Handler for Chat example prototype===
  
<pre><code>
+
Notice we subclass AbstractWebSocketListener instead of implement WebSocketListener.
 +
The AbstractWebSocketListener implements WebSocketListener so you can ignore the
 +
callback handler that you do not care about.
 +
 
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<code>
 
package com.caucho.websocket.example;
 
package com.caucho.websocket.example;
  
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}
 
}
  
</code></pre>
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</pre>
  
  
 
The key take away from this tutorial is this: WebSockets is bidirectional messaging, Servlet/Ajax/REST is request/response.
 
The key take away from this tutorial is this: WebSockets is bidirectional messaging, Servlet/Ajax/REST is request/response.

Revision as of 00:00, 17 March 2012

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Contents

Understanding WebSockets versus Ajax/REST: Tutorial for Java Developers

There has been a lot of discussion lately about WebSockets. WebSocket client API is part of HTML 5. WebSocket wire protocol that handles the low-level handshaking, framing, and negotiation was just released in 2012. WebSocket has been a multi year work in progress that just completed.

You can use WebSocket from a browser like you can Ajax/REST. But when should use WebSockets and when should you use Ajax/REST? Also, can you use WebSocket from other clients? This tutorial is going to try to answer that question. Its aim is to be a compare, contrast and learn tutorial. In order to convey the information we add enough code to make it go beyond the pointy hair boss description. To do this, we slowly build a chat client and server.

Let's do a quick code comparison of the JavaScript and Java involved in doing Ajax and WebSockets to start off the discussion. To developers sometimes code examples are very demystifying.


Ajax simple example client (JavaScript/Browser/HTML 5) and server (Resin Java Application Server)

The following code listing is a simple JavaScript Ajax, HTML 5 example that sends a "Hello Ajax World?" message to our server.

Sample Ajax "Chat" with RAW JavaScript/HTML 5


	var ajax = null;
	
	function sendChatMessageAjax() {                   //(2)
	    if (ajax == null) {                                         
	    	ajax = new XMLHttpRequest();                 //(1)
	    }    
	    
		if (ajax.readyState == 4 || ajax.readyState == 0) {
			document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "SENDING AJAX MESSAGE";

			ajax.open("POST", 'chat', true);
			ajax.onreadystatechange = handleChatMessageAjaxResponse;  //(3)
			ajax.send("Hello Ajax World?");
		}
	}
	function handleChatMessageAjaxResponse() {
		if (ajax.readyState == 4) {
			document.getElementById('span_result').innerHTML = ajax.responseText;
		}
	}
...
<body>
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:sendChatMessageAjax();">Send Chat Message via
		Ajax</a>
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:sendChatMessageWebSocket();">Send Chat Message
		via WebSocket</a>
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:clearSend();">Clear send results</a>
	<br />
	<span id="span_result"></span>
	<span id="error_result"></span>

</body>

Now typically, you don't use XMLHttpRequest directly, instead you use jQuery or Prototype or any number of other JavaScript frameworks. But to ease the explanation, and to aid in comparison to WebSocket, let's start with raw JavaScript (later tutorials will use raw JavaScript, jQuery and Prototype).

Quick Review of Ajax: sendChatMessageAjax (2) is JavaScript function that uses an instance of XMLHttpRequest called ajax (1) to send an HTTP POST request back to the server. Since this is JavaScript, and you don't want to block the user and JavaScript does not support threads, then you must register a callback called handleChatMessageAjaxResponse with the ajax.onreadystatechange (XMLHttpRequest) (3).

Servlet that handles Ajax call

Now let's cover the Java side of the house. Again, there are many Java frameworks that add layers between the Java backend and the HTML/JavaScript rendering to handle Ajax nicely. But for this discussion, let's start with the simplest thing that will work, and in Java that is a Java HttpServlet as follows:

Sample Ajax "Chat" server with a RAW Java Servlet (Resin Java Application Server / Java EE)

package com.caucho.websocket.example;
...

/**
 * Servlet implementation class ChatServlet
 */
@WebServlet("/chat")
public class ChatServlet extends HttpServlet {
 
...       
    /**
     * Handle ajax calls
     * @see HttpServlet#doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
     */    
    protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
        System.out.println("___________ doPost MEHTOD ________________ " );
        

        char [] data = new char[4096];
        request.getReader().read(data); // 1
        String text = new String(data); // 2
        
        System.out.println(text); //print out what the client sent
        
        response.getWriter().print("Hello from Server-side Ajax : " +text); //3
    }

}

This is fairly basic. Read the data (1), convert data into a String (2), send the data back to the browser with "Hello from Server-side Ajax : " prepended to to it (3).


WebSocket simple example client and server

Now lets compare the above client and server to a WebSocket equivalent. Efforts are made to keep this JavaScript really simple and easy to understand so it is easy to compare against the previous Ajax example.

The following code listing is a simple JavaScript Ajax, HTML 5 example that sends a "Hello WebSocket World?" message to our server.

The WebSocket example is a parallel as possible to the Ajax example.

Sample WebSocket "Chat" server with a RAW Java Servlet (Resin Java Application Server / Java EE)


    var socket = null;
	
    function sendChatMessageWebSocket() {         // (2)
    	if (socket == null) {
    	     // (1)
    	    socket = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:8080/web-socket-example/chat", "caucho-example-chat-protocol");
    	    socket.onmessage = handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse;   //(3)
    	    initSocket(); //Explained later
    	}
	    document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "SENDING WEBSOCKET MESSAGE";
	    socket.send("Hello WebSocket World?");
	}
	    
	function handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse(msg) {
	    document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = msg.data;
	}
        ...


Quick Run down of the WebSocket code: sendChatMessageWebSocket (2) is JavaScript function that uses an instance of WebSocket called socket (1) to start a WebSocket connection (HTTP upgrade) with the server. Since this is JavaScript, and you don't want to block the user and JavaScript does not support threads, then you must register a callback called handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse with the socket.onmessage (WebSocket) (3).

Ok so they look very similar. Again, I am going to start with the similarities. The differences are to come.

To handle the above you need a WebSocketListener handler as follows:



public class ChatWebSocketListener implements WebSocketListener {
    @Override
    public void onReadText(WebSocketContext context, Reader reader)
            throws IOException {
        System.out.println("___________ onReadText MEHTOD ________________ " );

        char [] data = new char[4096];
        
        reader.read(data);  // (1)
        
        String text = new String(data); // (2)
        System.out.println(text);
        
        PrintWriter out = context.startTextMessage();                      // (??? NEW 4)
        out.print("Hello from Server-side WebSocket : " + text); // (3)
        out.close(); //You have to close to send the message.             // (??? NEW 5)
        System.out.println("___________ onReadText MEHTOD END END END________________ " );

    }
   ...

This is fairly basic. Read the data (1), convert data into a String (2), send the data back to the browser with "Hello from Server-side Ajax : " prepended to to it (3).


At this point, these are nearly identical. You can use WebSockets similar to how you should use Ajax. No real learning curve for simple cases.

Some noticeable differences between WebSockets, and Ajax examples

The first difference between this and the Servlet version is that we are using a WebSocketListener. The WebSocketListener is a Resin class as Java EE 6 does not have WebSocket support. Java EE 6 predates Websocket. The WebSocketListener looks fairly similar to the Servlet API as much as possible by design.

Note that the current plan for Java EE 7 is to include WebSocket support. Caucho Technology is and has been involved in several Java EE JSRs, and was heavily involved in the IETF WebSocket draft.

From a programming perspective, so far, there is no real difference between the WebSocket version and the Ajax/Servlet version. There is a little bit of handshaking that the Servlet has to do which we will cover later, but essentially if this is all you wanted, then WebSocket looks a lot like Ajax. Now since we are developing a chat example, eventually we will want to push messages from other people who are in the chat session. This is where WebSockets is going to shine.

What is WebSockets again?

From a web developers viewpoint, WebSocket is a new browser feature for HTML 5 browsers. This new feature enables richer user interactions. Both the browser and the server can send asynchronous messages over a single TCP socket, without doing less scalable hacks like long polling or comet.

The communication starts out like HTTP and then upgrades after a HTTP handshake to bidirectional WebSockets. A WebSocket is a bidirectional message stream between the client and the server.

While all modern browsers support WebSocket as of March 2012 few application servers and web servers do. In order for browsers to take advantage of WebSockets, you need to have an application server or web server that can handle WebSockets.

Detour Streaming API versus a byte[]/String API versus a WebSocket Frame API

There are several Java WebSocket implementations out in the wild. Resin WebSocket support is the most mature and gets used by more high traffic sites. If you are not familiar with Resin Server, it is a scalable, fast, mature Java EE certified application/web server. Its speed is faster than NginX and Apache HTTPD, and it is more scalable.

All of Resin's cloud/clustering communication works on top of WebSocket. Resin's WebSocket support predates most implementations. If you are serious about WebSockets and Java, then Resin Server is an obvious contender. Also you can try out the Open Source version for free.

Many Java WebSocket implementations do not allow stream access to WebSocket (Reader, Writer, InputStream, OutputStream), and instead rely on simple buffer constructs like String and byte[] or dump you down into working directly with low level WebSocket frames (Frame API). Since WebSocket is a streaming, framing wire protocol, naturally Resin Server supports streams. It is easy to for Java developers to go from streams to byte[] and String as shown in the above examples. Using byte[] and String are probably ok for some department level or company level applications, but if for anything else you really need to use streams to maximize the throughput and minimize contention.

Regarding a Frame oriented API, when you program with TCP/IP you never have an application developer API that exposes TCP/IP packets bit mask fields, in the same way the WebSocket Frame is the wrong level of abstraction for most developers. Resin's API is the right level of abstraction, i.e., streams like the Servlet API. That said, we are always looking for feedback.

Now that we have the background in the why of the API, let's discuss how the streaming works.

WebSocket Streaming, Frames and Messaging

WebSocket is unlike Ajax/HTTP in that the WebSocket connection stays open and it is bidirectional. This is perfect for a chat application or a near real time stock price app, etc.

WebSockets have two types of messages, binary (byte[]), and text (String). If your message is bigger than a single Frame then it gets sent as chunks in multiple frames. For the sake of argument let's say that a frame holds 1K bytes. If you are sending a JSON payload to the browser that is 4K then you are sending 4 Frames. (Actual framing varies, this are example sizes for discussion.)

To begin a message you need to send a stream of WebSocket frames. To start the message you call context.startTextMessage() (NEW 4). If your message does not fit into one frame, then a another frame is created and marked that it continues the previous frame in the series using a "continues" flag. In WebSockets the final frame in a message is marked with a "finished" flag. This final frame is sent when you call close on the stream. This final frame says that you are done sending the current binary or text message. The out.close (5) is your way to tell Resin's WebSocket implementation that the message is done so go ahead and mark the current frame as finished and then send that as the last frame. On the client end of the wire, WebSockets client implementation will see that the it got the last frame. The JavaScript WebSocket client will only call socket.onmessage (WebSocket) after it receives the Frame marked final. HTML 5 has the luxury of handling whole message at a time because efficiency is not a concern for scalability like it is on the server-side of the house.

Get all of that? That is ok if you don't. Just remember to call close, and then Resin WebSockets will complete sending the message just like you would write output to a Servlet or write to a file. WebSocket frames are a nice fit with the Java IO Stream and Reader/Writer APIs.

Again the JavaScript API for WebSocket only deals with buffers like String and byte[] (these are String and ArrayBuffer or Blob in JavaScript speak). WebSocket is a generally purpose framing/wire protocol so expect a lot of other uses outside of HTML 5. Many other protocols spend a lot of time and effort creating a framing protocol (AMQP, IIOP, RMI-JRMP, etc.). If you are developing a new protocol that needs framing, you can just build your new protocol on top of WebSocket. Consider framing solved.

Protocol negotiation

HTTP upgrade was added to the HTTP specification to support changing to new versions of HTTP more flawlessly.

To use WebSockets which is a different wire protocol then HTTP, the client must do an HTTP upgrade, and tell the server that it supports WebSockets. The Browser HTML 5 client sends a special HTTP GET that has special headers. If the server supports WebSocket it sends an acknowledgement and then the conversation begins.

To register our ChatWebSocketListener you have to create a Servlet that handles this special request as follows:


<code>
    protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
        
        String protocol = request.getHeader("Sec-WebSocket-Protocol");  //(1)
        
        System.out.println("___________ doGet MEHTOD ________________ " + protocol);


        if ("caucho-example-chat-protocol".equals(protocol)) {
            
          System.out.println("___________ WEBSOCKET Handshake ________________ " + protocol);

          WebSocketListener listener = new ChatWebSocketListener(); //(2)

          response.setHeader("Sec-WebSocket-Protocol", "caucho-example-chat-protocol"); //(3)
          WebSocketServletRequest wsRequest = (WebSocketServletRequest) request;
          wsRequest.startWebSocket(listener); //(4)

        }
        
        
    }
</code>


The above checks the subprotocol that the HTML 5 browser client expects via the Sec-WebSocket-Protocol HTTP header (1). Then it creates and instance of the ChatWebSocketListener that we covered earlier (2) and registers that with the WebSocketServletRequest (4) via the startWebSocket method.

The client, HTML 5 Browser client, can request that the server use a specific subprotocol by including the Sec-WebSocket-Protocol field in its handshake. The server responds with a comma delimited list of of subprotocols. A subprotocol is basically the version of the wire format. It is an indication of what kinds of marshaling you are doing. Let's say you worked at Caucho Technology Inc. Your subprotocol could be called "chat.example.com". Subprotocols can be versioned in, e.g., "chat.example.com" versus "v2.chat.example.com" are two different subprotocols.


The HTTP header handshake from the browser could look something like this:

<code>
        GET /chat HTTP/1.1
        Host: server.caucho.com
        Upgrade: websocket
        Connection: Upgrade
        Sec-WebSocket-Key: dGhlIHNhbXBsZSBub25jZQ==
        Origin: http://example.com
        Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: caucho-example-chat-protocol, v2.caucho-example-chat-protocol
        Sec-WebSocket-Version: 13
</code>

The part of the handshake from the server might look like this:

<code>

        HTTP/1.1 101 Switching Protocols
        Upgrade: websocket
        Connection: Upgrade
        Sec-WebSocket-Accept: s3pPLMBiTxaQ9kYGzzhZRbK+xOo=
        Sec-WebSocket-Protocol: caucho-example-chat-protocol
</code>



Details about WebSocketContext and WebSocketListener

The WebSocketListener is the main area of focus for the server-side implementation. It is similar in concept to a Java Servlet at first blush. Unlike a Servlet, a WebSocketListener is a single-threaded handler for events and messages from the client.

The onReadText of WebSocketListener method will only get called by one thread at a time whilst a HttpServlet.doGet method can be called by many threads.

The Reader, PrintWriter and WebSocketContext are not thread safe and should only be accessed by one thread at a time. It is important that you only access these from one thread at a time. This is similar to the normal Servlet programming as it also works with streams and reader/writers which can only be accessed by one thread at a time.


The onReadText should not do anything that is going to block if you are trying to write a scalable application. Blocking might be okay for department level or company level application. For applications that support higher traffic and need higher throughput blocking on an onReadText is not ok. Higher scaling application would need to use some sort of queuing mechanisms, we will cover this in a later tutorial.

The big take away that I want you to get from this discussion is this: although the programming model may look the same from Ajax/Servlet to WebSocket, it is very different. Ajax/REST is request/response. WebSocket is messaging.

With WebSocket the connection stays open. It is expected that the server is calling the client at will. It is common in WebSockets for the reading and writing to happen in different threads.


Simplest possible example that shows bidirectional communication over WebSockets

As was mentioned earlier, we are going to cover building a full HTML 5 chat client, but to whet your appetite without going into crazy complexity, let's change the last example from a traditional Request/Response to a full blown bidirectional connection. The HTML 5 client is sending messages on one end, while the server is at the same time sending messages to the HTML 5 client.

In this example, we ask the server for a thread to fire off a chat message sender. The message sender gets messages from a queue. It echoes the messages back. If it does not hear from the client in five seconds, it starts nagging it with a "Are you there?" message. To do this, you do the following.

(THE EXAMPLE BELOW IS UNDER REVIEW BY PEERS. It may change.)


You change the client to connect as soon as the page loads as follows (full code listings will be at end of tutorial):

<code>
    function initSocket() {
        if (socket == null) {
            socket = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:8080/web-socket-example/chat", "caucho-example-chat-protocol");
            socket.onmessage = handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse;
        }

    	socket.onerror = function(msg) {
            document.getElementById("error_result").innerHTML = "ERROR:" + msg;
        }

        socket.onopen = function() {
            document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "Socket Status: "
                    + socket.readyState + " (open)";
        }
        socket.onclose = function() {
            document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "Socket Status: "
                    + socket.readyState + " (Closed)";

        }    	
    }
    
    initSocket();
</code>


You are going to handle the WebSocketListener.onStart method to start up this new message deliverer. WebSocketListener.onStart needs to schedule a task with the servers executor (java.util.concurrent.Executor). The task will listen for items that the onReadText puts on the queue.

Then change the WebSocketListener to create a BlockingQueue (1) and @Inject a ThreadPoolExecutor (2).

<code>
public class ChatWebSocketListener implements WebSocketListener {
    
    
    volatile boolean close;
    
    BlockingQueue<String> readQueue;

    @Inject ThreadPoolExecutor executor;
    
    
    @Override
    public void onReadText(WebSocketContext context, Reader reader)
            throws IOException {
        System.out.println("___________ onReadText MEHTOD ________________ " );

        char [] data = new char[4096];
        
        reader.read(data);
        
        String text = new String(data);
        
        try {
            readQueue.put(text);     // (3)
        } catch (InterruptedException e) {
        }
...
</code>

Notice that the onReadText no longer handles the writing of message directly. Instead it adds the text message to the queue (3).

The onStart method gets called as soon as WebSocket connection is established and ready to receive messages (from either side). Change the onStart method to create the queue, then execute a task (4) with the executor that handles the echoing of messages and the sending of our nagging reminders.


<code>
public class ChatWebSocketListener implements WebSocketListener {

    @Override
    public void onStart(final WebSocketContext context) throws IOException {
        System.out.println("ON start ***********************************************");
                
        readQueue = new ArrayBlockingQueue<String>(2000);
        
        ...        
        executor.execute(new Runnable() { // (4)


</code>

The task (anonymous inner class instance of Runnable) checks to see if the connection has been closed in a forever loop (6). The close flag is a volatile boolean that is set by the ChatWebSocketListener.onDisconnect which gets called when the connection is shut down. Each iteration of the loop, the task checks to see if there are any more messages on the queue (7). If there is a message, then it echoes that message back using the (context) WebSocketContext (8). Just to proove that we can send messages without getting told to by the client, every five seconds we send "I have not heard from you in a while ", "Are you stil there?", and "WAKE UP!!!!!!!!".


<code>
new Runnable() {
            public void run() {
                PrintWriter out=null;
                long oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                long newTime, deltaTime;
                

                while (true) {
                    if (close) break; // (6)
                    try {

                        
                        String message = readQueue.poll(500, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS); // (7)
                        if (message!=null) {
                            out = context.startTextMessage();             // (8)
                            out.print("Hello from Server-side WebSocket : " + message);
                            out.close(); //You have to close to send the message.
                            oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                        } 
                        
                        newTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                        
                        deltaTime = newTime - oldTime;
                        if (deltaTime>5000) { //if elapsed time is greater than 5000 seconds
                            
                            //Start nagging!
                            out = context.startTextMessage();
                            out.print("I have not heard from you in a while ");
                            out.close();
                            
                            Thread.sleep(1000);
                            
                            out = context.startTextMessage();
                            out.print("Are you stil there?");
                            out.close();

                            Thread.sleep(1000);
                            out = context.startTextMessage();
                            out.print("WAKE UP!!!!!!!!");
                            out.close();
                            
                            oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();

                        }

</code>


IMPORTANT: Note that only the runnable task's thread accesses the WebSocketContext. Only one thread at a time can access a WebSocketContext so also note that the onReadText no longer accesses the WebSocketContext like it did in the first example. WebSocketContext is not thread safe. This is why only one thread can access it. In the first example the onReadText accessed it directly. If it still did that, then this would be broke and we would have thread synchronization issues. If the thread that was running onReadText and the thread that is running this task both wrote at the same time, given the streaming nature of WebSockets and the need to sends frames in sequences, bad things could happen.

Ok, we have introduced enough new concepts for WebSockets. I hope you can see the value in it, and understand some key differences between Ajax and WebSockets as well as some clear similarities. Going through the process of writing these tutorials has given us some insight into how to make the WebSocket API more complete. We plan on updating these tutorials as we improve the API. In addition, the next installment in this series is going to cover building a multi user chat system so stay tuned.


Now as promised here are the complete code examples.

Simple Ajax/WebSocket HTML 5 client for driving code

<code>
<html>
<head>
<title>The Hello World of AJAX and WebSocket</title>
<script language="JavaScript" type="text/javascript">

	var ajax = null;
	
	function sendChatMessageAjax() {
	    if (ajax == null) {
	    	ajax = new XMLHttpRequest();
	    }    
	    
		if (ajax.readyState == 4 || ajax.readyState == 0) {
			document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "SENDING AJAX MESSAGE";

			ajax.open("POST", 'chat', true);
			ajax.onreadystatechange = handleChatMessageAjaxResponse;
			ajax.send("Hello Ajax World?");
		}
	}
	function handleChatMessageAjaxResponse() {
		if (ajax.readyState == 4) {
			document.getElementById('span_result').innerHTML = ajax.responseText;
		}
	}
</script>

<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">

/* http://dev.w3.org/html5/websockets/ */

	var socket = null;
	
    function sendChatMessageWebSocket() {
	    document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "SENDING WEBSOCKET MESSAGE";
	    socket.send("Hello WebSocket World?");
	}
	    
	function handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse(msg) {
	    document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = msg.data;
	}

    function initSocket() {
        if (socket == null) {
            socket = new WebSocket("ws://localhost:8080/web-socket-example/chat", "caucho-example-chat-protocol");
            socket.onmessage = handleChatMessageWebSocketResponse;
        }

    	socket.onerror = function(msg) {
            document.getElementById("error_result").innerHTML = "ERROR:" + msg;
        }

        socket.onopen = function() {
            document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "Socket Status: "
                    + socket.readyState + " (open)";
        }
        socket.onclose = function() {
            document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "Socket Status: "
                    + socket.readyState + " (Closed)";

        }    	
    }
    
    initSocket();



	function clearSend() {
		document.getElementById("span_result").innerHTML = "";

	}
</script>
</head>
<body>
	1st attempt
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:sendChatMessageAjax();">Send Chat Message via
		Ajax</a>
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:sendChatMessageWebSocket();">Send Chat Message
		via WebSocket</a>
	<br />
	<a href="javascript:clearSend();">Clear send results</a>
	<br />
	<span id="span_result"></span>
	<span id="error_result"></span>

</body>
</html>
</code>


Servlet that handles Ajax call and handles WebSocket upgrade protocol

<code>
package com.caucho.websocket.example;

import java.io.IOException;

import javax.servlet.ServletException;
import javax.servlet.annotation.WebServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletRequest;
import javax.servlet.http.HttpServletResponse;
import com.caucho.websocket.WebSocketServletRequest;

/**
 * Servlet implementation class ChatServlet
 */
@WebServlet("/chat")
public class ChatServlet extends HttpServlet {
       
 
    
    /**
     * Handle Websocket handshake.
     * @see HttpServlet#doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
     */
    protected void doGet(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
        
        String protocol = request.getHeader("Sec-WebSocket-Protocol");
        
        System.out.println("___________ doGet MEHTOD ________________ " + protocol);


        if ("caucho-example-chat-protocol".equals(protocol)) {
            
          System.out.println("___________ WEBSOCKET Handshake ________________ " + protocol);

          response.setHeader("Sec-WebSocket-Protocol", "caucho-example-chat-protocol");
          WebSocketServletRequest wsRequest = (WebSocketServletRequest) request;
          wsRequest.startWebSocket(new ChatWebSocketListener());

        }
        
        
    }
    
    /**
     * Handle ajax calls
     * @see HttpServlet#doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
     */    
    protected void doPost(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response) throws ServletException, IOException {
        System.out.println("___________ doPost MEHTOD ________________ " );
        

        char [] data = new char[4096];
        request.getReader().read(data);
        String text = new String(data);
        
        System.out.println(text);
        
        response.getWriter().print("Hello from Server-side Ajax : "+text);
    }

}

</code>


WebSocket Handler for Chat example prototype

Notice we subclass AbstractWebSocketListener instead of implement WebSocketListener. The AbstractWebSocketListener implements WebSocketListener so you can ignore the callback handler that you do not care about.

package com.caucho.websocket.example;

import java.io.IOException; import java.io.InputStream; import java.io.PrintWriter; import java.io.Reader; import java.nio.charset.Charset; import java.util.concurrent.ArrayBlockingQueue; import java.util.concurrent.BlockingQueue; import java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor; import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit; import com.caucho.websocket.WebSocketContext; import com.caucho.websocket.AbstractWebSocketListener;

public class ChatWebSocketListener extends AbstractWebSocketListener {


   volatile boolean close;
   
   BlockingQueue<String> readQueue;
  
   ThreadPoolExecutor executor;
   
   
   public ChatWebSocketListener(ThreadPoolExecutor executor) {
       this.executor = executor;
   }
   @Override
   public void onReadText(WebSocketContext context, Reader reader)
           throws IOException {
       System.out.println("___________ onReadText MEHTOD ________________ " );
       char [] data = new char[4096];
       
       reader.read(data);
       
       String text = new String(data);
       
       try {
           readQueue.put(text);
       } catch (InterruptedException e) {
       }
       
       System.out.println("******** ***** *****" + text);
       
       System.out.println("___________ onReadText MEHTOD END END END________________ " );
   }


   @Override
   public void onReadBinary(WebSocketContext context, InputStream input)
           throws IOException {
       byte[] data = new byte[4096];
       input.read(data);
       
       String text = new String(data, Charset.forName("UTF8"));
       System.out.println("***************** ::" + text);
   }


   @Override
   public void onDisconnect(WebSocketContext context) throws IOException {
       System.out.println("ON DISCONNECT ***********************************************");
       close=true;
   }


   @Override
   public void onStart(final WebSocketContext context) throws IOException {
       System.out.println("ON start ***********************************************");
               
       readQueue = new ArrayBlockingQueue<String>(2000);
       
       if (executor == null) {
           this.executor = new ThreadPoolExecutor(1, 1,
                   1, TimeUnit.SECONDS,
                   new ArrayBlockingQueue<Runnable>(1));
       }
       
       executor.execute(new Runnable() {
           
           @Override
           public void run() {
               PrintWriter out=null;
               long oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
               long newTime, deltaTime;
               
               while (true) {
                   if (close) break;
                   try {


                       String message = readQueue.poll(500, TimeUnit.MILLISECONDS);
                       if (message!=null) {
                           out = context.startTextMessage();
                           out.print("Hello from Server-side WebSocket : " + message);
                           out.close(); //You have to close to send the message.
                           oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                       } 
                       
                       newTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                       
                       deltaTime = newTime - oldTime;
                       if (deltaTime>5000) { //if elapsed time is greater than 5000 seconds
                           
                           //Start nagging!
                           out = context.startTextMessage();
                           out.print("I have not heard from you in a while ");
                           out.close();
                           
                           Thread.sleep(1000);
                           
                           out = context.startTextMessage();
                           out.print("Are you stil there?");
                           out.close();
                           Thread.sleep(1000);
                           out = context.startTextMessage();
                           out.print("WAKE UP!!!!!!!!");
                           out.close();
                           
                           oldTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
                       }
                   } catch (InterruptedException ex) {
                       break; //Our thread was interrupted, no worries, just leave the loop.
                   } catch (IOException e) {
                       break; //Some communication or connection issue, you could log this
                   }
               }
               
           }
       });
   }


}

</pre>


The key take away from this tutorial is this: WebSockets is bidirectional messaging, Servlet/Ajax/REST is request/response.

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