/* * $HeadURL: http://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/httpcomponents/httpclient/trunk/module-client/src/main/java/org/apache/http/conn/ManagedClientConnection.java $ * $Revision: 672969 $ * $Date: 2008-06-30 18:09:50 -0700 (Mon, 30 Jun 2008) $ * * ==================================================================== * 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 * . * */ package org.apache.http.conn; import java.io.IOException; import java.util.concurrent.TimeUnit; import javax.net.ssl.SSLSession; import org.apache.http.HttpClientConnection; import org.apache.http.HttpInetConnection; import org.apache.http.HttpHost; import org.apache.http.params.HttpParams; import org.apache.http.protocol.HttpContext; import org.apache.http.conn.routing.HttpRoute; /** * A client-side connection with advanced connection logic. * Instances are typically obtained from a connection manager. * * @author Roland Weber * * * * @version $Revision: 672969 $ * * @since 4.0 * * @deprecated Please use {@link java.net.URL#openConnection} instead. * Please visit this webpage * for further details. */ @Deprecated public interface ManagedClientConnection extends HttpClientConnection, HttpInetConnection, ConnectionReleaseTrigger { /** * Indicates whether this connection is secure. * The return value is well-defined only while the connection is open. * It may change even while the connection is open. * * @return true if this connection is secure, * false otherwise */ boolean isSecure() ; /** * Obtains the current route of this connection. * * @return the route established so far, or * null if not connected */ HttpRoute getRoute() ; /** * Obtains the SSL session of the underlying connection, if any. * If this connection is open, and the underlying socket is an * {@link javax.net.ssl.SSLSocket SSLSocket}, the SSL session of * that socket is obtained. This is a potentially blocking operation. *
* Note: Whether the underlying socket is an SSL socket * can not necessarily be determined via {@link #isSecure}. * Plain sockets may be considered secure, for example if they are * connected to a known host in the same network segment. * On the other hand, SSL sockets may be considered insecure, * for example depending on the chosen cipher suite. * * @return the underlying SSL session if available, * null otherwise */ SSLSession getSSLSession() ; /** * Opens this connection according to the given route. * * @param route the route along which to open. It will be opened to * the first proxy if present, or directly to the target. * @param context the context for opening this connection * @param params the parameters for opening this connection * * @throws IOException in case of a problem */ void open(HttpRoute route, HttpContext context, HttpParams params) throws IOException ; /** * Indicates that a tunnel to the target has been established. * The route is the one previously passed to {@link #open open}. * Subsequently, {@link #layerProtocol layerProtocol} can be called * to layer the TLS/SSL protocol on top of the tunnelled connection. *
* Note: In HttpClient 3, a call to the corresponding method * would automatically trigger the layering of the TLS/SSL protocol. * This is not the case anymore, you can establish a tunnel without * layering a new protocol over the connection. * * @param secure true if the tunnel should be considered * secure, false otherwise * @param params the parameters for tunnelling this connection * * @throws IOException in case of a problem */ void tunnelTarget(boolean secure, HttpParams params) throws IOException ; /** * Indicates that a tunnel to an intermediate proxy has been established. * This is used exclusively for so-called proxy chains, where * a request has to pass through multiple proxies before reaching the * target. In that case, all proxies but the last need to be tunnelled * when establishing the connection. Tunnelling of the last proxy to the * target is optional and would be indicated via {@link #tunnelTarget}. * * @param next the proxy to which the tunnel was established. * This is not the proxy through which * the tunnel was established, but the new end point * of the tunnel. The tunnel does not yet * reach to the target, use {@link #tunnelTarget} * to indicate an end-to-end tunnel. * @param secure true if the connection should be * considered secure, false otherwise * @param params the parameters for tunnelling this connection * * @throws IOException in case of a problem */ void tunnelProxy(HttpHost next, boolean secure, HttpParams params) throws IOException ; /** * Layers a new protocol on top of a {@link #tunnelTarget tunnelled} * connection. This is typically used to create a TLS/SSL connection * through a proxy. * The route is the one previously passed to {@link #open open}. * It is not guaranteed that the layered connection is * {@link #isSecure secure}. * * @param context the context for layering on top of this connection * @param params the parameters for layering on top of this connection * * @throws IOException in case of a problem */ void layerProtocol(HttpContext context, HttpParams params) throws IOException ; /** * Marks this connection as being in a reusable communication state. * The checkpoints for reuseable communication states (in the absence * of pipelining) are before sending a request and after receiving * the response in it's entirety. * The connection will automatically clear the checkpoint when * used for communication. A call to this method indicates that * the next checkpoint has been reached. *
* A reusable communication state is necessary but not sufficient * for the connection to be reused. * A {@link #getRoute route} mismatch, the connection being closed, * or other circumstances might prevent reuse. */ void markReusable() ; /** * Marks this connection as not being in a reusable state. * This can be used immediately before releasing this connection * to prevent it's reuse. Reasons for preventing reuse include * error conditions and the evaluation of a * {@link org.apache.http.ConnectionReuseStrategy reuse strategy}. *
* Note: * It is not necessary to call here before writing to * or reading from this connection. Communication attempts will * automatically unmark the state as non-reusable. It can then * be switched back using {@link #markReusable markReusable}. */ void unmarkReusable() ; /** * Indicates whether this connection is in a reusable communication state. * See {@link #markReusable markReusable} and * {@link #unmarkReusable unmarkReusable} for details. * * @return true if this connection is marked as being in * a reusable communication state, * false otherwise */ boolean isMarkedReusable() ; /** * Assigns a state object to this connection. Connection managers may make * use of the connection state when allocating persistent connections. * * @param state The state object */ void setState(Object state) ; /** * Returns the state object associated with this connection. * * @return The state object */ Object getState() ; /** * Sets the duration that this connection can remain idle before it is * reused. The connection should not be used again if this time elapses. The * idle duration must be reset after each request sent over this connection. * The elapsed time starts counting when the connection is released, which * is typically after the headers (and any response body, if present) is * fully consumed. */ void setIdleDuration(long duration, TimeUnit unit); } // interface ManagedClientConnection