- DefaultChannelPipeline detects such cases and creates an object called
'bridge' that works as a man-in-the-middle to deal with a race
condition
- Slight performance drop is observed but still faster than v3.
Couldn't find much from a profiler yet.
- Previously, head was a volatile field which is null at the beginning.
While iterating over the pipeline, if the loop hits null, it called
Channel.Unsafe explicitly.
- Instead, I created an outbound handler that redirects all requests
to the unsafe and made it a final field of the pipeline.
- As a result, DefaultChannelPipeline code became much simpler.
- AbstractCodecEmbedder does not throw an exception immediately anymore.
It stores the caught exceptions in the product queue and throws them
on pool() or peek().
- SocketTestCombination generates all possible test combinations of
socket transports.
- SocketEchoTest iterates over the combinations and runs all tests
using reflection.
- The handler you specify with initializer() is actually simply added
to the pipeline and that's all. It's ChannelInitializer which does
additional work. For example, a user can specify just a single
handler with initializer() and it will still work. This is especially
common for Bootstrap, so I renamed initializer to handler, which makes
more sense.
- DefaultChannelPipeline uses this information to reject invalid buffer
access in inbound(Message|Byte)Buffer. Otherwise, a user can access
a message buffer when the channel is stream-oriented.
- Because ChannelType cannot be both STREAM and MESSAGE, catch-all
buffer has been removed to avoid confusion and unexpected behavior
(it's already causing headache.)
- As a result, codec embedder needs rework.
- Removed ones are: IP filer and HTTP multipart codec
- Needs closer code review and polishing
- Sorry. I'll add them back in the next alpha releases
- SSL handler and ChunkedWriteHandler also need more work, but
I really want to make them part of the first alpha because they
are used pretty often by users.