73c0f85d63
Motivation: Everytime a new connection is accepted via EpollSocketServerChannel it will create a new EpollSocketChannel that needs to get the remote and local addresses in the constructor. The current implementation uses new InetSocketAddress(String, int) to create these. This is quite slow due the implementation in oracle and openjdk. Modifications: Encode all needed informations into a byte array before return from jni layer and then use new InetSocketAddress(InetAddress, int) to create the socket addresses. This allows to create the InetAddress via a byte[] and so reduce the overhead, this is done either by using InetAddress.getByteAddress(byte[]) or by Inet6Address.getByteAddress(String, byte[], int). Result: Reduce performance overhead while accept new connections with native transport |
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all | ||
buffer | ||
codec | ||
codec-dns | ||
codec-haproxy | ||
codec-http | ||
codec-memcache | ||
codec-mqtt | ||
codec-socks | ||
codec-stomp | ||
common | ||
example | ||
handler | ||
handler-proxy | ||
license | ||
microbench | ||
resolver | ||
resolver-dns | ||
tarball | ||
testsuite | ||
transport | ||
transport-native-epoll | ||
transport-rxtx | ||
transport-sctp | ||
transport-udt | ||
.fbprefs | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE.txt | ||
NOTICE.txt | ||
pom.xml | ||
README.md | ||
run-example.sh |
Netty Project
Netty is an asynchronous event-driven network application framework for rapid development of maintainable high performance protocol servers & clients.
Links
How to build
For the detailed information about building and developing Netty, please visit the developer guide. This page only gives very basic information.
You require the following to build Netty:
- Latest stable Oracle JDK 7
- Latest stable Apache Maven
- If you are on Linux, you need additional development packages installed on your system, because you'll build the native transport.
Note that this is build-time requirement. JDK 5 (for 3.x) or 6 (for 4.0+) is enough to run your Netty-based application.
Branches to look
The 'master' branch is where the development of the latest major version lives on. The development of all other versions takes place in each branch whose name is identical to <majorVersion>.<minorVersion>
. For example, the development of 3.9 and 4.0 resides in the branch '3.9' and the branch '4.0' respectively.