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Trustin Lee ffa348273a Future compatibility with TLS ALPN
Motivation:

According to TLS ALPN draft-05, a client sends the list of the supported
protocols and a server responds with the selected protocol, which is
different from NPN.  Therefore, ApplicationProtocolSelector won't work
with ALPN

Modifications:

- Use Iterable<String> to list the supported protocols on the client
  side, rather than using ApplicationProtocolSelector
- Remove ApplicationProtocolSelector

Result:

Future compatibility with TLS ALPN
2014-05-22 10:12:42 +09:00
license Provide convenient universal API to enable SSL/TLS 2014-05-17 19:40:48 +09:00
src Future compatibility with TLS ALPN 2014-05-22 10:12:42 +09:00
.fbfilter.xml Update license headers 2012-06-04 13:35:22 -07:00
.fbprefs Updated Find Bugs configuration 2009-03-04 10:33:09 +00:00
.gitignore Add JVM crash logs to .gitignore 2014-05-18 21:39:00 +09:00
.travis.yml Travis CI branch whitelisting 2013-03-11 09:54:35 +09:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Move the pull request guide to the developer guide 2014-03-12 13:18:38 +09:00
LICENSE.txt Relicensed to Apache License v2 2009-08-28 07:15:49 +00:00
NOTICE.txt Provide convenient universal API to enable SSL/TLS 2014-05-17 19:40:48 +09:00
pom.xml Add unified NextProtoNego extension support to SslContext 2014-05-21 17:38:52 +09:00
README.md Add README.md 2014-01-16 14:40:07 +09:00

Netty Project

Netty is an asynchronous event-driven network application framework for rapid development of maintainable high performance protocol servers & clients.

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:

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.