[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-1387?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14375758#comment-14375758
 ] 

Ian Roberts commented on CXF-1387:
----------------------------------

HTTP does allow for compression of requests - the spec for the Content-Encoding 
header (http://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec14.html#sec14.11) says 
"If the content-coding of an entity in a request message is not acceptable to 
the origin server, the server SHOULD respond with a status code of 415 
(Unsupported Media Type).".  It would be unusual for a browser to submit an 
unsolicited gzip request to a random server, but in the case of web services 
there's often (usually?) some out-of-band information that the client can use 
to know that the server it is talking to can understand compression.

> Support for GZIP compression of HTTP payloads
> ---------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-1387
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-1387
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: Core
>            Reporter: Ian Roberts
>            Assignee: Daniel Kulp
>             Fix For: 2.1.2
>
>         Attachments: gzip-interceptors-v2.diff, gzip-interceptors.diff
>
>
> This patch contains a pair of interceptors I wrote to provide support for 
> proper GZIP compression of request and response messages.  I originally 
> started from the configuration_interceptor sample but the code has evolved 
> quite a long way from there now.
> There are two separate interceptors.  GZIPInInterceptor looks in the 
> PROTOCOL_HEADERS for a Content-Encoding of "gzip", and if found it wraps the 
> message's InputStream with a GZIPInputStream to uncompress the payload.  It 
> restores the original input stream at the end of processing (failure to do 
> that originally left me with lots of stale HTTP connections).
> GZIPOutInterceptor applies gzip compression to outgoing messages whose 
> payload is larger than a configurable threshold (default 1kB), and sets their 
> Content-Encoding in the PROTOCOL_HEADERS to "gzip".  Smaller messages are not 
> compressed as it's probably not worth the overhead.
> As currently written, these interceptors are only for use on the client side 
> (compress the request, uncompress the response).  In my services I implement 
> the server-side compression outside of CXF via a servlet filter 
> (http://sourceforge.net/projects/pjl-comp-filter), but if you think it would 
> be useful I can modify the interceptors to support this too - the "in" 
> interceptor should work as-is, the "out" one would have to be made 
> conditional on the Accept-Encoding header supplied in the client request.



--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v6.3.4#6332)

Reply via email to