Commit #c187cb2 introduced proactive rejection of multiple subscribers
in ReactorClientHttpResponse, instead of hanging indefinitely as per
https://github.com/reactor/reactor-netty/issues/503.
However FluxReceive also rejects subsequent subscribers if the response
is consumed fully, as opposed to being canceled, e.g. as with
bodyToMono(Void.class). In that case, a subsequent subscriber causes
two competing error signals to be sent, and one gets dropped and
logged by reactor-core.
This fix ensures that a rejection is raised in
ReactorClientHttpResponse only after a cancel() was detected.
Issue: SPR-17564
This commit makes the 3 existing InvocableHandlerMethod types more
consistent and comparable with each other.
1. Use of consistent method names and method order.
2. Consistent error formatting.
3. Explicit for loops for resolving argument values in webflux variant
because that makes it more readable, creates less garabage, and it's
the only way to bring consistency since the other two variants cannot
throw exceptions inside Optional lambdas (vs webflux variant which can
wrap it in a Mono).
4. Use package private HandlerMethodArgumentComposite in webflux
variant in order to pick up the resolver argument caching that the
other two variants have.
5. Polish tests.
6. Add missing tests for messaging variant.
Prior to this commit, no `ResourceUrlProvider` was configured
in WebFlux (no bean was contributed by the WebFlux infrastructure).
Also, several `ResourceTransformer` instances that extend the
`ResourceTransformerSupport` base class need a `ResourceUrlProvider`
to resolve absolute URLs when rewriting resource URLs. At this point,
no `ResourceUrlProvider` was configured and they could only resolve
relative URLs.
This commit contributes a new `ResourceUrlProvider` to the WebFlux
configuration; this bean can be reused by the WebFlux infrastructure and
application code.
This also automatically configure this shared `ResourceUrlProvider`
instance on the resource chain where needed.
Issue: SPR-17433
Prior to this commit, `ResourceTransformerSupport.toAbsolutePath`
would call `StringUtils.applyRelativePath` in all cases. But this
implementation is prepending the given path even if the relative path
starts with `"/"`.
This commit skips the entire operation if the given path is absolute,
i.e. it starts with `"/"`.
Issue: SPR-17432
Review and update Servlet and Undertow adapters to release any data
buffers they be holding on to at the time of error or cancellation.
Also remove onDiscard hooks from Reactor and Undertow request body.
For Reactor we expect it to be handled. For Undertow there isn't
any Reactor Core upstream for the callback to be useful.
Issue: SPR-17410
This commit changes the attributes stored under
RouterFunctions.MATCHING_PATTERN_ATTRIBUTE and
HandlerMapping.BEST_MATCHING_PATTERN_ATTRIBUTE from a String to a
PathPattern, similar to what annotated controllers set.
Issue: SPR-17395
Several benchmarks underlined a few hotspots for CPU and GC pressure in
the Spring Framework codebase:
1. `org.springframework.util.MimeType.<init>(String, String, Map)`
2. `org.springframework.util.LinkedCaseInsensitiveMap.convertKey(String)`
Both are linked with HTTP request headers parsing and response headers
writin during the exchange processing phase.
1) is linked to repeated calls to `HttpHeaders.getContentType`
within a single request handling. The media type parsing operation
is expensive and the result doesn't change between calls, since
the request headers are immutable at that point.
This commit improves this by caching the parsed `MediaType` for the
`"Content-Type"` request header in the `ReadOnlyHttpHeaders` class.
This change is available for both Spring MVC and Spring WebFlux.
2) is linked to insertions/lookups in the `LinkedCaseInsensitiveMap`,
which is the data structure behind `HttpHeaders`.
Those operations are creating a lot of garbage (including a lot of
`String` created by `toLowerCase`). We could choose a more efficient
data structure for storing HTTP headers data.
As a first step, this commit is focusing on Spring WebFlux and
introduces `MultiValueMap` implementations mapped by native HTTP headers
for the following servers: Tomcat, Jetty, Netty and Undertow.
Such implementations avoid unnecessary copying of the headers
and leverages as much as possible optimized operations provided by the
native implementations.
This change has a few consequences:
* `HttpHeaders` can now wrap a `MultiValueMap` directly
* The default constructor of `HttpHeaders` is still backed by a
`LinkedCaseInsensitiveMap`
* The HTTP request headers for the websocket HTTP handshake now need to
be cloned, because native headers are likely to be pooled/recycled by
the server implementation, hence gone when the initial HTTP exchange is
done
Issue: SPR-17250