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Posted to issues@cxf.apache.org by "Sergey Beryozkin (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2015/05/08 11:44:01 UTC

[jira] [Resolved] (CXF-6395) Call setTimeout() in a second request cause illegalStateException from web container.

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-6395?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Sergey Beryozkin resolved CXF-6395.
-----------------------------------
       Resolution: Fixed
    Fix Version/s: 3.0.6
                   3.1.1
         Assignee: Sergey Beryozkin

> Call setTimeout() in a second request cause illegalStateException from web container.
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: CXF-6395
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-6395
>             Project: CXF
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: JAX-RS
>            Reporter: Wei Zhang
>            Assignee: Sergey Beryozkin
>             Fix For: 3.1.1, 3.0.6
>
>
> Come from a TCK test case:
> Resource class has two methods:
> static AsyncResponse asyncResponse;
>     @GET
>     @Path("/suspend")
>     public void getSuspendResponse(@Suspended AsyncResponse async) {
>         asyncResponse = async;
>     }
>     @GET
>     @Path("/setTimeOut")
>     public String setTimeOut() {
>         boolean setTimeout = asyncResponse.setTimeout(10, TimeUnit.SECONDS);
>         return String.valueOf(setTimeout)
>     }
> The first request invokes method getSuspendResponse(), the AsyncResponse is in suspend status. The second request invokes method setTimeOut() to invoke setTimeOut() method of the suspend AsyncRespone. AsyncResponseImp.setTimeout() -> cont.suspend(timeout)(Servlet3ContinuationProvider$Servlet3Continuation) -> context.setTimeout(timeout);
> The the impl class of AsyncContext throw a illegalStateException: called setTimeout after the container-initiated dispatch which called startAsync has returned.
> According to the javadoc of AsyncContext class, seemed the behavior of AsyncContext is correct. We tried to challenge this test case, but was rejected.
> Checked restesay code, found they thought the invocation is illegal, but they provide a work around:
>     protected WeakReference<Thread> creatingThread = new WeakReference<Thread>(Thread.currentThread());
>     protected ScheduledFuture timeoutFuture; // this is to get around TCK tests that call setTimeout in a separate thread which is illegal.
>     protected ScheduledExecutorService asyncScheduler;
> public synchronized boolean setTimeout(long time, TimeUnit unit) throws IllegalStateException {
> ......
>         Thread thread = creatingThread.get();
>         if (thread != null && thread != Thread.currentThread()) {
>             // this is to get around TCK tests that call setTimeout in a separate thread which is illegal.
>             if (timeoutFuture != null && !timeoutFuture.cancel(false)) {
>                 return false;
>             }
>             Runnable task = new Runnable() {
>                 @Override
>                 public void run()
>                 {
>                     handleTimeout();
>                 }
>             };
>             timeoutFuture = asyncScheduler.schedule(task, time, unit);
>             return true;
>         } else {
>         ......
>         }
> }
> Check if current thread is the creating thread of AsyncResponseImpl object, if not, means setTimeout() method is called in a second request, then handle the timeout with a ScheduledExecutorService instead of AsyncContext to avoid the illegalState exception. 
> I tried to add above code to setTimeout() method. It's ok when setTimeout() was called, and handleTimeout() method was called also when timeout. But client can't get a response which said timeout until connection timeout.



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