Available as of Camel 2.14
The netty4-http component is an extension to Netty4 component to facilitiate HTTP transport with Netty4.
This camel component supports both producer and consumer endpoints.
![]() | Stream |
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Netty is stream based, which means the input it receives is submitted to Camel as
a stream. That means you will only be able to read the content of the stream
once. If you find a situation where the
message body appears to be empty or you need to access the data multiple times (eg:
doing multicasting, or redelivery error handling) you should use Stream
caching or convert the message body to a |
Maven users will need to add the following dependency to their pom.xml
for this component:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.camel</groupId>
<artifactId>camel-netty4-http</artifactId>
<version>x.x.x</version>
<!-- use the same version as your Camel core version -->
</dependency>The URI scheme for a netty component is as follows
netty4-http:http://localhost:8080[?options]
You can append query options to the URI in the following format,
?option=value&option=value&...
![]() | Query parameters vs endpoint options |
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You may be wondering how Camel recognizes URI query parameters and endpoint
options. For example you might create endpoint URI as follows -
Keep also in mind that you cannot specify endpoint options using dynamic headers
(like |
![]() | A lot more options |
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Important: This component inherits all the options from Netty4. So make sure to look at the Netty4 documentation as well. Notice that some options from Netty4 are not applicable when using this Netty4 HTTP component, such as options related to UDP transport. |
Name |
Default Value |
Description |
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Value in bytes the max content length per chunked frame received on the Netty HTTP server. |
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Allow using gzip/deflate for compression on the Netty HTTP server if the client supports it from the HTTP headers. |
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To use a custom
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To disable HTTP methods on the Netty HTTP consumer. You can specify multiple separated by comma. |
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If this option is enabled, then during binding
from Netty to Camel Message then the headers will be mapped as well (eg added as
header to the Camel Message as well). You can turn off this option to disable
this. The headers can still be accessed from the
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Whether or not Camel should try to find a target consumer by matching the URI prefix if no exact match is found. See further below for more details. |
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To use a custom
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If the option is |
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Option to disable throwing the
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Specifies whether to enable HTTP TRACE for this Netty HTTP consumer. By default TRACE is turned off. |
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If enabled and an Exchange failed
processing on the consumer side, and if the caused Exception was send
back serialized in the response as a
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If this option is enabled, then during binding
from Netty to Camel Message then the header values will be URL decoded (eg %20
will be a space character. Notice this option is used by the default
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To use a shared Netty4 HTTP server. See Netty HTTP Server Example for more details. |
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Determines whether or not the raw input stream
from Netty |
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Consumer only. Refers to a
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Consumer only. Whether to
send back HTTP status code 503 when the consumer has been suspended. If
the option is |
The NettyHttpSecurityConfiguration has the following options:
Name |
Default Value |
Description |
|---|---|---|
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Whether authentication is enabled. Can be used to quickly turn this off. |
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The constraint supported. Currently only
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The name of the JAAS security realm. This option is mandatory. |
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Allows to plugin a security constraint mapper where you can define ACL to web resources. |
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Allows to plugin a authenticator that performs
the authentication. If none has been configured then the
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Logging level used when a login attempt failed, which allows to see more details why the login failed. |
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To specify FQN class names of
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The following headers can be used on the producer to control the HTTP request.
Name |
Type |
Description |
|---|---|---|
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Allow to control what HTTP method to use such as
GET, POST, TRACE etc. The type can also be a
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Allows to provide URI query parameters as a
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Allows to provide URI context-path and query
parameters as a |
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To set the content-type of the HTTP body. For
example: |
CamelHttpResponseCode |
int
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Allows to set the HTTP Status code to use. By default 200 is used for success, and 500 for failure. |
The following headers is provided as meta-data when a route starts from an Netty4 HTTP endpoint:
The description in the table takes offset in a route having:
from("netty4-http:http:0.0.0.0:8080/myapp")...
Name |
Type |
Description |
|---|---|---|
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The HTTP method used, such as GET, POST, TRACE etc. |
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The URL including protocol, host and port, etc: http://0.0.0.0:8080/myapp |
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The URI without protocol, host and port, etc: /myapp |
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Any query parameters, such as
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Any query parameters, such as
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Additional context-path. This value is empty if
the client called the context-path |
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The charset from the content-type header. |
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If the user was authenticated using HTTP Basic
then this header is added with the value |
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The content type if provided. For example:
|
This component uses the
org.apache.camel.component.netty4.http.NettyHttpMessage as the message
implementation on the Exchange. This allows end users to get access to the original Netty
request/response instances if needed, as shown below. Mind that the original response
may not be accessible at all times.
io.netty.handler.codec.http.HttpRequest request = exchange.getIn(NettyHttpMessage.class).getHttpRequest();
In the route below we use Netty4 HTTP as a HTTP server, which returns back a hardcoded "Bye World" message.
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:8080/foo")
.transform().constant("Bye World");And we can call this HTTP server using Camel also, with the ProducerTemplate as shown below:
String out = template.requestBody("netty4-http:http://localhost:8080/foo", "Hello World", String.class);
System.out.println(out);And we get back "Bye World" as the output.
By default Netty4 HTTP will only match on exact uri's. But you can instruct Netty to match prefixes. For example
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:8123/foo").to("mock:foo");In the route above Netty4 HTTP will only match if the uri is an exact match, so it
will match if you enter http://0.0.0.0:8123/foo but not match if you do
http://0.0.0.0:8123/foo/bar.
So if you want to enable wildcard matching you do as follows:
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:8123/foo?matchOnUriPrefix=true").to("mock:foo");So now Netty matches any endpoints with starts with foo.
To match any endpoint you can do:
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:8123?matchOnUriPrefix=true").to("mock:foo");In the same CamelContext you can have multiple routes from Netty4 HTTP that shares the
same port (eg a io.netty.bootstrap.ServerBootstrap instance). Doing this
requires a number of bootstrap options to be identical in the routes, as the routes will
share the same io.netty.bootstrap.ServerBootstrap instance. The instance
will be configured with the options from the first route created.
The options the routes must be identical configured is all the options defined in the
org.apache.camel.component.netty4.NettyServerBootstrapConfiguration
configuration class. If you have configured another route with different options, Camel
will throw an exception on startup, indicating the options is not identical. To mitigate
this ensure all options is identical.
Here is an example with two routes that share the same port.
Example 9. Two routes sharing the same port
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/foo")
.to("mock:foo")
.transform().constant("Bye World");
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/bar")
.to("mock:bar")
.transform().constant("Bye Camel");And here is an example of a mis configured 2nd route that do not have identical
org.apache.camel.component.netty4.NettyServerBootstrapConfiguration
option as the 1st route. This will cause Camel to fail on startup.
Example 10. Two routes sharing the same port, but the 2nd route is misconfigured and will fail on starting
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/foo")
.to("mock:foo")
.transform().constant("Bye World");
// we cannot have a 2nd route on same port with SSL enabled, when the 1st route is NOT
from("netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/bar?ssl=true")
.to("mock:bar")
.transform().constant("Bye Camel");By configuring the common server bootstrap option in an single instance of a
org.apache.camel.component.netty4.NettyServerBootstrapConfiguration
type, we can use the bootstrapConfiguration option on the Netty4 HTTP
consumers to refer and reuse the same options across all consumers.
<bean id="nettyHttpBootstrapOptions" class="org.apache.camel.component.netty4.NettyServerBootstrapConfiguration"> <property name="backlog" value="200"/> <property name="connectionTimeout" value="20000"/> <property name="workerCount" value="16"/> </bean>
And in the routes you refer to this option as shown below
<route>
<from uri="netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/foo?bootstrapConfiguration=#nettyHttpBootstrapOptions"/>
...
</route>
<route>
<from uri="netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/bar?bootstrapConfiguration=#nettyHttpBootstrapOptions"/>
...
</route>
<route>
<from uri="netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/beer?bootstrapConfiguration=#nettyHttpBootstrapOptions"/>
...
</route>See the Netty HTTP Server Example for more details and example how to do that.
The Netty HTTP consumer supports HTTP basic authentication by specifying the security realm name to use, as shown below
<route>
<from uri="netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/foo?securityConfiguration.realm=karaf"/>
...
</route>The realm name is mandatory to enable basic authentication. By default the JAAS based authenticator is used, which will use the realm name specified (karaf in the example above) and use the JAAS realm and the JAAS {{LoginModule}}s of this realm for authentication.
End user of Apache Karaf / ServiceMix has a karaf realm out of the box, and hence why the example above would work out of the box in these containers.
The org.apache.camel.component.netty4.http.SecurityConstraint allows to
define constrains on web resources. And the
org.apache.camel.component.netty.http.SecurityConstraintMapping is
provided out of the box, allowing to easily define inclusions and exclusions with
roles.
For example as shown below in the XML DSL, we define the constraint bean:
<bean id="constraint" class="org.apache.camel.component.netty4.http.SecurityConstraintMapping">
<!-- inclusions defines url -> roles restrictions -->
<!-- a * should be used for any role accepted (or even no roles) -->
<property name="inclusions">
<map>
<entry key="/*" value="*"/>
<entry key="/admin/*" value="admin"/>
<entry key="/guest/*" value="admin,guest"/>
</map>
</property>
<!-- exclusions is used to define public urls, which requires no authentication -->
<property name="exclusions">
<set>
<value>/public/*</value>
</set>
</property>
</bean>The constraint above is define so that
access to /* is restricted and any roles is accepted (also if user has no roles)
access to /admin/* requires the admin role
access to /guest/* requires the admin or guest role
access to /public/* is an exclusion which means no authentication is needed, and is therefore public for everyone without logging in
To use this constraint we just need to refer to the bean id as shown below:
<route>
<from uri="netty4-http:http://0.0.0.0:{{port}}/foo?matchOnUriPrefix=true&securityConfiguration.realm=karaf&securityConfiguration.securityConstraint=#constraint"/>
...
</route>