Book Image

Tomcat 6 Developer's Guide

Book Image

Tomcat 6 Developer's Guide

Overview of this book

While Tomcat is one of the most popular servlet containers, its inner workings still remain a mystery to many developers. If you only have a superficial familiarity of how this container actually functions, much of its power remains untapped and underutilized. This book will provide you with all that you need to undertand how to effectively use Apache Tomcat. This book begins by providing detailed instructions on building a Tomcat distribution. The next few chapters introduce you to the conceptual underpinnings of web servers, the Java EE and servlet specifications, and the Tomcat container. Subsequent chapters address the key Tomcat components, taking care to provide you with the information needed to understand the internal workings of each component. Detailed examples let you walk through a Tomcat installation, stepping into key Tomcat components, as well as into your own custom servlets. During the course of the book you will encounter various structural components such as the Server and Service; containers such as the Engine, Host, Context, and Wrapper; and helpers such as the Loader, Manager, and Valve. You will also see how Tomcat implements the JNDI API to provide both a directory service for storage agnostic access to its resources, as well as a naming service that implements the Java EE Environment Naming Context. Along the way you will learn how various elements of the servlet 2.5 specification, as well as the HTTP RFCs are implemented by a servlet container. By the end of your journey, you will be able to count yourself as part of the elite minority of Java EE web developers who truly understand what goes on under the covers of a servlet container.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Tomcat 6 Developer's Guide
Credits
About the author
Acknowledgement
About the reviewers
Preface

Chapter 6. The Connector Component

In Tomcat, the Connector component provides the protocol-specific implementation of a web server. At its most basic level, this component monitors a particular port for incoming requests, receives requests that conform to a given protocol such as HTTP 1.1 or AJP 1.3, translates these requests into a canonical form that conforms to the servlet specification, hands these requests to the engine for processing, and returns the generated response to the client. In doing so, it insulates the remainder of the Catalina request processing engine from the specifics of any given protocol.

This component is composed of so many cooperating classes that it may be termed more correctly as the connector subsystem. The Connector class itself is only responsible for the bootstrapping of this subsystem. The remainder of this subsystem is comprised of the following:

  • An endpoint connection acceptor that receives all incoming connections

  • A protocol handler that implements a protocol...