On Tue, 2014-01-21 at 09:39 -0800, Tony Anecito wrote: > Thanks Gary there was nothing about performance improvements at least what I > noticed. Just wanted to be sure. > > -Tony >
HttpClient 4.3 can be expected to be ~5% faster than 4.2 due to reduced synchronization in several hot spots, but any performance improvement below 10% is simply not news worthy and is largely irrelevant. Oleg In the future, please do not respond to release announcements directly and _especially_ to multiple lists at the same time. This will annoy fewer people. > > > > On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 9:33 AM, Tony Anecito <adanec...@yahoo.com> > wrote: > > I am using 4.2.5. Have there been any performance improvements since then? > > Great job on the updates! > > -Tony > > > > > > > On Tuesday, January 21, 2014 1:29 AM, Gary Gregory <ggreg...@apache.org> > wrote: > > The Apache HttpComponents project is pleased to announce 4.3.2 GA release > of HttpComponents HttpClient. > > [Sorry for the resend, I had the wrong component in the email subject] > > HttpClient 4.3.2 (GA) is a maintenance release that delivers a number of > improvements as well as bug fixes for issues reported since 4.3.1 release. > SNI support for Oracle JRE 1.7+ is being among the most notable > improvements. > > Users of HttpClient 4.3 are encouraged to upgrade. > > Download: http://hc.apache.org/downloads.cgi > Release notes: > https://www.apache.org/dist/httpcomponents/httpclient/RELEASE_NOTES-4.3.x.txt > HttpComponents site: http://hc.apache.org > > About HttpComponents HttpClient > > The Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is perhaps the most significant > protocol used on the Internet today. Web services, network-enabled > appliances and the growth of network computing continue to expand the role > of the HTTP protocol beyond user-driven web browsers, while increasing the > number of applications that require HTTP support. > > Although the java.net package provides basic functionality for accessing > resources via HTTP, it doesn't provide the full flexibility or > functionality needed by many applications. HttpClient seeks to fill this > void by providing an efficient, up-to-date, and feature-rich package > implementing the client side of the most recent HTTP standards and > recommendations. > > Designed for extension while providing robust support for the base HTTP > protocol, HttpClient may be of interest to anyone building HTTP-aware > client applications such as web browsers, web service clients, or systems > that leverage or extend the HTTP protocol for distributed communication. > > Gary Gregory on behalf of the HttpComponents team. > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: httpclient-users-unsubscr...@hc.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: httpclient-users-h...@hc.apache.org