[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-8955?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]
Andriy Redko reassigned CXF-8955: --------------------------------- Assignee: Andriy Redko > Custom timeout with Message.RECEIVE_TIMEOUT not working with hc5 / hc > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: CXF-8955 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CXF-8955 > Project: CXF > Issue Type: Bug > Components: JAX-WS Runtime > Affects Versions: 4.0.3 > Environment: Fedora 36, Java 17, cxf 4.0.3 > Reporter: Michael Wins > Assignee: Andriy Redko > Priority: Major > Attachments: cxf_timeout_bug.tar-2.gz > > > Hi, I am trying to set custom read timeouts for WS operations in an > interceptor: > {code:java} > public class CustomReadTimeoutInterceptor extends > AbstractPhaseInterceptor<Message> { > ... > @Override > public void handleMessage(Message message) { > message.put(Message.RECEIVE_TIMEOUT, timeoutMillis); > } > ...{code} > That works well when using the JDK http client, but it does NOT work with the > hc5 async client. > It looks like requests issued in parallel affect each others timeout settings. > > Download the attached sample project, which contains a > CustomReadTimeoutInterceptor and starts two requests in parallel with > different timeouts (4 and 2 seconds). > Execute both > {code:java} > mvn > {code} > and > {code:java} > mvn -DuseAsync > {code} > and compare the output. The output of the first will be like > {code:java} > CLIENT[19]: Duration: 2010 millis > CLIENT[29]: Duration: 4211 millis{code} > (which is as expected) whereas the second - using hc5 async - will result in > {code:java} > CLIENT[29]: Duration: 4269 millis > CLIENT[19]: Duration: 4012 millis{code} > Now I am wondering if my code is somehow incorrect or if it is cxf's fault... -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.20.10#820010)