Hi,

You can configure the WebSocketContainer with the Jetty HttpClient which
you can set the CookieStore on.
see
https://www.eclipse.org/jetty/documentation/jetty-10/programming-guide/index.html#pg-client-http-cookie

You can use the static method
`org.eclipse.jetty.websocket.javax.client.JavaxWebSocketClientContainerProvider#getContainer(HttpClient)`
to get the container instead the `ContainerProvider.getContainer()` method.
This way you can pass in a configured HttpClient.

This could also be done with XML which can help avoid some classloading
issues if running in a webapp. Configure the HttpClient in a file named
jetty-websocket-httpclient.xml in your resources directory.
example:
https://github.com/eclipse/jetty.project/blob/cd1f146867f66f37df73184a086f0e17828d70c8/tests/test-webapps/test-websocket-client-provided-webapp/src/main/resources/jetty-websocket-httpclient.xml

cheers,
Lachlan

On Sat, Nov 20, 2021 at 4:35 PM Piotr Morgwai Kotarbinski <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Hello all,
> I have a client app that both issues standard http requests and makes
> websocket connections (to the same server). Currently I'm using Java-11's
> built in HttpClient for plain http and Jetty-10's client WebSocketContainer
> for websockets (obtained with ContainerProvider.getWebSocketContainer()).
> Now I need these 2 to share cookie storage: for HttpClient I can explicitly
> set CookieHandler with
> HttpClient.newBuilder().cookieHandler(cookieManager)....build() but I
> haven't been able to find any way to configure cookie storage for
> WebSocketContainer: is it possible to do it somehow?
>
> Thanks!
> _______________________________________________
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> [email protected]
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