Prior to this commit, the `DefaultWebClient` would execute the configured
`ExchangeFilterFunction` as the reactive pipeline is assembled during
subscription. This means that if imperative code is executed in a filter
function, it won't be aware of the current observation through the local
scope.
For example, when automatic context propagation is enabled for Reactor
operators, the logger MDC will not know about the current
traceId/spanId.
This commit ensures that client filter functions execution is deferred
during the actual client exchange.
Fixes gh-33559
This aligns HttpHeaders with other places like ServletWebRequest and
DefaultWebExchange where an ETag is accepted as input.
It also allows us to remove quoting from places that delegate to
HttpHeaders#setETag since it now does that internally.
Closes gh-33412
Update checks whether quoting is needed to be more complete
than what we've used so far, making sure the there is both
opening and closing quotes independent of each other.
See gh-33412
On the client side, supports `name=value` pairs. Placeholders in values
are resolved by the `embeddedValueResolver`.
On the server side, additionally supports `name` and `!name` syntax.
Closes gh-33309
Thymeleaf has its own special handling for SSE that gets in the way
of fragment rendering. This is why we need to set the response
content-type before streaming, and then pass text/html to the
View for rendering each fragment.
See gh-33194
This application/javascript MIME type is deprecated.
This commit therefore changes the MIME type mapping for *.js files from
application/javascript to text/javascript in order to align with
industry standards.
Closes gh-33197
The result returned by Kotlin reflective invocation of a function
returning an inline value class is wrapped, which makes sense
from Kotlin POV but from a JVM perspective the associated value
and type should be unwrapped to be consistent with what
would happen with a reflective invocation done by Java.
This commit unwraps such result.
Closes gh-33026
This provides an implementation of an HTTP Handler Adapter that is coded
directly to the Eclipse Jetty core API, bypassing any servlet
implementation.
This includes a Jetty implementation of the spring `WebSocketClient`
interface, `JettyWebSocketClient`, using an explicit dependency to the
jetty-websocket-api.
Closes gh-32097
Co-authored-by: Lachlan Roberts <lachlan@webtide.com>
Co-authored-by: Arjen Poutsma <arjen.poutsma@broadcom.com>