RSocket
RSocket is an application protocol initially developed by Netflix,[1] that supports Reactive Streams. The motivation behind its development was to replace hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP), which is inefficient for many tasks such as microservices communication, with a protocol that has less overhead.[2]
| Initial release | 26 October 2015 | 
|---|---|
| Repository | github | 
| Written in | Java, JavaScript, Kotlin, .NET, Go, C++ | 
| Type | Reactive Streams networking | 
| License | Apache License | 
| Website | rsocket | 
RSocket is a binary protocol for use on byte stream transports such as TCP, WebSockets, and Aeron. It enables the following symmetric interaction models via async message passing over a single connection:
- request/response (stream of 1)
- request/stream (finite stream of many)
- fire-and-forget (no response)
- channel (bi-directional streams)
It supports session resumption, to allow resuming long-lived streams across different transport connections. This is particularly useful for mobile‹–›server communication when network connections drop, switch, and reconnect frequently.
References
    
- Monkiewicz, Łukasz (June 4, 2017). "A summary of Code Europe 2017 in Warsaw". lmonkiewicz.com. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
- Christensen, Ben (Apr 3, 2017). "Motivations". github.com. Retrieved May 7, 2017.
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