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okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/Connection.kt
* * Typically instances of this class are created, connected and exercised automatically by the HTTP * client. Applications may use this class to monitor HTTP connections as members of a * [connection pool][ConnectionPool]. * * Do not confuse this class with the misnamed `HttpURLConnection`, which isn't so much a connection * as a single request/response exchange. *
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Fri Dec 27 13:39:56 UTC 2024 - 4.3K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava-tests/test/com/google/common/util/concurrent/TestThread.java
*/ public void callAndAssertWaits(String methodName, Object conditionLikeObject) throws Exception { checkNotNull(methodName); checkNotNull(conditionLikeObject); // TODO: Restore the following line when Monitor.hasWaiters() no longer acquires the lock. // assertEquals(false, invokeMethod("hasWaiters", conditionLikeObject)); sendRequest(methodName, conditionLikeObject); Thread.sleep(DUE_DILIGENCE_MILLIS);
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Dec 22 03:38:46 UTC 2024 - 10.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/main/resources/fess_config.properties
crawler.ignore.content.exception=true # HTTP status codes considered as failure URLs. crawler.failure.url.status.codes=404 # Interval (seconds) for system monitor during crawling. crawler.system.monitor.interval=60 # Whether to ignore idle threads in hot thread monitoring. crawler.hotthread.ignore_idle_threads=true # Interval for hot thread monitoring (e.g., 500ms). crawler.hotthread.interval=500ms
Registered: Thu Sep 04 12:52:25 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Jul 05 14:45:37 UTC 2025 - 54.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/features/events.md
Events ====== Events allow you to capture metrics on your application’s HTTP calls. Use events to monitor: * The size and frequency of the HTTP calls your application makes. If you’re making too many calls, or your calls are too large, you should know about it! * The performance of these calls on the underlying network. If the network’s performance isn’t sufficient, you need to either improve the network or use less of it. ### EventListener
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Feb 06 02:19:09 UTC 2022 - 7.7K bytes - Viewed (0) -
docs/features/interceptors.md
Interceptors ============ Interceptors are a powerful mechanism that can monitor, rewrite, and retry calls. Here's a simple interceptor that logs the outgoing request and the incoming response. ```java class LoggingInterceptor implements Interceptor { @Override public Response intercept(Interceptor.Chain chain) throws IOException { Request request = chain.request(); long t1 = System.nanoTime();
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Feb 06 02:19:09 UTC 2022 - 8.1K bytes - Viewed (0) -
android/guava-tests/test/com/google/common/util/concurrent/TestThread.java
*/ public void callAndAssertWaits(String methodName, Object conditionLikeObject) throws Exception { checkNotNull(methodName); checkNotNull(conditionLikeObject); // TODO: Restore the following line when Monitor.hasWaiters() no longer acquires the lock. // assertEquals(false, invokeMethod("hasWaiters", conditionLikeObject)); sendRequest(methodName, conditionLikeObject); Thread.sleep(DUE_DILIGENCE_MILLIS);
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sun Dec 22 03:38:46 UTC 2024 - 10.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
okhttp/src/commonJvmAndroid/kotlin/okhttp3/EventListener.kt
import java.io.IOException import java.net.InetAddress import java.net.InetSocketAddress import java.net.ProtocolException import java.net.Proxy /** * Listener for metrics events. Extend this class to monitor the quantity, size, and duration of * your application's HTTP calls. * * All start/connect/acquire events will eventually receive a matching end/release event, either
Registered: Fri Sep 05 11:42:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Tue May 27 14:58:02 UTC 2025 - 17.4K bytes - Viewed (0) -
guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/AbstractScheduledService.java
// because the service does not monitor the state of the future so if the exception is not // caught and forwarded to the service the task would stop executing but the service would // have no idea. // TODO(lukes): consider building everything in terms of ListenableScheduledFuture then // the AbstractService could monitor the future directly. Rescheduling is still hard...
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Aug 09 01:14:59 UTC 2025 - 27.8K bytes - Viewed (0) -
src/main/java/org/codelibs/fess/mylasta/direction/FessConfig.java
* Get the value for the key 'crawler.system.monitor.interval'. <br> * The value is, e.g. 60 <br> * comment: Interval (seconds) for system monitor during crawling. * @return The value of found property. (NotNull: if not found, exception but basically no way) */ String getCrawlerSystemMonitorInterval(); /** * Get the value for the key 'crawler.system.monitor.interval' as {@link Integer}. <br>
Registered: Thu Sep 04 12:52:25 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Thu Jul 17 08:28:31 UTC 2025 - 525.6K bytes - Viewed (1) -
android/guava/src/com/google/common/util/concurrent/AbstractScheduledService.java
// because the service does not monitor the state of the future so if the exception is not // caught and forwarded to the service the task would stop executing but the service would // have no idea. // TODO(lukes): consider building everything in terms of ListenableScheduledFuture then // the AbstractService could monitor the future directly. Rescheduling is still hard...
Registered: Fri Sep 05 12:43:10 UTC 2025 - Last Modified: Sat Aug 09 01:14:59 UTC 2025 - 27.7K bytes - Viewed (0)