Server Libraries
The Eclipse Jetty Project provides server-side libraries that allow you to configure and start programmatically an HTTP or WebSocket server from a main class, or embed it in your existing application. A typical example is a HTTP server that needs to expose a REST endpoint. Another example is a proxy application that receives HTTP requests, processes them, and then forwards them to third party services, for example using the Jetty client libraries.
While historically Jetty is an HTTP server, it is possible to use the Jetty server-side libraries to write a generic network server that interprets any network protocol (not only HTTP). If you are interested in the low-level details of how the Eclipse Jetty server libraries work, or are interested in writing a custom protocol, look at the Server I/O Architecture.
The Jetty server-side libraries provide:
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HTTP support for HTTP/1.0, HTTP/1.1, HTTP/2, clear-text or encrypted, HTTP/3, for applications that want to embed Jetty as a generic HTTP server or proxy, via the HTTP libraries
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HTTP/2 low-level support, for applications that want to explicitly handle low-level HTTP/2 sessions, streams and frames, via the HTTP/2 libraries
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HTTP/3 low-level support, for applications that want to explicitly handle low-level HTTP/3 sessions, streams and frames, via the HTTP/3 libraries
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WebSocket support, for applications that want to embed a WebSocket server, via the WebSocket libraries
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FCGI support, to delegate requests to python or similar scripting languages.