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Commit eeb723b6 authored by dmyur's avatar dmyur
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YurkovichHW2 complete

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package MV3500Cohort2019JulySeptember.homework2.Yurkovich;
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
/**
* Before, we always used telnet (netcat) to connect to the server. Here we are
* now writing our own program to do the connection.
*
* As you will see, when we run this after we start the server we will see the
* same string telnet printed, sent by the server. The output at the server will
* show different socket pairs for each time the loop iterates.
*
* @author mcgredo
*/
public class Yurkovich_Client {
// IPv6 String constant for localhost address, similarly IPv4 127.0.0.1
public final static String LOCALHOST = "0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1";
public static void main(String[] args) {
// Local vars/fields
Socket socket;
InputStream is;
InputStreamReader isr;
BufferedReader br;
String serverMessage;
Integer count = 0;
OutputStream os;
PrintStream ps;
try {
while (true) {
System.out.println("TcpExample3Client creating socket...");
// We request an IP to connect to ("localhost") and
// port number at that IP (2317). This establishes
// a connection to that IP in the form of a Socket
// object; the server uses a ServerSocket to wait for
// connections.
socket = new Socket(LOCALHOST, 2317); // locohost?
// Now hook everything up (i.e. set up the streams), Java style:
is = socket.getInputStream();
isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
br = new BufferedReader(isr);
// Read a single line written by the server. We'd
// do things a bit differently if there were many lines to be read
// from the server instead of one only.
serverMessage = br.readLine();
System.out.println("==================================================");
System.out.println("Now we're talking!");
System.out.println("The message the server sent was: '" + serverMessage + "'");
System.out.println("This was the "+ count +" connection.");
count++;
// socket gets closed, either automatically/silently by this code (or possibly by the server)
// Now hook everything up (i.e. set up the streams), Java style:
os = socket.getOutputStream();
ps = new PrintStream(os);
ps.println("This message was produced by the YurkClient."); // this gets sent back to client!
ps.flush();
} // end while(true)
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println("Problem with TcpExample3ServerClient networking:"); // describe what is happening
System.err.println("Error: " + e);
// Provide more helpful information to user if exception occurs due to running twice at one time
if (e instanceof java.net.BindException) {
System.err.println("*** Be sure to stop any other running instances of programs using this port!");
}
} finally {
// program exit: tell somebody about that
System.out.println("\nclient exit");
}
}
}
package MV3500Cohort2019JulySeptember.homework2.Yurkovich;
import java.io.*;
import java.net.*;
/**
* Very slightly more complex than example1, further modifying example2. The
* only thing this does differently is introduce a loop into the response, so
* you don't have to restart the program after one response. Also, it prints out
* the socket pair the server sees. Run the program via telnet several times and
* compare the socket pairs.
*
* telnet (nc) localhost 2317
*
* If you're sophisticated you can contact the instructor's computer while
* running this program.
*
* telnet (nc) [ipNumberOfServerLaptop] 2317
*
* and have the instructor display the socket pairs received.
*
* @author mcgredo
*/
public class Yurkovich_Server {
public static void main(String[] args) {
try {
// ServerSocket waits for a connection from a client.
// Notice that it is outside the loop; ServerSocket
// needs to be made only once.
System.out.println("TcpExample3Server has started..."); // it helps debugging to put this on console first
ServerSocket serverSocket = new ServerSocket(2317);
OutputStream os;
PrintStream ps;
InetAddress localAddress, remoteAddress;
InputStream is;
InputStreamReader isr;
BufferedReader br;
String clientMessage;
int localPort, remotePort;
// Server is up and waiting (i.e. "blocked" or paused)
// Loop, infinitely, waiting for client connections.
// Stop the program somewhere else.
while (true) {
// block until connected to a client
try (Socket clientConnection = serverSocket.accept()) {
// Now hook everything up (i.e. set up the streams), Java style:
os = clientConnection.getOutputStream();
ps = new PrintStream(os);
ps.println("This message was produced by the YurkServer."); // this gets sent back to client!
// Print some information locally about the Socket connection.
// This includes the port and IP numbers on both sides (the socket pair).
localAddress = clientConnection.getLocalAddress();
remoteAddress = clientConnection.getInetAddress();
localPort = clientConnection.getLocalPort();
remotePort = clientConnection.getPort();
// My socket pair connection looks like this, to localhost:
// Socket pair: (( /0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1, 2317 ), ( /0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1, 54876 ))
// Socket pair: (( /0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1, 2317 ), ( /0:0:0:0:0:0:0:1, 54881 ))
// Why is the first IP/port the same, while the second set has different ports?
System.out.println("TcpExample3Server socket pair: (( " + localAddress.toString() + ", " + localPort + " ), ( "
+ remoteAddress.toString() + ", " + remotePort + " ))");
// Notice the use of flush() and try w/ resources. Without
// the try w/ resources the Socket object may stay open for
// a while after the client has stopped needing this
// connection. try w/ resources explicitly ends the connection.
// Now hook everything up (i.e. set up the streams), Java style:
is = clientConnection.getInputStream();
isr = new InputStreamReader(is);
br = new BufferedReader(isr);
// Read a single line written by the server. We'd
// do things a bit differently if there were many lines to be read
// from the server instead of one only.
clientMessage = br.readLine();
System.out.println("==================================================");
System.out.println("Now we're talking!");
System.out.println("The message the server sent was: '" + clientMessage + "'");
// System.out.println("This was the "+ count +" connection.");
ps.flush();
// like it or not, you're outta here!
}
}
} catch (IOException e) {
System.err.println("Problem with TcpExample3Server networking: " + e);
// Provide more helpful information to user if exception occurs due to running twice at one time
if (e instanceof java.net.BindException) {
System.err.println("*** Be sure to stop any other running instances of programs using this port!");
}
}
}
}
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