Java NIO ServerSocketChannel


Java Nio 

1 Java NIO Tutorial
2 Java NIO Overview
3 Java NIO Channel
4 Java NIO Buffer
5 Java NIO Scatter / Gather
6 Java NIO Channel to Channel Transfers
7 Java NIO Selector
8 Java NIO FileChannel
9 Java NIO SocketChannel
10 Java NIO ServerSocketChannel
11 Java NIO DatagramChannel
12 Java NIO Pipe
13 Java NIO vs. IO

Java NIO ServerSocketChannel

Java NIO ServerSocketChannel_第1张图片 
By Jakob Jenkov
 Connect with me: 
Rate article:
Share article:
Tweet

Table of Contents
  • Opening a ServerSocketChannel
  • Closing a ServerSocketChannel
  • Listening for Incoming Connections
  • Non-blocking Mode

A Java NIO ServerSocketChannel is a channel that can listen for incoming TCP connections, just like aServerSocket in standard Java Networking. The ServerSocketChannel class is located in thejava.nio.channels package.

Here is an example:

ServerSocketChannel serverSocketChannel = ServerSocketChannel.open();

serverSocketChannel.socket().bind(new InetSocketAddress(9999));

while(true){
    SocketChannel socketChannel =
            serverSocketChannel.accept();

    //do something with socketChannel...
}

Opening a ServerSocketChannel

You open a ServerSocketChannel by calling the ServerSocketChannel.open() method. Here is how that looks:

ServerSocketChannel serverSocketChannel = ServerSocketChannel.open();

Closing a ServerSocketChannel

Closing a ServerSocketChannel is done by calling the ServerSocketChannel.close() method. Here is how that looks:

serverSocketChannel.close();

Listening for Incoming Connections

Listening for incoming connections is done by calling the ServerSocketChannel.accept() method. When theaccept() method returns, it returns a SocketChannel with an incoming connection. Thus, the accept() method blocks until an incoming connection arrives.

Since you are typically not interested in listening just for a single connection, you call the accept() inside a while-loop. Here is how that looks:

while(true){
    SocketChannel socketChannel =
            serverSocketChannel.accept();

    //do something with socketChannel...
}

Of course you would use some other stop-criteria than true inside the while-loop.

Non-blocking Mode

ServerSocketChannel can be set into non-blocking mode. In non-blocking mode the accept() method returns immediately, and may thus return null, if no incoming connection had arrived. Therefore you will have to check if the returned SocketChannel is null. Here is an example:

ServerSocketChannel serverSocketChannel = ServerSocketChannel.open();

serverSocketChannel.socket().bind(new InetSocketAddress(9999));
serverSocketChannel.configureBlocking(false);

while(true){
    SocketChannel socketChannel =
            serverSocketChannel.accept();

    if(socketChannel != null){
        //do something with socketChannel...
        }
}











你可能感兴趣的:(Java NIO ServerSocketChannel)