I'm writing a non-blocking client that reads data from a network socket using selector SelectionKey.OP_READ
and selector.select()
calls. The reading part is handled like this:
if (selectionKey.isReadable()) {
int len = inChannel.read(buf);
System.out.println(len);
. . .
}
The problem I see is that the read size (len
) is gradually degenerating as the download progresses:
1290
1290
1290
480
318
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
28
Does anyone know why this is and how to improve it? Of course, it works as-is, but I need to reduce cpu overhead, and thus it is best to process large chunks instead of small ones. Adding a small sleep (20ms) helps, but will obviously limit scalability, as I need to handle thousands of streams simultaneously.