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The problem is fairly odd to me although I'm a newbie.

What's going on is that if you force the server under heavy load of connections and keep sending an invalid packet that doesn't represent POLICY_XML packet.

Pretty much what I'm trying to say is that if you connect it goes into socket READ OPERATION. Then you never go into send() which changes SelectionKey into WRITE OPERATION. Somehow the read operations stack up and after 2000 or so connection requests the server will stop accepting connections, no matter what. I've tried to connect with telnet and always fail to make a connection.. But after around 5 minutes it starts accepting connections again and becomes fully functional.

Very strange problem but note that if I remove the packet matching statement it will act similarly to an echo server. Then it will run endlessly without experiencing any connection accepting issues, pretty much turns stable.

I've attached the whole server source code below. Can someone who has extensive knowledge with NIO please check it out and let me know if there is a way to fix it.

All that really catches my eye is the selector wakeup in send() which may fix everything after putting the line below into the read() it seems to do absolutely nothing and the problem remains.

// Finally, wake up our selecting thread so it can make the required changes
this.selector.wakeup();

Here is the source for the simple server.

import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.InetAddress;
import java.net.InetSocketAddress;
import java.net.Socket;
import java.nio.ByteBuffer;
import java.nio.charset.Charset;
import java.nio.charset.CharsetDecoder;
import java.nio.charset.CodingErrorAction;
import java.nio.channels.CancelledKeyException;
import java.nio.channels.SelectionKey;
import java.nio.channels.Selector;
import java.nio.channels.ServerSocketChannel;
import java.nio.channels.SocketChannel;
import java.nio.channels.spi.SelectorProvider;
import java.util.*;

public class PolicyServer implements Runnable {
    public static final String POLICY_REQUEST = "<policy-file-request/>";
    public static final String POLICY_XML =
        "<?xml version=\"1.0\"?>"
        + "<cross-domain-policy>"
        + "<allow-access-from domain=\"*\" to-ports=\"*\" />"
        + "</cross-domain-policy>"
        + (char)0;


    // The host:port combination to listen on
    private InetAddress hostAddress;
    private int port;

    // The channel on which we'll accept connections
    private ServerSocketChannel serverChannel;

    // The selector we'll be monitoring
    private Selector selector;

    // The buffer into which we'll read data when it's available
    private ByteBuffer readBuffer = ByteBuffer.allocate(255);

    // This decodes raw bytes into ascii data.
    private CharsetDecoder asciiDecoder;

    // A list of PendingChange instances
    private List<ChangeRequest> pendingChanges = new LinkedList<ChangeRequest>();

    // Maps a SocketChannel to a list of ByteBuffer instances
    private Map<SocketChannel, List<ByteBuffer>> pendingData = new HashMap<SocketChannel, List<ByteBuffer>>();

    public PolicyServer(InetAddress hostAddress, int port) throws IOException {
        this.hostAddress = hostAddress;
        this.port = port;
        this.selector = this.initSelector();
        this.asciiDecoder = Charset.forName("US-ASCII").newDecoder().onMalformedInput(
                                CodingErrorAction.REPLACE).onUnmappableCharacter(
                                CodingErrorAction.REPLACE);
    }

    public void send(SocketChannel socket, byte[] data) {
        synchronized (this.pendingChanges) {
            // Indicate we want the interest ops set changed
            this.pendingChanges.add(new ChangeRequest(socket, ChangeRequest.CHANGEOPS, SelectionKey.OP_WRITE));

            // And queue the data we want written
            synchronized (this.pendingData) {
                List<ByteBuffer> queue = (List<ByteBuffer>) this.pendingData.get(socket);
                if (queue == null) {
                    queue = new ArrayList<ByteBuffer>();
                    this.pendingData.put(socket, queue);
                }
                queue.add(ByteBuffer.wrap(data));
            }
        }

        // Finally, wake up our selecting thread so it can make the required changes
        this.selector.wakeup();
    }

    public void run() {
        while (true) {
            try {
                // Process any pending changes
                synchronized (this.pendingChanges) {
                    Iterator changes = this.pendingChanges.iterator();
                    while (changes.hasNext()) {
                        ChangeRequest change = (ChangeRequest) changes.next();
                        changes.remove();
                        if(change == null) continue;
                        switch (change.type) {
                        case ChangeRequest.CHANGEOPS:
                            SelectionKey key = change.socket.keyFor(this.selector);
                            try {
                                if(key!=null)
                                    key.interestOps(change.ops);
                            } catch(Exception ex) {
                                if (key!=null)
                                    key.cancel();
                            }
                        }
                    }
                    this.pendingChanges.clear();
                }

                // Wait for an event one of the registered channels
                this.selector.select();

                // Iterate over the set of keys for which events are available
                Iterator selectedKeys = this.selector.selectedKeys().iterator();
                while (selectedKeys.hasNext()) {
                    SelectionKey key = (SelectionKey) selectedKeys.next();
                    selectedKeys.remove();

                    if (!key.isValid()) {
                        key.cancel();
                        continue;
                    }

                    // Check what event is available and deal with it
                    try {
                        if (key.isAcceptable()) {
                            this.accept(key);
                        } else if (key.isReadable()) {
                            this.read(key);
                        } else if (key.isWritable()) {
                            this.write(key);
                        }
                    } catch(IOException io) {
                        this.pendingData.remove(key.channel());
                        try {
                            ((SocketChannel)key.channel()).socket().close();
                        } catch (IOException e) {}
                        key.channel().close();
                        key.cancel();
                        key.attach(null);
                        key = null;
                    }
                }
            } catch (Exception e) {
                e.printStackTrace();
            }
        }
    }

    private void accept(SelectionKey key) throws IOException {
        // For an accept to be pending the channel must be a server socket channel.
        ServerSocketChannel serverSocketChannel = (ServerSocketChannel) key.channel();

        // Accept the connection and make it non-blocking
        SocketChannel socketChannel = serverSocketChannel.accept();
        Socket socket = socketChannel.socket();
        socketChannel.configureBlocking(false);

        // Register the new SocketChannel with our Selector, indicating
        // we'd like to be notified when there's data waiting to be read
        // also contains a attachment of a new StringBuffer (for storing imcomplete/multi packets)
        socketChannel.register(this.selector, SelectionKey.OP_READ, new StringBuffer());
    }

    private void read(SelectionKey key) throws IOException {
        SocketChannel socketChannel = (SocketChannel) key.channel();

        // Clear out our read buffer so it's ready for new data
        this.readBuffer.clear();

        // Attempt to read off the channel
        int numRead = socketChannel.read(this.readBuffer);

        if (numRead == -1) {
            // Remote entity shut the socket down cleanly. Do the
            // same from our end and cancel the channel.
            throw new IOException("");
        }

        // Grab the StringBuffer we stored as the attachment
        StringBuffer sb = (StringBuffer)key.attachment();

        // Flips the readBuffer by setting the current position of
        // packet stream to beginning.
        // Append the data to the attachment StringBuffer
        this.readBuffer.flip();
        sb.append(this.asciiDecoder.decode(this.readBuffer).toString());
        this.readBuffer.clear();

        // Get the policy request as complete packet
        if(sb.indexOf("\0") != -1) {
            String packets = new String(sb.substring(0, sb.lastIndexOf("\0")+1));
            sb.delete(0, sb.lastIndexOf("\0")+1);
            if(packets.indexOf(POLICY_REQUEST) != -1)
                send(socketChannel, POLICY_XML.getBytes());
        } else if(sb.length() >  8192) {
            sb.setLength(0);
            //Force disconnect.
            throw new IOException("");
        }
    }

    private void write(SelectionKey key) throws IOException {
        SocketChannel socketChannel = (SocketChannel) key.channel();

        synchronized (this.pendingData) {
            List<ByteBuffer> queue = (List<ByteBuffer>) this.pendingData.get(socketChannel);

            if(queue == null || queue.isEmpty()) {
                // We wrote away all data, so we're no longer interested
                // in writing on this socket. Switch back to waiting for
                // data.
                try {
                    if (key!=null)
                        key.interestOps(SelectionKey.OP_READ);
                } catch(Exception ex) {
                    if (key!=null)
                        key.cancel();
                }
            }

            // Write until there's not more data ...
            while (!queue.isEmpty()) {
                ByteBuffer buf = (ByteBuffer) queue.get(0);
                socketChannel.write(buf);
                if (buf.remaining() > 0) {
                    // ... or the socket's buffer fills up
                    break;
                }
                queue.remove(0);
            }
        }
    }

    private Selector initSelector() throws IOException {
        // Create a new selector
        Selector socketSelector = SelectorProvider.provider().openSelector();

        // Create a new non-blocking server socket channel
        this.serverChannel = ServerSocketChannel.open();
        serverChannel.configureBlocking(false);

        // Bind the server socket to the specified address and port
        InetSocketAddress isa = new InetSocketAddress(this.hostAddress, this.port);
        serverChannel.socket().bind(isa);

        // Register the server socket channel, indicating an interest in
        // accepting new connections
        serverChannel.register(socketSelector, SelectionKey.OP_ACCEPT);

        return socketSelector;
    }

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        try {
            new Thread(new PolicyServer(null, 5556)).start();
        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}


import java.nio.channels.SocketChannel;

public class ChangeRequest {
    public static final int CHANGEOPS = 1;

    public SocketChannel socket;
    public int type;
    public int ops;

    public ChangeRequest(SocketChannel socket, int type, int ops) {
        this.socket = socket;
        this.type = type;
        this.ops = ops;
    }
}
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  • Do you see any exceptions on console or in logs ?
    – YoK
    Sep 17, 2010 at 6:01
  • Nope no exceptions just a blank console nothing really crashes just stops responding to incoming connections.. I'm 99% sure it's something i'm not doing to release the selection key
    – SSpoke
    Sep 17, 2010 at 6:19
  • 1
    I don't see your sockets being closed.
    – YoK
    Sep 17, 2010 at 6:32
  • I made read/write/accept throw exceptions to the main thread run() function which handles all those exceptions which are all related to closing the socket which it does you can see there. Pretty much is perfect
    – SSpoke
    Sep 17, 2010 at 6:34
  • In your read method you comsume only if data is valid. And you disconnect only if sb.length() > 8192. How about disconnection if data is not valid ?
    – YoK
    Sep 17, 2010 at 6:51

3 Answers 3

1

For heavy loads please make sure you use a framework that does connection pooling. This will reduce the number of number of open sockets and keep things under control.

Check out sfnrpc (http://code.google.com/p/sfnrpc) which uses commons pool and by default pools 20 connections.

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((SocketChannel)key.channel()).socket().close()

You don't need all that. Change that to:

key.channel().close()

send() which changes SelectionKey into WRITE OPERATION

I would want to see the details of that. More likely you are never getting out of the OP_WRITE state.

4
  • Okay so how do I let it get out of WRITE operation when the send processing is done? really hard to do this. Since send just adds events which are processed by a thread that calls write subroutine which should change it back to READ operation if nothing else left to send
    – SSpoke
    Oct 29, 2010 at 22:16
  • That's what I asked to see details of. You should generally just write when you need to write, always checking the return code. If you get zero, switch to OP_WRITE. When that fires, write, and if you succeed in writing everything, switch back to OP_READ. Post your code.
    – user207421
    Oct 29, 2010 at 23:28
  • I am confused again sorry all the code I use is pretty much in the question. But some kind of lock happens or object gets disposed before it changes the I/O state
    – SSpoke
    Oct 31, 2010 at 2:41
  • None of the sending code is in the question. I am now asking you for the third time to post it. I can solve this problem for you but not like this.
    – user207421
    Nov 1, 2010 at 0:40
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Edited after reading comments :

After reading your comments I think number of sockets currently open with client seems to be problem. opening an socket and keeping it open even when its idle certainly looks like problem. Each socket requires system resources like inode.

Try running ulimit if you are using linux. NOTE: Its not recomended to set it to unlimited but you can try this:

 ulimit -u unlimited
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  • There's no way to tell if the data is valid because it might have only came in half way or has two packets and a half, etc.
    – SSpoke
    Sep 17, 2010 at 7:01
  • Man I appreciate for trying I really mean it but it doesn't have anything to do with too much sockets build-up it's a problem with selectionKey getting flooded then hanging.. so accepter key doesn't seem to ever trigger. As I wrote if I leave the server as a Echo/Bounce packet it will work unlimited as in I can spawn 500 sockets and disconnect them and spawn again over and over for about a hour? (didn't go further and it still allows new connections no problem.. but when I disable the send() method in read() method all of a sudden after 500 connections it won't accept connections.
    – SSpoke
    Sep 17, 2010 at 12:52

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