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In writing some test code I have found that Selector.select() can return without Selector.selectedKeys() containing any keys to process. This is happening in a tight loop when I register an accept()ed channel with

SelectionKey.OP_READ | SelectionKey.OP_CONNECT

as the operations of interest.

According to the docs, select() should return when:

1) There are channels that can be acted upon.

2) You explicitly call Selector.wakeup() - no keys are selected.

3) You explicitly Thread.interrupt() the thread doing the select() - no keys are selected.

If I get no keys after the select() I must be in cases (2) and (3). However, my code is not calling wakeup() or interrupt() to initiate these returns.

Any ideas as to what is causing this behaviour?

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Do you have some code you can show, that demonstrates this behaviour? – Chris Jester-Young Oct 15 '08 at 9:50
Please also mention the JVM version and the OS on which it is running. It might be a (known) bug. – Alexander Oct 15 '08 at 15:40
Your code isn't calling wakeup() or interrupt(), but can't a thread in general be interrupted regardless? Although I'm not 100% sure in Java. When doing I/O work, I always assume that it can be interrupted. Also, when I was doing networking code in C on Unix/Linux platforms, this happened often. I would attempt to write say 1000 bytes and would return prematurely (buffers were not full either). Just a though! – Jeach Dec 3 at 17:49

1 Answer

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Short answer: remove OP_CONNECT from the list of operations you are interested in for the accepted connection -- an accepted connection is already connected.

I managed to reproduce the issue, which might be exactly what's happening to you:

import java.net.*;
import java.nio.channels.*;


public class MyNioServer {
  public static void main(String[] params) throws Exception {
    final ServerSocketChannel serverChannel = ServerSocketChannel.open();
    serverChannel.configureBlocking(true);
    serverChannel.socket().bind(new InetSocketAddress("localhost", 12345));
    System.out.println("Listening for incoming connections");
    final SocketChannel clientChannel = serverChannel.accept();
    System.out.println("Accepted connection: " + clientChannel);


    final Selector selector = Selector.open();
    clientChannel.configureBlocking(false);
    final SelectionKey clientKey = clientChannel.register(selector, SelectionKey.OP_READ | SelectionKey.OP_CONNECT);
    System.out.println("Selecting...");
    System.out.println(selector.select());
    System.out.println(selector.selectedKeys().size());
    System.out.println(clientKey.readyOps());
  }
}

After the above server receives a connection, the very first select() on the connection exits without blocking and there are no keys with ready operations. I don't know why Java behaves in this way, but it appears many people get bitten by this behavior.

The outcome is the same on Sun's JVM 1.5.0_06 on Windows XP as well as Sun's JVM 1.5.0_05 and 1.4.2_04 on Linux 2.6.

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Thanks for the answer. This is clearly an anomaly in the behaviour of select, but its easily solvable. – Frank Taylor Nov 6 '08 at 9:55

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