0

I get sine wave from server though TCP and plot it. Everything seems to be fine until I start sending something back at c>1000. After one byte sent, I still get data but the waveform of sine wave is changed. I'm sure that there are some missed data but I can't find bugs in my code. The transmission rate is about 1M bps.

The question is

  1. When I write something to server, how it effects to socket?

  2. Why the socket miss some data?

  3. How can I fix it?

    ssTcpClient::ssTcpClient(QObject *parent) :
    QObject(parent)
    {
        socket = new QTcpSocket(this);
        connect(socket, SIGNAL(connected()),
                this, SLOT(on_connected()));
        connect(socket, SIGNAL(disconnected()),
                this, SLOT(on_disconnected()));
    }
    
    void ssTcpClient::on_connected()
    {
        qDebug() << "Client: Connection established.";
        connect(socket, SIGNAL(readyRead()),
                this, SLOT(on_readyRead()));
        in = new QDataStream(socket);
    }
    
    void ssTcpClient::on_readyRead(){
        static quint32 c = 0;
        qDebug() << "c" << c++;
    
        QVector<quint8> data;
        quint8 buf;
        while(socket->bytesAvailable()>0){
            //read data to buffer
            *in >> buf;
            data.append(buf);
        }
        //process data
        emit data_read(data);
    
        //if there are over 1000 data then send something back
        if(c>1000){
            char msg[10];
            msg[0] = 'c';
            socket->write(msg,1);
            socket->flush();
        }
    
    }
    
0

1 Answer 1

3

You cannot rely on TCP traffic to be complete, data arrives in indeterminable chunks.

You are using QDataStream to read data from the socket. This is a really bad idea because QDataStream assumes that you have complete set of data. If there isn't enough data, it will silently fail.

I suggest you modify your data source so it either sends a byte count as the first thing, or it sends some kind of termination sequence that you can look out for to tell you that you have received enough to process.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.