I have a multi-threaded C# program where each thread uses TcpClient to synchronously receive text/line oriented data from multiple servers.
It has run without errors for 2 years, but when the vendor providing the server changed, we started seeing issues where the vendor server program had a buffer overrun, and their fix (apparently) prevented them from core-dumping, but also they stop sending to us. But they do not tear down the TCP connection, so both sides show it as ESTABLISHED.
We were told by the vendor that another customer worked around this by simply implementing a timeout and re-establishing the connection if no data was received after a configurable timeout.
Since I implemented my threads using a synchronous model (essentially, a 'while readline()'), can I use the TcpClient ReceiveTimeout property and expect it to work properly? I tried it with a simpler non-threaded version, and it seemed to work the first loop, but not afterwards.
I really do not want to have to rewrite the program to use an asynchronous socket model.
Any suggestions about a simple way to timeout using synchronous TcpClient would be greatly appreciated.
Mitch
Addendum: when I received the exception on the ReadLine(), I do close the TcpClient and start over, just as if I received a network disconnect. By "not working", I mean that it stopped timing out after a few times, even though 1.) I was still not being sent anything and 2.) I was sitting blocked in a ReadLine().