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I have a client Android app which creates a http and https connection to a server (on port 80) and I could read and write data successfully.

Problem arises when multiple instances of my client app try to connect to server from same network (same source IP address). In this case only 1 client always connects (when multiple clients try to simultaneously connect to server).

Is there any way to specify source port number in httpURLConnect call so that server opens a separate socket for each of my clients.

HttpsURLConnection conns = null;
url=new URL(urlS);
conns=(HttpsURLConnection)url.openConnection();                 
conns.setDoOutput(true);
conns.setRequestMethod("POST");
conns.setFixedLengthStreamingMode(params.getBytes().length);
conns.setRequestProperty("Content-Type", "application/x-www-form-urlencoded");
conns.setRequestProperty("Connection", "close");
conns.setConnectTimeout(SOCKET_TIMEOUT);
conns.setReadTimeout(HTTP_TIMEOUT);

//send the POST out
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(conns.getOutputStream());
out.print(params);
out.close();
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    Why? What problem? You'll always get a different local port per connection, and the server will always have a corresponding new socket.
    – user207421
    Jan 27, 2015 at 7:02

1 Answer 1

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I would like to post the solution here as it may help someone. I removed this line from my code above and it is now working like a charm, I could run 3 simultaneous clients on same network talking to same server. I just removed this:

conns.setRequestProperty("Connection", "close");

Wonder what was it doing , but removing this line fixed the issue.

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  • Err, it was telling the server to 'close' the 'connection'. Moral: don't write code when you don't know what it does.
    – user207421
    Jan 27, 2015 at 7:32
  • I did that because my server is on a shared hosting and I feared that eventually server will limit the ports .
    – FHDFRD
    Jan 27, 2015 at 7:54
  • The server only needs one port. I suggest you stop guessing.
    – user207421
    Jan 27, 2015 at 22:36

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