//server side
void* s2(void *arg){
info *s = (info*)arg;
char buffer[MAXS];
int k;
sockaddr_in addr;
socklen_t aSize = sizeof(sockaddr_in);
int sfd = accept(s->fd,(sockaddr*)&addr,(socklen_t*)&aSize);
if(sfd<0){
s->current--;
pthread_exit(0);
}
while(1){
k = recv(sfd,buffer,MAXS,0);
cout<<buffer<<"\n";
//1. k ==0 socket has been closed by client
//2. k==-1 error in recv
//3. recv quit
if((k==-1)||(!strncmp(buffer,"quit",4))||(k==0))break;
sprintf(buffer,"%d\n",(int)strlen(buffer)); //Convert length to string using sprintf()
send(sfd,buffer,strlen(buffer),0); //send buffer to client
}
close(sfd);
if(s->limit==s->current)
FD_SET(s->fd,&sfds);
s->current--; //decrement the client number
pthread_exit(0);
}
//client side
1. send(sockfd,"sadhdag",8,0);
2. send(sockfd,"ss",3,0);
Server recv sadhdag
in first call to recv .
In second call to recv server recv
ss
dag
server side:
function s2 is run by a thread and argument is passed with socket information connection is accepted there and send and recv is called on newly accepted client.
Why this is happening ? or how to avoid this ?
recv()
calls?memset
thebuffer
to 0, before everyrecv
call.memset(buffer, 0, MAXS)
.memset
will reset the data yourbuffer
holds now (ie. erases the previously read data). As per your code, you don't need call tomemset
as after 2ndrecv
yourbuffer
should look like this|s|s|\0|h|d|a|g|\0|
and when you do a cout<<buffer<<"\n", it should print content up to the first null character and only "ss" should be printed. If you use Visual Studio, can you just check the content in buffer using Quick Watch and ensure that your buffer has '\0' after 'S', 'S'