2

A while back I wrote a little application to implement a TCP Server, but as a newbie to C# .NET I just followed a tutorial. The authorization part of it works fine, but due to following the tutorial to closely, after the authorization is made, it drops the connection with tcpClient.Close();

How should I adjust this code to keep listening for more packets? I think most servers drop connections after X minutes, but I am still new to this type of thing.

// Starts the TCP RCON Server
public void StartServer()
{
    Console.WriteLine("RCON Server starting on Port: {0}", serverPort);

    this.tcpListener = new TcpListener(IPAddress.Any, serverPort);
    this.listenThread = new Thread(new ThreadStart(ListenForClients));
    this.listenThread.Start();

    Console.WriteLine("RCON Server has been Started.");
}

// Listen for Client Connections
private void ListenForClients()
{
    this.tcpListener.Start();

    while (true)
    {
        // blocks until a client has connected to the server
        TcpClient client = this.tcpListener.AcceptTcpClient();

        // Create a thread for client communication
        Thread clientThread = new Thread(new ParameterizedThreadStart(ReadClientPacket));
        clientThread.Start(client);
    }
}

private void ReadClientPacket(object client)
{
    TcpClient tcpClient = (TcpClient)client;
    NetworkStream clientStream = tcpClient.GetStream();

    bool terminate = false;

    while (!terminate)
    {
        try
        {
            int packetsize;

            // Create a new Packet Object and fill out the data from the incoming TCP Packets
            RCONPacket packet = new RCONPacket();

            using (BinaryReader reader = new BinaryReader(clientStream))
            {
                // First Int32 is Packet Size
                packetsize = reader.ReadInt32();

                packet.RequestId = reader.ReadInt32();
                packet.RconDataReceived = (RCONPacket.RCONDATA_rec)reader.ReadInt32();

                Console.WriteLine("Packet Size: {0} RequestID: {1} ServerData: {2}", packetsize, packet.RequestId, packet.RconDataReceived);

                // Read first and second String in the Packet (UTF8 Null Terminated)
                packet.String1 = ReadBytesString(reader);
                packet.String2 = ReadBytesString(reader);

                Console.WriteLine("String1: {0} String2: {1}", packet.String1, packet.String2);

                switch (packet.RconDataReceived)
                {
                    case RCONPacket.RCONDATA_rec.SERVERDATA_AUTH:
                    {
                        if (packet.String1 == "testpass")
                        {
                            Console.WriteLine("Password is Valid");
                            ReplyAuthRequest(packet.RequestId, tcpClient, packet.String1); // Junk Packet
                            ReplyAuthRequest(packet.RequestId, tcpClient, packet.String1);
                        }
                        else
                        {
                            Console.WriteLine("Password is Invalid");
                            ReplyAuthRequest(BAD_PASSWORD, tcpClient, packet.String1); // Junk Packet
                            ReplyAuthRequest(BAD_PASSWORD, tcpClient, packet.String1);

                            terminate = true;
                        }

                        break;
                    }
                    case RCONPacket.RCONDATA_rec.SERVERDATA_EXECCOMMAND:
                    {
                        Console.WriteLine("RCON Command Packet Received");
                        ReplyExecCommand(packet.RequestId, tcpClient);

                        break;
                    }
                    default:
                    {
                        break;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(ex.Message);
            terminate = true;
        }
    }

    tcpClient.Close();
}

1 Answer 1

4

If you notice, you have a lot of break statements. I am not clear on the entire design of your program, but if you remove those and then add a check for a boolean value in your while loop such aswhile(!terminated) { .. }, this would ensure that whenever your application tells the program to end or to stop listening, the loop will also be terminated because you would set terminated to true. What you are saying by while(true) is to continue forever until breakoccurs, which then subsequently breaks out of the while loop and calls .Close().

4
  • That makes sense, but isn't that basically what I am doing with break; except it just makes it more readable? I have updated the code so you might get a better idea of what I am doing. I am trying to implement this protocol developer.valvesoftware.com/wiki/Source_RCON_Protocol as a server. Problem I am running into is that even when removing that break; that was stopping the ReadClientPacket() after the first packet, now I get the error "Stream was not readable" after it looks through one time
    – user470760
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:50
  • btw, I will mark yours as the answer shortly. Just wanted to leave it open a bit longer to see if I can go ahead and get this problem resolved. Thanks for the good answer!
    – user470760
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:51
  • I think I just figured it out. Should I just remove the while loop and the tcpClient.Close()? Would that make it so that the entire function is called again when the next packet is received?
    – user470760
    Jun 22, 2011 at 12:56
  • @Brett: I think your design is a little off... before the while loop you should check if you actually have any data in the stream, otherwise you are building packets for nothing.
    – user195488
    Jun 22, 2011 at 13:04

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