writing a system in netbeans rcp - not sure if this matters, i just don't trust the rcp
We're approaching crunch time on our system and the following error keeps happening (sometimes it happens after 10 minutes, sometimes it runs for 2 days and then happens which is leading me to believe it could be a threading error)
we have a socket reader class which implements runnable - here is a sample of the code
@Override
public void run() {
while (!Thread.interrupted()) {
try {
/*
* can't display actual code
* reads data through socket and passes stream to a new handler class
* which uses reflection to create new object based off socket stream
* (none of this happens in a separate thread)
* (we're not holding a reference to the handler class - a new one is
* -created every iteration)
*
* at some point during the creation of this object, we get a socket
* closed exception happening at SocketInputStream.socketRead()
*/
} catch (Exception ex) {
cleanup();
}
}
}
what i expect to happen is that the socket exception should just be caught by the catch block and the cleanup executed
what ends up happening instead is i get a visible stack trace (pops up in the netbeans uncaught exception window and displays in the console) for java.net.SocketException socket closed - i cannot post the stack trace due to customer requirements
what else is strange is that in the actual socket input handler class we have the following method (this is the method that the exception is actually being thrown from)
public Abstract________ new________(Class<? extends Abstract________> clazz,
DataInput input) {
...
try {
// reflection code here
} catch (Exception ex) {
LOG.error("...");
throw new RuntimeException(ex);
}
...
}
if i try manually throwing the java.net.SocketException after the catch block the exception reads java.lang.RuntimeException: java.net.SocketException exception: socket closed
yet the stack trace that we receive randomly simply says java.net.SocketException: socket closed
this is leading me to believe that in our socket stream handling class it's not even catching the exception to begin with.
Does anybody have any input as to why this may be happening???
also - i am very sorry that i can't post the actual code, i'm not trying to be cryptic
so far the one thing i'm wondering about - i am somewhat familiar with reflection but not to a great extent - when i manually throw an exception it always gets caught by the try catch block - if an exception is thrown from something in reflection is there any way it could break the try catch contract - i don't see why it would but i mean, i'm honestly not sure and grasping for straws at this point
i have received permission to post an edited stack trace
in the MessageReader class there is no separate thread - the newMessage method is where the exception is being caught, wrapped into a RuntimeException and thrown up - the ____Reader is the socket reader with the while loop
both methods do show up in the stack trace
not sure if this will help