I have run into an interesting issue trying to upgrade one of my applications from the Java 6 to Java 7. It is a simple Java socket program. It sends a command to a COM socket and receives a response. It works perfectly in a Java 6 environment, but when I try to run the same code in a Java 7 environment, the socket appears to receive nothing in the InputStream.
I can confirm that the COM socket it's connecting to does receive the command and sends the response. This is run on the exact same machine in both cases with the firewall disabled, and it's the exact same code ran both times.
Has something changed in Java 7, do I have some deeper flaw, or is this simply a Java bug?
Here is a slightly stripped version of the code.
public static void main(String[] arguments) throws Exception {
InetAddress server = InetAddress.getByName(serverAddress);
Socket sock = SSLSocketFactory.getDefault().createSocket(server.getHostAddress(), port);
InputStream in = sock.getInputStream();
OutputStream out = sock.getOutputStream();
out.write(command.getBytes()); //Is valid command
String token = "";
responseReader: while (true) {
try {
Thread.sleep(1);
}
catch (InterruptedException exception) {}
byte[] d = new byte[in.available()];
int avail = in.read(d);
for (int i = 0; i < avail; i++) {
if (d[i] == fieldSeperator) {
token = "";
}
else if (d[i] == commandSeperator) {
break responseReader;
}
else {
token += (char) d[i];
}
}
}
}
I've tried as much as I can think of, most of the time knowing it shouldn't matter. Using different methods of reading the stream, casting to SSLSocket and making different calls, adding some sleeps.
flush
your output stream after writing command? – Andremoniy Jan 11 '13 at 18:26