It seems you wrote a mixed code of server and client
Here a simple sample of codes for socket programming the first on server side and the second on client
Server side code:
# server.py
import socket
import time
# create a socket object
serversocket = socket.socket(
socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
# get local machine name
host = socket.gethostname()
port = 9999
# bind to the port
serversocket.bind((host, port))
# queue up to 5 requests
serversocket.listen(5)
while True:
# establish a connection
clientsocket,addr = serversocket.accept()
print("Got a connection from %s" % str(addr))
currentTime = time.ctime(time.time()) + "\r\n"
clientsocket.send(currentTime.encode('ascii'))
clientsocket.close()
and now the client
# client.py
import socket
# create a socket object
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
# get local machine name
host = socket.gethostname()
port = 9999
# connection to hostname on the port.
s.connect((host, port))
# Receive no more than 1024 bytes
tm = s.recv(1024)
s.close()
print("The time got from the server is %s" % tm.decode('ascii'))
The server simply remained listened for any client and when it finds out a new connection it returns current datetime and closes the client connection
()
inclose()
to close it. Second: you can't use closed socket again - you have to create new socket. BTW: you could use the same connection tosend()
data to server and torecv()
data from server - if you only change server too.