0

I'm trying to send data to the client but I have not figured out This is my code.

UDP-Client:

BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));

DatagramSocket datagramSocket = new DatagramSocket( );
InetAddress ipServer = InetAddress.getByName("localhost");

byte[] sendDatagram = new byte[1054];
byte[] sendDatagramB = new byte[1055];
byte[] sendDatagramC = new byte[1056];

byte[] receiveDatagram = new byte[1054];
byte[] receiveDatagramB = new byte[1055];
byte[] receiveDatagramC = new byte[1056];
while  (true) {
    System.out.println("Ingrese X");
    String msgA = input.readLine();
    System.out.println("Ingrese B");
    String msgB = input.readLine();
    System.out.println("Ingrese C");
    String msgC = input.readLine();


    sendDatagram = (msgA.getBytes());
    DatagramPacket sendPacket = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagram, sendDatagram.length, ipServer, 6667);
    datagramSocket.send(sendPacket);

    sendDatagramB = (msgB.getBytes());
    DatagramPacket sendPacketB = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagramB, sendDatagramB.length, ipServer, 6667);
    datagramSocket.send(sendPacketB);

    sendDatagramC = (msgC.getBytes());
    DatagramPacket sendPacketC = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagramC, sendDatagramC.length, ipServer, 6667);
    datagramSocket.send(sendPacketC);
}

UDP-Server:

BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));

DatagramSocket datagramSockets = new DatagramSocket( );
InetAddress ipServer = InetAddress.getByName("localhost");

byte[] sendDatagrams = new byte[1054];
byte[] receiveDatagrams = new byte[1054];

DatagramSocket datagramSocket = new DatagramSocket(6667);
byte[] sendDatagram = new byte[1054];
byte[] receiveDatagram = new byte[1054];

byte[] sendDatagramB = new byte[1055];
byte[] receiveDatagramB = new byte[1055];

byte[] sendDatagramC = new byte[1056];
byte[] receiveDatagramC = new byte[1056];

System.out.println("Server Start");

while (true){

    DatagramPacket receivePacket = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagram,receiveDatagram.length);
    datagramSocket.receive(receivePacket);
    String receive = new String(receivePacket.getData());
    System.out.println(receive+"x");

    InetAddress ipClient = receivePacket.getAddress();
    int portClient = receivePacket.getPort();
    receiveDatagram = new byte[1054];
    String msgClient = "Hola Mundo";

    DatagramPacket receivePacketB = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagramB,receiveDatagramB.length);
    datagramSocket.receive(receivePacketB);
    String receiveB = new String(receivePacketB.getData());
    System.out.println(receiveB+"y");

    InetAddress ipClientB = receivePacketB.getAddress();
    int portClientB = receivePacketB.getPort();
    receiveDatagramB = new byte[1055];
    String msgClientB = "Hola Mundo";

    DatagramPacket receivePacketC = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagramC,receiveDatagramB.length);
    datagramSocket.receive(receivePacketC);
    String receiveC = new String(receivePacketC.getData());
    System.out.println(receiveC+"z");

    InetAddress ipClientC = receivePacketC.getAddress();
    int portClientC = receivePacketC.getPort();
    receiveDatagramC = new byte[1056];
    String msgClientC = "Hola Mundo";



    Double x1 =  (-portClientB - (Math.sqrt((portClient*portClientB - ((4*portClient*portClientC))))))/ (2 * portClientC);
    Double x2 =  (-portClientB + (Math.sqrt((portClient*portClientB - ((4*portClient*portClientC))))))/ (2 * portClientC);

    String xa = String.valueOf(x1);
    String xb = String.valueOf(x2);
    System.out.println("El Resultado de x1 es = "+" "+x1);
    System.out.println("El Resultado de x1 es = "+" "+x2);
}

I suppose to send String XA and XB to the client.

8
  • why don't you use mina.apache.org or netty.io instead?
    – IEE1394
    Nov 13, 2017 at 0:49
  • What exactly is it doing or not doing?
    – roelofs
    Nov 13, 2017 at 0:54
  • @roelofs It's doing everything except i need to find out or know how can i send these 2 strings to the client. Nov 13, 2017 at 1:05
  • Can you add those details, and a bit more information about your overall setup to your question? It's hard inferring what your problem is, purely by looking at code...
    – roelofs
    Nov 13, 2017 at 1:06
  • 1
    UDP has no clients or servers. UDP is a connectionless protocol that has senders and receivers. The client/server concept is an application-layer concept, not a transport-layer concept.
    – Ron Maupin
    Nov 13, 2017 at 2:27

1 Answer 1

0

I don't know what you are really doing with udp socket but generally a server must support all the requests including a protocol from clients.

This is what my udp socket server looks like from your source as follows:

package justtest;

import java.io.IOException;
import java.net.DatagramPacket;
import java.net.DatagramSocket;
import java.net.InetAddress;

public class UDPServer {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
        DatagramSocket datagramSocket = new DatagramSocket(6667);
        byte[] sendDatagram = new byte[1054];
        byte[] receiveDatagram = new byte[1054];

        System.out.println("Server Start");
        try
        {
            while (true) 
            {


                DatagramPacket receivePacket = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagram, receiveDatagram.length);
                datagramSocket.receive(receivePacket);
                //System.out.println("len" + receivePacket.getLength());
                String receive = new String(receivePacket.getData());
                System.out.println(receive.trim() + " received...");

                //////// Do it what you want here //////////
                //////// done //////////////////////////////


                InetAddress IPAddress = receivePacket.getAddress();
                int port = receivePacket.getPort();

                String msgClient = "Hola Mundo";

                System.arraycopy(msgClient.getBytes(), 0, sendDatagram, 0, msgClient.getBytes().length);
                DatagramPacket sendPacket = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagram, sendDatagram.length, IPAddress, port);
                datagramSocket.send(sendPacket);

            }
        }
        finally
        {
            datagramSocket.close();
        }
    }
}

Then, the udp client can do what you are supposed to do.

package justtest;

import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.net.DatagramPacket;
import java.net.DatagramSocket;
import java.net.InetAddress;

public class UDPClient {
    public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
        BufferedReader input = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(System.in));
        InetAddress ipServer = InetAddress.getByName("localhost");
        DatagramSocket datagramSocket = null;
        DatagramSocket datagramSocketA = null;
        DatagramSocket datagramSocketB = null;
        byte[] sendDatagram = new byte[1054];
        byte[] sendDatagramB = new byte[1055];
        byte[] sendDatagramC = new byte[1056];

        byte[] receiveDatagram = new byte[1054];
        byte[] receiveDatagramB = new byte[1055];
        byte[] receiveDatagramC = new byte[1056];

        while (true) 
        {
            System.out.println();
            System.out.println("Ingrese X");
            String msgA = input.readLine();

            //sendDatagram = (msgA.getBytes());
            System.arraycopy(msgA.getBytes(), 0, sendDatagram, 0, msgA.getBytes().length);
            DatagramPacket sendPacket = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagram, sendDatagram.length, ipServer, 6667);
            DatagramPacket recvPacket = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagram, receiveDatagram.length, ipServer, 6667);

            datagramSocket = new DatagramSocket();
            datagramSocket.send(sendPacket);
            datagramSocket.receive(recvPacket);
            System.out.printf("Send...[%s]/ recv...[%s]", new String(sendDatagram).trim(), new String(recvPacket.getData()).trim());


            System.out.println();
            System.out.println("Ingrese B");
            String msgB = input.readLine();
            //sendDatagramB = (msgB.getBytes());
            System.arraycopy(msgB.getBytes(), 0, sendDatagramB, 0, msgB.getBytes().length);
            DatagramPacket sendPacketB = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagramB, sendDatagramB.length, ipServer, 6667);
            DatagramPacket recvPacketB = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagramB, receiveDatagramB.length, ipServer, 6667);

            datagramSocketA = new DatagramSocket();
            datagramSocketA.send(sendPacketB);
            datagramSocketA.receive(recvPacketB);
            System.out.printf("Send...[%s]/ recv...[%s]", new String(sendDatagramB).trim(), new String(recvPacketB.getData()).trim());


            System.out.println();
            System.out.println("Ingrese C");

            String msgC = input.readLine();
            //sendDatagramC = (msgC.getBytes());
            System.arraycopy(msgC.getBytes(), 0, sendDatagramC, 0, msgC.getBytes().length);
            DatagramPacket sendPacketC = new DatagramPacket(sendDatagramC, sendDatagramC.length, ipServer, 6667);
            DatagramPacket recvPacketC = new DatagramPacket(receiveDatagramC, receiveDatagramC.length, ipServer, 6667);
            datagramSocketB = new DatagramSocket();
            datagramSocketB.send(sendPacketC);
            datagramSocketB.receive(recvPacketC);
            System.out.printf("Send...[%s]/ recv...[%s]", new String(sendDatagramC).trim(), new String(recvPacketC.getData()).trim());

            datagramSocket.close();
            datagramSocketA.close();
            datagramSocketB.close();
        }
    }
}

I think it is important what you will exactly do with the code.

Good luck.

2
  • It's easier for the server just to reuse the DatagramSocket the request came in, and just update the data fields, leaving the address:port alone.
    – user207421
    Nov 13, 2017 at 5:37
  • Hmm, Good point but it is not my duty but him. It is just an example based on what he've done. I can tell you it is not a complete code.
    – tommybee
    Nov 13, 2017 at 5:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.