I'm trying to implement a simple http server in Java to understand how does a http server work. Now, I'm able to send request from any browser and receive the proper response, however, when I try to simulate a request from Postman, it always throws java.net.SocketException: Broken pipe (Write failed)
exception.
My http server is very simple: once received a request, echo a message to sender.
The implementation is as follow, Source Code
package com.ont.http;
import java.io.*;
import java.net.ServerSocket;
import java.net.Socket;
public class SingleThreadHttpServer implements HttpServer {
public void run(int port) throws IOException {
ServerSocket serverSocket = new ServerSocket(port);
try {
while (true) {
Socket socket = serverSocket.accept();
BufferedReader inBufferReader = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(socket.getInputStream()));
StringBuilder stringBuffer = new StringBuilder();
String inputLine;
while ((inputLine = inBufferReader.readLine()) != null && !inputLine.equals("")) {
stringBuffer.append(inputLine);
stringBuffer.append("\r\n");
}
System.out.println(stringBuffer.toString());
OutputStream outStream = socket.getOutputStream();
BufferedReader bufferedReader = new BufferedReader(new StringReader("A Message from server."));
// Header should be ended with '\r\n' at each line.
outStream.write("HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n".getBytes());
outStream.write("Main: OneServer 0.1\r\n".getBytes());
outStream.write("Content-length: 22\r\n".getBytes()); // if text/plain the length is required
outStream.write("Content-Type: text/plain\r\n".getBytes());
// An empty line is required after the header
outStream.write("\r\n".getBytes());
String line;
while ((line = bufferedReader.readLine()) != null) {
outStream.write(line.getBytes());
}
inBufferReader.close();
bufferedReader.close();
outStream.flush();
outStream.close(); // Socket will close automatically once output stream is closed.
}
} catch (Exception e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
Any types of request sent from Postman will immediately trigger that exception, and debug tells that the socket connection had been lost during outStream.write(...)
. if I send from a browser, it never trigger that problem.
The thing I don't understand is that there shouldn't be any setting applied to Postman, because when I try to simulate a request to my tomcat, it handles everything like a charm, there must be something gone wrong with my code but I don't know where and why.
Any helps or tips would be appreciated, thank you.
----- Updates ----
From Postman console, I can see this exception,
Error: read ECONNRESET
Request Headers:
accept:"text/plain"
cache-control:"no-cache"
If I left only outStream.write("HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n".getBytes())
this line, and delete all other outStream.write...
, both browsers and postman work like a charm. this is really pulling my hair, but why?
text/plain
? I suspect it doesn't, then it sees the header and closes the request.Connection: close
header to let the client know that the connection will be intentionally closed after the response has been sent. Also,Content-length
should beContent-Length
. And you didn't indicate which call tooutStream.write()
is the one throwing the exception.Content-length
andContent-Length
, and exception occurs afteroutStream.write("HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n".getBytes());
this call, no matter which kind of orders of otheroutStream.write(...)
to put after this line, it throws the same exception. which means I can only put everything into one single line, and then it closed connection after the firstoutStream.write()
call.