I currently have a rather simple SSL server/client project that involves a standard Java backend and an Android frontend. I wanted to try to read a response from the server after I send data with the client. However, I encountered a little problem. The server doesn't always respond, so I had to somehow try to get a response in an asynchronous way. (because the read() method is a blocking one) After some messing around I found a working solution, but it seems so weird to me, like Im doing something that is potentially "dangerous". The first thing I did was to create a new Runnable and Thread object:
// "reader" is of type "BufferedReader"
Runnable receiveResponse = new Runnable() {
boolean stop = false;
@Override
public void run() {
try {
new Timer().schedule(new TimerTask() {
@Override
public void run() {
stop = true;
}
}, 5000);
char receive;
StringBuilder responseBuilder = new StringBuilder();
while (!stop && ((receive = (char) reader.read()) != END_OF_STREAM_CHAR)) {
responseBuilder.append(receive);
}
// If the server responds in time I can continue processing the response etc.
} catch (Exception ex) {
// Handle exception ...
}
}
};
Thread thread = new Thread(receiveResponse);
thread.start();
As you can see I used a boolean "stop" (that I set to true after 5 seconds) inside the while loop as an additional condition. The "reader.read()" method is a blocking one, so if I wouldn't implement some type of stopping the thread this method would block an infinite amount of time, if the server doesn't respond. Thats why I tried using a Timer that simply sets the "stop" boolean to true.
I know this isn't the best solution and at some point I would redesign this entire thing altogether, but I still wonder whether or not the thing I'm doing right now is okay or not. It certainly works, but that sadly doesn't mean anything.