I have some code that I'm using to get data from a network socket. It works fine, but I flailed my way into it through trial and error. I humbly admit that I don't fully understand how it works, but I would really like to. (This was cargo culted form working code I found)
The part I don't understand starts with "ready = IO.select ..." I'm unclear on:
- What IO.select is doing (I tried looking it up but got even more confused with Kernel and what-not)
- what the array argument to IO.select is for
- what ready[0] is doing
- the general idea of reading 1024 bytes? at a time
Here's the code:
@mysocket = TCPSocket.new('192.168.1.1', 9761)
th = Thread.new do
while true
ready = IO.select([@mysocket])
readable = ready[0]
readable.each do |socket|
if socket == @mysocket
buf = @mysocket.recv_nonblock(1024)
if buf.length == 0
puts "The server connection is dead. Exiting."
exit
else
puts "Received a message"
end
end
end
end
end
Thanks in advance for helping me "learn to fish". I hate having bits of my code that I don't fully understand - it's just working by coincidence.
puts
inside and can't understand why the program never enters thewhile true
loop (or may beputs
output inside of loop never reaches console?)