22

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:

  1. What IO.select is doing (I tried looking it up but got even more confused with Kernel and what-not)
  2. what the array argument to IO.select is for
  3. what ready[0] is doing
  4. 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.

2
  • But, why do you use a new thread? What are the pros and cons of that? Jul 27, 2012 at 22:33
  • I ran the example putting a bunch of puts inside and can't understand why the program never enters the while true loop (or may be puts output inside of loop never reaches console?)
    – Paul
    May 26, 2014 at 13:57

1 Answer 1

26

1) IO.select takes a set of sockets and waits until it's possible to read or write with them (or if error happens). It returns sockets event happened with.

2) array contains sockets that are checked for events. In your case you specify only sockets for reading.

3) IO.select returns an array of arrays of sockets. Element 0 contains sockets you can read from, element 1 - sockets you can write to and element 2 - sockets with errors.

After getting list of sockets you can read the data.

4) yes, recv_nonblock argument is size in byte. Note that size of data actually being read may be less than 1024, in this case you may need to repeat select (if actual data matters for you).

1
  • So basically this is not using select with a timeout argument to determine if a socket is alive, but it's using #recv to check wheter or not it's possible to get some 1024 bytes of data, and if it's not, it determines that socket is dead, right??? But then.. what if simply there is no data to be read at the moment (which could come later) ? How can this kind of check make for a good way to tell if a connection is dead? ..What is the (big?) part of it I am not getting? Thanks..
    – red-o-alf
    Mar 9, 2013 at 5:01

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.