Socket Options in Java
Socket Options in Java The C way Programming in C, one sets options by using a system call along the lines of:
setsockopt(int fd, int level, int optval, void *optdata,
int optdatalen);
fd = already opened (possibly connected) socket fd;
level = level in the protocol stack (IP, UDP, TCP) where
the option applies;
optval = the option, a CONSTANT;
optdata = ptr to option dependent struct of parameters relevant
only to a particular option;
In java The C way of setting options lacks the type-safety of object-oriented programming. The option one wishes to set/get is identified by an int, and the value to set/get into is an opaque void*. It is all too easy to pass the wrong option identifier, the wrong type object in the void* parameter, or the wrong for that parameter. Worse still, the code for these errors will typically compile, and the error will only be manifested at runtime. Java now provides a type-safe way to set options. Each socket class has a get/set method for each option it supports, taking and returning the appropriate type. The options supported, for which socket classes and their meaning in brief: TCP_NODELAY Disable Nagle's algorithm. Valid for (client) Sockets. SO_LINGER Specify a linger-on-close timeout. Valid for (client) Sockets. SO_TIMEOUT Specify a timeout on blocking socket operations. (Don't block forever! Valid for all sockets: Socket, ServerSocket, DatagramSocket. SO_BINDADDR Fetch the local address binding of a socket. Valid for Socket, ServerSocket, DatagramSocket. SO_REUSEADDR Enable reuse address for a socket. Valid for Socket, ServerSocket, DatagramSocket. SO_BROADCAST Enables a socket to send broadcast messages. Valid for DatagramSocket. SO_SNDBUF Set a hint the size of the underlying buffers for outgoing network I/O. Valid for all sockets: Socket, ServerSocket, DatagramSocket. SO_RCVBUF Get the size of the buffer actually used by the platform when receiving in data on this socket. Valid for all sockets: Socket, ServerSocket, DatagramSocket. SO_KEEPALIVE Turn on socket keepalive. Valid for Socket. SO_OOBINLINE Enable inline reception of TCP urgent data. Valid for Socket. IP_MULTICAST_IF Specify the outgoing interface for multicast packets (on multihomed hosts). Valid for MulticastSockets. IP_MULTICAST_LOOP Enables or disables local loopback of multicast datagrams. Valid for MulticastSocket. IP_TOS Sets the type-of-service or traffic class field in the IP header for a TCP or UDP socket. Valid for Socket, DatagramSocket Fell by the wayside... Some possible BSD options that are not supported in java: RAW/ICMP SOCKETS: The main argument in favor of this one seemed to be so people could write "ping" in java. Security nightmare. Must be root on UNIX machines. The implementation details... ...that you don't need to know, unless you subclass SocketImpl/DatagramSocketImpl. Every *Socket object has an underlying SocketImpl/DatagramSocketImpl that interfaces to native code. The Impl classes implement two methods to support options:
void setOption(int optID, Object val) throws SocketException;
Object getOption(int optID) throws SocketException;
that look much like C. These methods act as glue to the native methods, and ensure type safety before native methods are invoked.