Newsletter sign-up
View all newsletters

Enterprise Java Newsletter
Stay up to date on the latest tutorials and Java community news posted on JavaWorld

Sponsored Links

Optimize with a SATA RAID Storage Solution
Range of capacities as low as $1250 per TB. Ideal if you currently rely on servers/disks/JBODs

Sockets programming in Java: A tutorial

Writing your own client/server applications can be done seamlessly using Java

  • Print
  • Feedback

Page 2 of 5

Now, you might ask what protocol you should use -- UDP or TCP? This depends on the client/server application you are writing. The following discussion shows the differences between the UDP and TCP protocols; this might help you decide which protocol you should use.

In UDP, as you have read above, every time you send a datagram, you have to send the local descriptor and the socket address of the receiving socket along with it. Since TCP is a connection-oriented protocol, on the other hand, a connection must be established before communications between the pair of sockets start. So there is a connection setup time in TCP.

In UDP, there is a size limit of 64 kilobytes on datagrams you can send to a specified location, while in TCP there is no limit. Once a connection is established, the pair of sockets behaves like streams: All available data are read immediately in the same order in which they are received.

UDP is an unreliable protocol -- there is no guarantee that the datagrams you have sent will be received in the same order by the receiving socket. On the other hand, TCP is a reliable protocol; it is guaranteed that the packets you send will be received in the order in which they were sent.

In short, TCP is useful for implementing network services -- such as remote login (rlogin, telnet) and file transfer (FTP) -- which require data of indefinite length to be transferred. UDP is less complex and incurs fewer overheads. It is often used in implementing client/server applications in distributed systems built over local area networks.

Programming sockets in Java

In this section we will answer the most frequently asked questions about programming sockets in Java. Then we will show some examples of how to write client and server applications.

Note: In this tutorial we will show how to program sockets in Java using the TCP/IP protocol only since it is more widely used than UDP/IP. Also: All the classes related to sockets are in the java.net package, so make sure to import that package when you program sockets.

How do I open a socket?

If you are programming a client, then you would open a socket like this:

    Socket MyClient;
    MyClient = new Socket("Machine name", PortNumber);


Where Machine name is the machine you are trying to open a connection to, and PortNumber is the port (a number) on which the server you are trying to connect to is running. When selecting a port number, you should note that port numbers between 0 and 1,023 are reserved for privileged users (that is, super user or root). These port numbers are reserved for standard services, such as email, FTP, and HTTP. When selecting a port number for your server, select one that is greater than 1,023!

In the example above, we didn't make use of exception handling, however, it is a good idea to handle exceptions. (From now on, all our code will handle exceptions!) The above can be written as:

    Socket MyClient;
    try {
           MyClient = new Socket("Machine name", PortNumber);
    }
    catch (IOException e) {
        System.out.println(e);
    }


If you are programming a server, then this is how you open a socket:

  • Print
  • Feedback

Resources