Java Nio
1 | Java NIO Tutorial |
2 | Java NIO Overview |
3 | Java NIO Channel |
4 | Java NIO Buffer |
5 | Java NIO Scatter / Gather |
6 | Java NIO Channel to Channel Transfers |
7 | Java NIO Selector |
8 | Java NIO FileChannel |
9 | Java NIO SocketChannel |
10 | Java NIO ServerSocketChannel |
11 | Java NIO DatagramChannel |
12 | Java NIO Pipe |
13 | Java NIO vs. IO |
A Java NIO DatagramChannel is a channel that can send and receive UDP packets. Since UDP is a connection-less network protocol, you cannot just by default read and write to a DatagramChannel
like you do from other channels. Instead you send and receive packets of data.
Here is how you open a DatagramChannel
:
DatagramChannel channel = DatagramChannel.open(); channel.socket().bind(new InetSocketAddress(9999));
This example opens a DatagramChannel
which can receive packets on UDP port 9999.
You receive data from a DatagramChannel
by calling its receive()
method, like this:
ByteBuffer buf = ByteBuffer.allocate(48); buf.clear(); channel.receive(buf);
The receive()
method will copy the content of a received packet of data into the given Buffer
. If the received packet contains more data than the Buffer
can contain, the remaining data is discarded silently.
You can send data via a DatagramChannel
by calling its send()
method, like this:
String newData = "New String to write to file..." + System.currentTimeMillis(); ByteBuffer buf = ByteBuffer.allocate(48); buf.clear(); buf.put(newData.getBytes()); buf.flip(); int bytesSent = channel.send(buf, new InetSocketAddress("jenkov.com", 80));
This example sends the string to the "jenkov.com" server on UDP port 80. Nothing is listening on that port though, so nothing will happen. You will not be notified of whether the send packet was received or not, since UDP does not make any guarantees about delivery of data.
It is possible to "connect" a DatagramChannel
to a specific address on the network. Since UDP is connection-less, this way of connecting to an address does not create a real connection, like with a TCP channel. Rather, it locks yourDatagramChannel
so you can only send and receive data packets from one specific address.
Here is an example:
channel.connect(new InetSocketAddress("jenkov.com", 80));
When connected you can also use the read()
and write()
method, as if you were using a traditional channel. You just don't have any guarantees about delivery of the sent data. Here are a few examples:
int bytesRead = channel.read(buf);
int bytesWritten = channel.write(buf);