Book Image

Learning Network Programming with Java

Book Image

Learning Network Programming with Java

Overview of this book

Network-aware applications are becoming more prevalent and play an ever-increasing role in the world today. Connecting and using an Internet-based service is a frequent requirement for many applications. Java provides numerous classes that have evolved over the years to meet evolving network needs. These range from low-level socket and IP-based approaches to those encapsulated in software services. This book explores how Java supports networks, starting with the basics and then advancing to more complex topics. An overview of each relevant network technology is presented followed by detailed examples of how to use Java to support these technologies. We start with the basics of networking and then explore how Java supports the development of client/server and peer-to-peer applications. The NIO packages are examined as well as multitasking and how network applications can address practical issues such as security. A discussion on networking concepts will put many network issues into perspective and let you focus on the appropriate technology for the problem at hand. The examples used will provide a good starting point to develop similar capabilities for many of your network needs
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Learning Network Programming with Java
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Java socket support for HTTP client/server applications


An HTTP client will make a connection to an HTTP server. The client will send a request message to the server. The server will send back a response message, frequently, as an HTML document. In the early HTTP version, once the response was sent, the server would terminate the connection. This is sometimes referred to as a stateless protocol because the connection is not maintained.

With HTTP/1.1, persistent connections can be maintained. This improves the performance by eliminating the need to open and close connections when multiple pieces of data need to be transferred between the server and a client.

We will focus on creating an HTTP server and an HTTP client. While browsers typically serve as HTTP clients, other applications can also access web servers. In addition, it helps illustrate the nature of HTTP requests. Our server will support a subset of the HTTP/1.0 specification.

Building a simple HTTP server

We will use a class called...