4 // Fraunhofer Institute for Open Communication Systems (FOKUS)
6 // The contents of this file are subject to the Fraunhofer FOKUS Public License
7 // Version 1.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance
8 // with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
9 // http://senf.berlios.de/license.html
11 // The Fraunhofer FOKUS Public License Version 1.0 is based on,
12 // but modifies the Mozilla Public License Version 1.1.
13 // See the full license text for the amendments.
15 // Software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" basis,
16 // WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License
17 // for the specific language governing rights and limitations under the License.
19 // The Original Code is Fraunhofer FOKUS code.
21 // The Initial Developer of the Original Code is Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft e.V.
22 // (registered association), Hansastraße 27 c, 80686 Munich, Germany.
25 // Stefan Bund <g0dil@berlios.de>
28 /** \mainpage UDP Client/Server example application
30 \dontinclude udpServer.cc
32 This Application is a command line based client/server application, which sends some strings
33 from client to server, where they are printed on the command line.
35 After installing the Library, the udpServer and the udpClient can be found in the
36 senf/Example/udpServer directory and compiled with
42 Now you can start the application with
48 \section UDPserverApplication UDP server application
50 We take a look to the code starting with the Server: The file starts out including the necessary
53 \skip // Custom includes
56 The Scheduler will be needed because we implement a non blocking UDP Server with the %senf
57 integrated Scheduler. The scheduler library provides a simple yet flexible abstraction of
58 the standard asynchronous UNIX mainloop utilizing \c select or \c poll.
60 First we define a class which is responsible for opening a socket and print out the incoming
61 data on stdout. We create a \c ::UDPv4ClientSocketHandle, which is an unconnected and
62 uninitialized UDP (IPv4) socket.
66 The name \e client socket handle is a bit misleading: The handle is a \e client and not a \e
67 server socket handle since it implements the ordinary (client) socket API and not the connection
68 oriented (e.g. TCP accept) server socket API. Since UDP is not connection oriented, there exists
69 no \c UDPv4ServerSocketHandle.
73 The constructor initialize the Server Object with a given address and port. In our case the
74 server configuration is static: The server listens on the loopback device on port 4243. We
75 instantiate and configure a senf::scheduler::FdEvent instance to call Server::readFromClient
76 whenever data is available on the handle.
80 The public \c run() member is called to run the sniffer. It enables the event callback and
81 enters the scheduler main-loop.
85 This member function is called by the %scheduler whenever new data is available. The scheduler
86 passes in an event-mask of the event(s) triggering the call.
90 In the function the data from the socket is put into a standard string and dumped out on stdout.
95 In the main function we need to create an Object of our Server with the loopback address and the
98 That's it. We finish of by catching the exception and giving as much %detail as possible if an
99 exception is caught. The \c prettyName function from the \c Utils library is used, to get a
100 nice, printable representation of the dynamic type of the exception instance. It is an interface
101 to the g++ de-mangler. This is necessary since the name member of the C++ \c type_info instance
102 is a mangled name in g++.
104 \section UDPclientApplication UDP client application
106 \dontinclude udpClient.cc
108 The client application uses the same mechanisms but implements them in a small main function.
109 It sends numbers as strings to the server.
115 First a \c senf::::UDPv4ClientSocketHandle is created. With
116 <tt>writeto(senf::INet4SocketAddress, string)</tt> the string \c s will be written to the
117 specified address and port, which is constructed here from a static string read from the command
118 line with the syntax \c IP:PORT. In this example Integers from zero to ten are send to the
126 // comment-column: 40
127 // c-file-style: "senf"
128 // indent-tabs-mode: nil
129 // ispell-local-dictionary: "american"
130 // compile-command: "scons -u test"