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Non-blocking UDP I/O vs blocking UDP I/O in Java

Non-blocking TCP/IP SocketChannels and Selector in NIO help me to handle many TCP/IP connections with small number of threads. But how about UDP DatagramChannels? (I must admit that I'm not very familiar with UDP.)

UDP send operations don't seem to block even if the DatagramChannel is not operating in blocking mode. Is there really a case where DatagramSocket.send(DatagramPacket) blocks due to congestion or something similar? I'm really curious if there's such a case and what the possible cases exist in a production environment.

If DatagramSocket.send(DatagramPacket) doesn't actually block and I am not going to use a connected DatagramSocket and bind to only one port, is there no advantage of using non-blocking mode with DatagramChannel and Selector?

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trustin Avatar asked Feb 20 '09 13:02

trustin


1 Answers

It's been a while since I've used Java's DatagramSockets, Channels and the like, but I can still give you some help.

The UDP protocol does not establish a connection like TCP does. Rather, it just sends the data and forgets about it. If it is important to make sure that the data actually gets there, that is the client's responsibility. Thus, even if you are in blocking mode, your send operation will only block for as long as it takes to flush the buffer out. Since UDP does not know anything about the network, it will write it out at the earliest opportunity without checking the network speed or if it actually gets to where it is supposed to be going. Thus, to you, it appears as if the channel is actually immediately ready for more sending.

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James Avatar answered Sep 18 '22 16:09

James