I have a Java Client which sends UTF-8 strings to a C# TCP-Server, I'm using a DataOutputStream to send the strings. The code looks like this:
public void sendUTF8String(String ar) {
if (socket.isConnected()) {
try {
dataOutputStream.write(ar.getBytes(Charset.forName("UTF-8")));
dataOutputStream.flush();
} catch (IOException e) {
handleException(e);
}
}
}
The problem is that flush doesn't seem to work right. If I send two Strings close to each other, the server receives only one message with both strings. The whole thing works if I do a Thread.sleep(1000) between calls, this is obviously not a solution. What am I missing?
flush()
doesn't guarantee that a data packet gets shipped off. Your TCP/IP stack is free to bundle your data for maximum efficiency. Worse, there are probably a bunch of other TCP/IP stacks between you and your destination, and they are free to do the same.I think you shouldn't rely on packet bundling. Insert a logical terminator/divider in your data and you will be on the safe side.