Reputation: 31
I have two (client - server - client) system. First one uses TCP and second one uses UDP. It is interesting that my TCP using system is faster than UDP using one when transferring files in size 5-6 mb. Does problem occurs because of my coding mistakes or can that happen?
TCP Client
try {
socket = new Socket("localhost", 7755);
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println(e.getMessage().toString());
}
out = new PrintWriter(socket.getOutputStream(), true);
int i = 0;
while (file.hasNext()) {
String line = file.nextLine();
if (!line.isEmpty()) {
out.println(line);
}
i++;
}
TCP Server
try {
serverSocketA = new ServerSocket(7755);
serverSocketB = new ServerSocket(7760);
} catch (Exception e) {
System.out.println("Port error!");
}
System.out.println("Server is ready...");
clientSocketA = serverSocketA.accept();
clientSocketB = serverSocketB.accept();
PrintWriter out = new PrintWriter(clientSocketB.getOutputStream(), true);
BufferedReader in = new BufferedReader(new InputStreamReader(clientSocketA.getInputStream()));
while((dataFromClientA = in.readLine()) != null) {
out.println(dataFromClientA);
}
UDP Server
private static byte[] buf = new byte[6];
static Scanner file;
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException{
long startTime = System.currentTimeMillis();
socket = new DatagramSocket();
address = InetAddress.getByName("localhost");
file = new Scanner(new File("sentfile.txt"));
DatagramPacket packet;
while (file.hasNext()) {
String line = file.nextLine();
if (!line.isEmpty()) {
buf = line.getBytes();
packet = new DatagramPacket(buf, buf.length, address, 7765);
socket.send(packet);
}
}
UDP Client
private static byte[] buffer = new byte[6];
private static byte[] buffer2 = new byte[6];
private static boolean running;
static PrintWriter writer;
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
udpSocketB = new DatagramSocket();
address = InetAddress.getByName("localhost");
udpSocketA = new DatagramSocket(7765);
running = true;
DatagramPacket packet;
while(running) {
packet = new DatagramPacket(buffer, buffer.length);
udpSocketA.receive(packet);
InetAddress address = packet.getAddress();
int port = packet.getPort();
packet = new DatagramPacket(buffer, buffer.length, address, port);
String received = new String(packet.getData(), 0, packet.getLength());
DatagramPacket packetToB;
buffer2 = received.getBytes();
packetToB = new DatagramPacket(buffer2, buffer2.length, address, 7770);
udpSocketB.send(packetToB);
if (received.equals("end")) {
running = false;
continue;
}
}
I just add client1 and server codes and rest is similar. What could be the reason?
Upvotes: 3
Views: 953
Reputation: 533500
When you write over a TCP socket, it will coalesce bytes if possible into an MTU of data of around ~1500 bytes making the overhead of the packet header relatively small.
When you write each line in its own UDP packet it has an overhead for each line, possibly more than the actual data sent.
Note: in neither case do you need to read a line at a time. You can read say a byte[] of 1 KB at a time and print that.
public class TCPClient {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
try (Socket socket = new Socket("localhost", 7755);
FileInputStream fis = new FileInputStream(args[0])) {
byte[] bytes = new byte[1024];
OutputStream out = socket.getOutputStream();
for (int len; (len = fis.read(bytes)) > 0; ) {
out.write(bytes, 0, len);
}
}
}
}
public class TCPServer {
public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
ServerSocket serverSocket = new ServerSocket(7755);
System.out.println("Server is ready...");
try (Socket socket = serverSocket.accept()) {
byte[] bytes = new byte[1024];
for (int len; (len = socket.getInputStream().read(bytes)) > 0; )
System.out.write(bytes, 0, len);
}
}
}
You can do the same thing with UDP, transfering 1 KB at a time and get a similar throughput.
NOTE: UDP is lossy, so you might lose packets, or get them out of order.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 182761
TCP has been heavily optimized by some of the greatest networking experts in the world. It's specifically designed for sending streams of data over IP networks as quickly and efficiently as possible. It's tied into the kernel and they are heavily optimized as a unit on most modern platforms. You're not going to outperform it unless it does something that you don't need and you can obtain a significant benefit from not doing that thing.
Upvotes: 0