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Java Coding Problems

You're reading from   Java Coding Problems Become an expert Java programmer by solving over 250 brand-new, modern, real-world problems

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837633944
Length 798 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Anghel Leonard Anghel Leonard
Author Profile Icon Anghel Leonard
Anghel Leonard
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Text Blocks, Locales, Numbers, and Math 2. Objects, Immutability, Switch Expressions, and Pattern Matching FREE CHAPTER 3. Working with Date and Time 4. Records and Record Patterns 5. Arrays, Collections, and Data Structures 6. Java I/O: Context-Specific Deserialization Filters 7. Foreign (Function) Memory API 8. Sealed and Hidden Classes 9. Functional Style Programming – Extending APIs 10. Concurrency – Virtual Threads and Structured Concurrency 11. Concurrency ‒ Virtual Threads and Structured Concurrency: Diving Deeper 12. Garbage Collectors and Dynamic CDS Archives 13. Socket API and Simple Web Server 14. Other Books You May Enjoy
15. Index

263. Writing UDP server/client applications

UDP is a protocol built on top of IP. Via UDP, we can send data packets of at most 65,507 bytes (that is, 65,535-byte IP packet size – plus the minimum IP header of 20 bytes – plus the 8-byte UDP header = 65,507 bytes total). In UDP, data packets are seen as individual entities. In other words, no packet is aware of others. Data packets may arrive in any order or may not arrive at all. The sender will not be informed about the lost packets, so it will not know what to resend. Moreover, data packets may arrive too fast or too slow, so processing them may be a real challenge.

While TCP is famous for high-reliability data transmissions, UDP is famous for low-overhead transmissions. So, UDP is more like sending a letter (remember that TCP is like a phone call). You write on the envelope the address of the receiver (here, the remote IP and port) and your address (here, local IP and port) and send it (here, over the wires). You...

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