public class ServerSocket extends Object implements Closeable
 The actual work of the server socket is performed by an instance
 of the SocketImpl class. An application can
 change the socket factory that creates the socket
 implementation to configure itself to create sockets
 appropriate to the local firewall.
SocketImpl, 
setSocketFactory(java.net.SocketImplFactory), 
ServerSocketChannel| Constructor | Description | 
|---|---|
| ServerSocket() | Creates an unbound server socket. | 
| ServerSocket(int port) | Creates a server socket, bound to the specified port. | 
| ServerSocket(int port,
            int backlog) | Creates a server socket and binds it to the specified local port
 number, with the specified backlog. | 
| ServerSocket(int port,
            int backlog,
            InetAddress bindAddr) | Create a server with the specified port, listen backlog, and
 local IP address to bind to. | 
| Modifier and Type | Method | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| Socket | accept() | Listens for a connection to be made to this socket and accepts
 it. | 
| void | bind(SocketAddress endpoint) | Binds the  ServerSocketto a specific address
 (IP address and port number). | 
| void | bind(SocketAddress endpoint,
    int backlog) | Binds the  ServerSocketto a specific address
 (IP address and port number). | 
| void | close() | Closes this socket. | 
| ServerSocketChannel | getChannel() | Returns the unique  ServerSocketChannelobject
 associated with this socket, if any. | 
| InetAddress | getInetAddress() | Returns the local address of this server socket. | 
| int | getLocalPort() | Returns the port number on which this socket is listening. | 
| SocketAddress | getLocalSocketAddress() | Returns the address of the endpoint this socket is bound to. | 
| int | getReceiveBufferSize() | Gets the value of the  SO_RCVBUFoption
 for thisServerSocket, that is the proposed buffer size that
 will be used for Sockets accepted from thisServerSocket. | 
| boolean | getReuseAddress() | Tests if  SO_REUSEADDRis enabled. | 
| int | getSoTimeout() | Retrieve setting for  SO_TIMEOUT. | 
| protected void | implAccept(Socket s) | Subclasses of ServerSocket use this method to override accept()
 to return their own subclass of socket. | 
| boolean | isBound() | Returns the binding state of the ServerSocket. | 
| boolean | isClosed() | Returns the closed state of the ServerSocket. | 
| void | setPerformancePreferences(int connectionTime,
                         int latency,
                         int bandwidth) | Sets performance preferences for this ServerSocket. | 
| void | setReceiveBufferSize(int size) | Sets a default proposed value for the
  SO_RCVBUFoption for sockets
 accepted from thisServerSocket. | 
| void | setReuseAddress(boolean on) | Enable/disable the  SO_REUSEADDRsocket option. | 
| static void | setSocketFactory(SocketImplFactory fac) | Sets the server socket implementation factory for the
 application. | 
| void | setSoTimeout(int timeout) | Enable/disable  SO_TIMEOUTwith the
 specified timeout, in milliseconds. | 
| String | toString() | Returns the implementation address and implementation port of
 this socket as a  String. | 
public ServerSocket()
             throws IOException
IOException - IO error when opening the socket.public ServerSocket(int port)
             throws IOException
0 means that the port number is automatically
 allocated, typically from an ephemeral port range. This port
 number can then be retrieved by calling getLocalPort.
 
 The maximum queue length for incoming connection indications (a
 request to connect) is set to 50. If a connection
 indication arrives when the queue is full, the connection is refused.
 
 If the application has specified a server socket factory, that
 factory's createSocketImpl method is called to create
 the actual socket implementation. Otherwise a "plain" socket is created.
 
 If there is a security manager,
 its checkListen method is called
 with the port argument
 as its argument to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
port - the port number, or 0 to use a port
                   number that is automatically allocated.IOException - if an I/O error occurs when opening the socket.SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its checkListen
 method doesn't allow the operation.IllegalArgumentException - if the port parameter is outside
             the specified range of valid port values, which is between
             0 and 65535, inclusive.SocketImpl, 
SocketImplFactory.createSocketImpl(), 
setSocketFactory(java.net.SocketImplFactory), 
SecurityManager.checkListen(int)public ServerSocket(int port,
                    int backlog)
             throws IOException
0 means that the port number is
 automatically allocated, typically from an ephemeral port range.
 This port number can then be retrieved by calling
 getLocalPort.
 
 The maximum queue length for incoming connection indications (a
 request to connect) is set to the backlog parameter. If
 a connection indication arrives when the queue is full, the
 connection is refused.
 
 If the application has specified a server socket factory, that
 factory's createSocketImpl method is called to create
 the actual socket implementation. Otherwise a "plain" socket is created.
 
 If there is a security manager,
 its checkListen method is called
 with the port argument
 as its argument to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
 The backlog argument is the requested maximum number of
 pending connections on the socket. Its exact semantics are implementation
 specific. In particular, an implementation may impose a maximum length
 or may choose to ignore the parameter altogther. The value provided
 should be greater than 0. If it is less than or equal to
 0, then an implementation specific default will be used.
 
port - the port number, or 0 to use a port
                      number that is automatically allocated.backlog - requested maximum length of the queue of incoming
                      connections.IOException - if an I/O error occurs when opening the socket.SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its checkListen
 method doesn't allow the operation.IllegalArgumentException - if the port parameter is outside
             the specified range of valid port values, which is between
             0 and 65535, inclusive.SocketImpl, 
SocketImplFactory.createSocketImpl(), 
setSocketFactory(java.net.SocketImplFactory), 
SecurityManager.checkListen(int)public ServerSocket(int port,
                    int backlog,
                    InetAddress bindAddr)
             throws IOException
0 means that the port number is
 automatically allocated, typically from an ephemeral port range.
 This port number can then be retrieved by calling
 getLocalPort.
 If there is a security manager, this method
 calls its checkListen method
 with the port argument
 as its argument to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
 The backlog argument is the requested maximum number of
 pending connections on the socket. Its exact semantics are implementation
 specific. In particular, an implementation may impose a maximum length
 or may choose to ignore the parameter altogther. The value provided
 should be greater than 0. If it is less than or equal to
 0, then an implementation specific default will be used.
 
port - the port number, or 0 to use a port
              number that is automatically allocated.backlog - requested maximum length of the queue of incoming
                connections.bindAddr - the local InetAddress the server will bind toSecurityException - if a security manager exists and
 its checkListen method doesn't allow the operation.IOException - if an I/O error occurs when opening the socket.IllegalArgumentException - if the port parameter is outside
             the specified range of valid port values, which is between
             0 and 65535, inclusive.SocketOptions, 
SocketImpl, 
SecurityManager.checkListen(int)public void bind(SocketAddress endpoint) throws IOException
ServerSocket to a specific address
 (IP address and port number).
 
 If the address is null, then the system will pick up
 an ephemeral port and a valid local address to bind the socket.
 
endpoint - The IP address and port number to bind to.IOException - if the bind operation fails, or if the socket
                     is already bound.SecurityException - if a SecurityManager is present and
 its checkListen method doesn't allow the operation.IllegalArgumentException - if endpoint is a
          SocketAddress subclass not supported by this socketpublic void bind(SocketAddress endpoint, int backlog) throws IOException
ServerSocket to a specific address
 (IP address and port number).
 
 If the address is null, then the system will pick up
 an ephemeral port and a valid local address to bind the socket.
 
 The backlog argument is the requested maximum number of
 pending connections on the socket. Its exact semantics are implementation
 specific. In particular, an implementation may impose a maximum length
 or may choose to ignore the parameter altogther. The value provided
 should be greater than 0. If it is less than or equal to
 0, then an implementation specific default will be used.
endpoint - The IP address and port number to bind to.backlog - requested maximum length of the queue of
                          incoming connections.IOException - if the bind operation fails, or if the socket
                     is already bound.SecurityException - if a SecurityManager is present and
 its checkListen method doesn't allow the operation.IllegalArgumentException - if endpoint is a
          SocketAddress subclass not supported by this socketpublic InetAddress getInetAddress()
 If the socket was bound prior to being closed,
 then this method will continue to return the local address
 after the socket is closed.
 
 If there is a security manager set, its checkConnect method is
 called with the local address and -1 as its arguments to see
 if the operation is allowed. If the operation is not allowed,
 the loopback address is returned.
null if the socket is unbound.SecurityManager.checkConnect(java.lang.String, int)public int getLocalPort()
 If the socket was bound prior to being closed,
 then this method will continue to return the port number
 after the socket is closed.
public SocketAddress getLocalSocketAddress()
 If the socket was bound prior to being closed,
 then this method will continue to return the address of the endpoint
 after the socket is closed.
 
 If there is a security manager set, its checkConnect method is
 called with the local address and -1 as its arguments to see
 if the operation is allowed. If the operation is not allowed,
 a SocketAddress representing the
 loopback address and the local
 port to which the socket is bound is returned.
SocketAddress representing the local endpoint of
         this socket, or a SocketAddress representing the
         loopback address if denied by the security manager,
         or null if the socket is not bound yet.getInetAddress(), 
getLocalPort(), 
bind(SocketAddress), 
SecurityManager.checkConnect(java.lang.String, int)public Socket accept() throws IOException
A new Socket s is created and, if there
 is a security manager,
 the security manager's checkAccept method is called
 with s.getInetAddress().getHostAddress() and
 s.getPort()
 as its arguments to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
IOException - if an I/O error occurs when waiting for a
               connection.SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
             checkAccept method doesn't allow the operation.SocketTimeoutException - if a timeout was previously set with setSoTimeout and
             the timeout has been reached.IllegalBlockingModeException - if this socket has an associated channel, the channel is in
             non-blocking mode, and there is no connection ready to be
             acceptedSecurityManager.checkAccept(java.lang.String, int)protected final void implAccept(Socket s) throws IOException
s - the SocketIllegalBlockingModeException - if this socket has an associated channel,
         and the channel is in non-blocking modeIOException - if an I/O error occurs when waiting
 for a connection.public void close()
           throws IOException
accept() will throw
 a SocketException.
 If this socket has an associated channel then the channel is closed as well.
close in interface Closeableclose in interface AutoCloseableIOException - if an I/O error occurs when closing the socket.public ServerSocketChannel getChannel()
ServerSocketChannel object
 associated with this socket, if any.
  A server socket will have a channel if, and only if, the channel
 itself was created via the ServerSocketChannel.open
 method.
null if this socket was not created
          for a channelpublic boolean isBound()
public boolean isClosed()
public void setSoTimeout(int timeout)
                  throws SocketException
SO_TIMEOUT with the
 specified timeout, in milliseconds.  With this option set to a non-zero
 timeout, a call to accept() for this ServerSocket
 will block for only this amount of time.  If the timeout expires,
 a java.net.SocketTimeoutException is raised, though the
 ServerSocket is still valid.  The option must be enabled
 prior to entering the blocking operation to have effect.  The
 timeout must be > 0.
 A timeout of zero is interpreted as an infinite timeout.timeout - the specified timeout, in millisecondsSocketException - if there is an error in
 the underlying protocol, such as a TCP error.getSoTimeout()public int getSoTimeout()
                 throws IOException
SO_TIMEOUT.
 0 returns implies that the option is disabled (i.e., timeout of infinity).SO_TIMEOUT valueIOException - if an I/O error occurssetSoTimeout(int)public void setReuseAddress(boolean on)
                     throws SocketException
SO_REUSEADDR
 socket option.
 
 When a TCP connection is closed the connection may remain
 in a timeout state for a period of time after the connection
 is closed (typically known as the TIME_WAIT state
 or 2MSL wait state).
 For applications using a well known socket address or port
 it may not be possible to bind a socket to the required
 SocketAddress if there is a connection in the
 timeout state involving the socket address or port.
 
 Enabling SO_REUSEADDR prior to
 binding the socket using bind(SocketAddress) allows the socket
 to be bound even though a previous connection is in a timeout state.
 
 When a ServerSocket is created the initial setting
 of SO_REUSEADDR is not defined.
 Applications can use getReuseAddress() to determine the initial
 setting of SO_REUSEADDR.
 
 The behaviour when SO_REUSEADDR is
 enabled or disabled after a socket is bound (See isBound())
 is not defined.
on - whether to enable or disable the socket optionSocketException - if an error occurs enabling or
            disabling the SO_REUSEADDR
            socket option, or the socket is closed.getReuseAddress(), 
bind(SocketAddress), 
isBound(), 
isClosed()public boolean getReuseAddress()
                        throws SocketException
SO_REUSEADDR is enabled.boolean indicating whether or not
         SO_REUSEADDR is enabled.SocketException - if there is an error
 in the underlying protocol, such as a TCP error.setReuseAddress(boolean)public String toString()
String.
 
 If there is a security manager set, its checkConnect method is
 called with the local address and -1 as its arguments to see
 if the operation is allowed. If the operation is not allowed,
 an InetAddress representing the
 loopback address is returned as
 the implementation address.
public static void setSocketFactory(SocketImplFactory fac) throws IOException
 When an application creates a new server socket, the socket
 implementation factory's createSocketImpl method is
 called to create the actual socket implementation.
 
 Passing null to the method is a no-op unless the factory
 was already set.
 
 If there is a security manager, this method first calls
 the security manager's checkSetFactory method
 to ensure the operation is allowed.
 This could result in a SecurityException.
fac - the desired factory.IOException - if an I/O error occurs when setting the
               socket factory.SocketException - if the factory has already been defined.SecurityException - if a security manager exists and its
             checkSetFactory method doesn't allow the operation.SocketImplFactory.createSocketImpl(), 
SecurityManager.checkSetFactory()public void setReceiveBufferSize(int size)
                          throws SocketException
SO_RCVBUF option for sockets
 accepted from this ServerSocket. The value actually set
 in the accepted socket must be determined by calling
 Socket.getReceiveBufferSize() after the socket
 is returned by accept().
 
 The value of SO_RCVBUF is used both to
 set the size of the internal socket receive buffer, and to set the size
 of the TCP receive window that is advertized to the remote peer.
 
 It is possible to change the value subsequently, by calling
 Socket.setReceiveBufferSize(int). However, if the application
 wishes to allow a receive window larger than 64K bytes, as defined by RFC1323
 then the proposed value must be set in the ServerSocket before
 it is bound to a local address. This implies, that the ServerSocket must be
 created with the no-argument constructor, then setReceiveBufferSize() must
 be called and lastly the ServerSocket is bound to an address by calling bind().
 
Failure to do this will not cause an error, and the buffer size may be set to the requested value but the TCP receive window in sockets accepted from this ServerSocket will be no larger than 64K bytes.
size - the size to which to set the receive buffer
 size. This value must be greater than 0.SocketException - if there is an error
 in the underlying protocol, such as a TCP error.IllegalArgumentException - if the
 value is 0 or is negative.getReceiveBufferSize()public int getReceiveBufferSize()
                         throws SocketException
SO_RCVBUF option
 for this ServerSocket, that is the proposed buffer size that
 will be used for Sockets accepted from this ServerSocket.
 Note, the value actually set in the accepted socket is determined by
 calling Socket.getReceiveBufferSize().
SO_RCVBUF
         option for this Socket.SocketException - if there is an error
            in the underlying protocol, such as a TCP error.setReceiveBufferSize(int)public void setPerformancePreferences(int connectionTime,
                                      int latency,
                                      int bandwidth)
Sockets use the TCP/IP protocol by default. Some implementations may offer alternative protocols which have different performance characteristics than TCP/IP. This method allows the application to express its own preferences as to how these tradeoffs should be made when the implementation chooses from the available protocols.
 Performance preferences are described by three integers
 whose values indicate the relative importance of short connection time,
 low latency, and high bandwidth.  The absolute values of the integers
 are irrelevant; in order to choose a protocol the values are simply
 compared, with larger values indicating stronger preferences.  If the
 application prefers short connection time over both low latency and high
 bandwidth, for example, then it could invoke this method with the values
 (1, 0, 0).  If the application prefers high bandwidth above low
 latency, and low latency above short connection time, then it could
 invoke this method with the values (0, 1, 2).
 
Invoking this method after this socket has been bound will have no effect. This implies that in order to use this capability requires the socket to be created with the no-argument constructor.
connectionTime - An int expressing the relative importance of a short
         connection timelatency - An int expressing the relative importance of low
         latencybandwidth - An int expressing the relative importance of high
         bandwidth Submit a bug or feature 
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