![portable packet sender portable packet sender](https://present5.com/presentation/534fb19deda8d661a65743880572bcb7/image-88.jpg)
You are receiving this because you commented. Web users could make, view and send GIF files freely but they couldnt develop. Replies with persistent TCP enabled is a bit buggy. PNG (Portable Network Graphics) is a file format used for lossless image. Turn on persistent TCP, and then Packet Sender will reply and leave the connection open. If you are referring to TCP, Packet Sender replies back once and closes the connection. Turn off logging to have it go on forever. You can turn on responses on 2 Packet Senders, and they will happily UDP reply back and forth to each other until the app dies from using too much RAM.
![portable packet sender portable packet sender](https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-KYjLKcNHds4/VTz8oNI3UoI/AAAAAAAAD6k/aw6-PUh51B0/s1600/packet_sender-android.png)
Packet Sender's UDP socket is always listening. Subject: Re: Persistent TCP on the server side ( #19)
Portable packet sender code#
In the meantime, I found my code had an error preventing the correct filling/reading of the client buffer when recv().įrom: Dan Nagle Friday, 15 September 2017 13:20 Thanks for the explanations, very helpful for me to learn how UDP works. This server might be useful for development and testing in a home network automation/entertainment environment where a mobile client controls remote devices over sockets in near real-time, among other scenarios. Replies with persistent TCP enabled is a bit buggy.
![portable packet sender portable packet sender](https://cdn.slidesharecdn.com/ss_thumbnails/collectingapacketcapturefromaciscoipphone-150630035350-lva1-app6892-thumbnail-4.jpg)
echoing back the last received message.Īs for a timeline, I don't dare to request anything. Turn off logging to have it go on forever. Once theyve completed that process, they will send the port request to KCHA. Also, valuable to me is the ability to configure an automatic response from the server, e.g. Portability lets voucher holders move into a different housing authoritys. For me, personally, more important is performance because I'll be using it for testing from a Java NIO client which is capable of quickly sending many messages using the same socket. I don't mind if the server does not have any UI, let alone an ugly one. It maintains a persistent connection, but cannot be configured to respond automatically (only manually) and does not seem to have been updated in a while. Which is written in Java, hence cross-platform.