http://qs321.pair.com?node_id=485477


in reply to Re^2: New to perl: IO Select question :(
in thread New to perl: IO Select question :(

For server side, one cares whether each connection can read or write, not the listening server socket. The listening socket does not read or write.

Let's do a simple testing. With the following client and server:

#server use strict; use warnings; use IO::Socket; use IO::Select; my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto=>"tcp", LocalHost=>"localhost", + Listen=>16, Reuse=>1, LocalPort=>3000) || die("Could not create socket!\n"); my $conn = $sock->accept(); my $sel = new IO::Select($sock); if ($sel->can_read()) { print "can read\n"; } #client use IO::Socket; my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new( Proto=>"tcp", PeerHost=>"Localhost", PeerPort=>3000 ) or die("Could not create socket!\n") +; print $sock "abcd\n";

Run perl -w server.pl in one window, then run perl -w client.pl in another window, nothing gets printed in the server window! run perl -w client.pl again, "abcd" gets printed. This is not what one will want.

change server code:

use strict; use warnings; use IO::Socket; use IO::Select; my $sock = IO::Socket::INET->new(Proto=>"tcp", LocalHost=>"localhost", + Listen=>16, Reuse=>1, LocalPort=>3000) || die("Could not create socket!\n"); my $conn = $sock->accept(); my $sel = new IO::Select($conn); if ($sel->can_read()) { print "can read\n"; }

The first time you run perl -w client.pl, server side knows that it can read, and prints "abcd". That's what one wants.