Top Banner
Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,
49

Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Dec 19, 2015

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Advanced Java Programming:

programming of distributed application

using TCP/IP

Santiago, Aug. 2008

Nelson Baloian,

Page 2: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Content0. Introduction (concepts of distributed systems)

1. TCP/IP client & server programming – Client programming:

– a simple client (date, echo) – a pop3 client – A SMTP client

2. Server programming (and their clients)– Simple client-server example with serializing example – File Servers: simple whole file iterative server (not secure)– Simple whole file robust server – Simple whole file concurrent server – Stateless random access file server – TCP/IP Chat with awareness – A simple extensible web server – Parallel downloading techniques – Awareness in a TC/IP peer to peer environment and the

latecomers problem

Page 3: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Content3. UDP programming

- simple UDP client-server example - a "ping" program –- multicasting - multicasting chat - awareness in a multicasting environment - broadcasting vs. multicasting

4. RMI Client-server programming - a simple example will be used to show: remiregistry,

concurrency automatic stub distribution - a sequential file server with state - Automatic teller machine example - RMI-based chat with awareness

5- Introduction to servlets and jsp- principles - parameters (from request and parameter file) - using forms - implementing state with cookies/sessions

6- JDBC

Page 4: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Evaluation

• Attending to classes (at least 80%)

• Homeworks (5)

Page 5: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Why distributed systems

- Share resources (25 years ago)- Communicate people (now)- Performance, scalability (always)- Fault tolerant systems (always)

Page 6: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Which distributed programs do I use daily ?

1- ICQ

2- email

3- p2p file sharing

4- web browser-server

5- database software

6- file server

Page 7: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Can we deduce how were they developed ?

1- Programming language and resources used

2- Connection style

3- Communications architecture

4- Software architecture

5- Server design (if any)

Page 8: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Internet : two different ways to deliver a message to another application

The UDP: User Defined Package: like writing a letter

TCP or UDP

Applications’ programmers decide on this according to their needs

Page 9: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Every layer has the illusion of talking to the same one located at the other host

A SERVER

A CLIENT

A CLIENT

A CLIENT

4444

The UDP: User Defined Package: like writing a letterRead write sequence

UDP or TCP communication

Internet frames and addresses

electricpulses

Page 10: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Implementation of Communications in a TCP/IP Network

• At a low level (¿future “assembler of the communications”?)

• Based on the “sockets” & “ports” abstractions• Originally developed for BSD UNIX but now present in almost all

systems (UNIX, LINUX, Macintosh OS, Windows)• The destination of a message is determined by the computer’s IP

number and the port number • Every machine has 2**16 ports• The origin of the message is also a socket but most of the times the

port number is not important • Ports are associated to services (programs)

Page 11: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

The 3 basic communication forms• UDP communication reflects almost what really happens over the internet. An application sends a packet trough a socket addressed to a certain IP number and port. There should be another application on that host listening to packets coming to that port (which is agreed beforehand) • TCP simulates a data flow. A client must establish a communication with the server before starting sending/receiving data. The server must be waiting for such request. • Multicast fits well for group communication when the group is not well defined beforehand (spontaneous networking). It is also based in the sending of UDP packages but all “interested” applications may receive it. It does not require a central server

Page 12: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Protocolos for communication• Every service is normally identifyed by a port

– Web: HTTP (port 80)– Mail: SMTP (port 25)– File transfer protocol: FTP (21)– telnet: 22/23

More common services ports at:http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/~rakerman/port-table.html

• Servers with/without Connection– connectionless style: UDP – connection-oriented style TCP

Page 13: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

The SOCKET

A SERVER 1

When a server wants to start listening it must create a socketbound to a port. The port is specified with a number.

A SERVER 2

A SERVER 3

www.informatik.de

4444

3333

5555

If a client wants to communicate with server 1 should try to communicate with computer www.informatik.de through port 4444

Page 14: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

UDP: communication with datagramsDATAGRAM: an independent, self-contained message sent over the internet whose arrival, arrival time and content are not guaranteed (like regular mail in some countries....)

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

www.waseda1.jp

message

4444

Once a server is listening, the client should create a datagramwith the server’s address, port number and, the message

www.waseda2.jp

?

Page 15: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Sending datagrams with UDP protocol

Then it should open a socket and send the datagramto the internet. The “routing algorithm” will find the way to the target computer

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

?

Page 16: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Before the datagram leaves the client, it receives the address of the originating computer and the socket number

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

!

Sending datagrams with UDP protocol

Page 17: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Sending datagrams with UDP protocol

After the datagram is sent, the client computer may start hearing at the port created for sending the datagram if an answer from the server is expected

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

?

Page 18: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Sending datagrams with UDP protocol

The server can extract the client’s address and port number to create another datagram with the answer

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

answer

?

Page 19: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Sending datagrams with UDP protocol

Finally is sends the datagram with the answer to the “client”. When a datagram is sent there is no guarantee that it will arrive to the destination. If you want reliable communication you should provide a checking mechanism, or use ...

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

?

Page 20: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

TCP: communication with data flow

With TCP a communication channel between both computers is built and a reliable communication is established between both computers. This allows to send a data flow rather tan datagrams.

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

?

Page 21: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

TCP: communication with data flow

After the client contacts the server, a reliable channel is established. After this, client and server may begin sending data through this channel. The other should be reading this data: They need a protocol !!!!

A SERVERA

CLIENT

4444

www.informatik.de

3333

www.waseda2.jp

bla bla bla bla

Page 22: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

TCP: How is reliability achieved ?The internet itself works only with the datagram paradigm. Internet frames are may “get lost” (destroyed): For every frame delivered carrying a part of the data flow there is a confirmation!

Sending bla bla bla Sending 1st bla

Ack 1st bla

Sending 2nd bla

Ack 2nd bla

Sending 3rd bla

Ack 3rd bla

Page 23: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

What if a message get lost ?The server waits a certain amount of time. If it does not receive any confirmation it sends the message again.

Sending bla bla bla

Sending 1st bla

Ack 1st bla

Sending 2nd bla

Sending 2nd bla again

Ack 2nd bla

No confirmation !!!

LOST !!!

Page 24: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

The Window for improving efficiencyThe transmitter will handle a set of not acknowledged packets

Sending 1st bla

Ack 1st bla

Sending 2nd bla

Ack 2nd bla

Sending 3rd bla

Ack 3rd bla

Page 25: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

TCP or UDP Protocol: decision at the transport level

• What does it means for the programmer/designer: – By choosing one or the other protocol for establishing a connection

between machines the programmer/designer decides about the reliability and speed of the communication.

• TCP provides high reliability: data are only sent if the communication was established. An underlying protocol is responsible for retranslating, ordering, eliminating duplicate packages

• UDP reflects just what the internet does with the packages: best effort delivery, no checking.

– Also the programming style is quite different : • With TCP the data is sent a flow (of bytes, in principle) which can be

written, read as if they were stored in a file.

• With UDP the programmer must assemble the package and send it to the internet without knowing if it will arrive its pretended destination

Page 26: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

When to use one or another

• Considerations – TCP imposes a much higher load to the network than UDP (almost 6

times)

– We can expect high package loss when the information travels trough many routers.

– Inside a LAN UDP communications may be reliable is there is not much traffic. Although with some congestion we can expect some packages to be lost inside the LAN

• In general, it is recommended especially for beginners (but also to skilled programmers) to use only TCP to develop distributed applications. Not only it is more reliable but the programming style is also simpler. UDP is normally used if the application needs to implement hardware supported broadcasting or multicasting, or if the application cannot tolerate the overload of TCP

Page 27: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Mark with a + the applications to use TCP and with a = those to use UDP

E-Mail Video conference

Temperature every second

Web server and client

Stock values every 5 seconds

Page 28: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

The client-server paradigm(do you remember the WEB ?)

The web server

program

Webresources

request

answer

THE INTERNET

requestanswer

The web client program

Page 29: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

1- The server opens a channel and starts listening to requests.

A SERVER

Webresources

THE INTERNET

A CLIENT

1 ?

Page 30: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

2- A client who knows it, sends a request and waits for the answer

A SERVER

Webresources

THE INTERNET

A CLIENT

2

2

Page 31: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

3- The server, analyses the request and answers properly according to the

protocol

A SERVER

Webresources

THE INTERNET

A CLIENT

3

3

This may involve the reading of a file

Page 32: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Why Client/Server ? It is a communication protocol model (listener/caller)

• TCP/IP does not provide any mechanism which would start running a program in a computer when a message arrives. A program must be executing BEFORE the message arrives in order to establish a communication (daemons).

• Is there really no other mean to communicate ?– Multicasting (but the sender does not know who is receiving and

in this case there is no dialogue)

• Most programs do not act as pure servers or client– It very frequent to have a server of o a certain program act as a

client of another

– Sometimes a group of programs are client and servers from each other at the same time!

Page 33: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

The Client-Server Model

Client

Client

Server 1

Server 2

Server 3

request

answer

Page 34: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Services Provided by Multiple Servers

Client

Client

Server 2

Server 3

Server 1

Page 35: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Proxy servers & caches

Client

Client

Proxy/cache

Server 2

Server 1

Page 36: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Peer-to-peer Applications (p2p)

Application+

Coordination

Application+

Coordination

Application+

Coordination

Page 37: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Communication Architectures for Distributed Applications

• Servers as Clients– Programms do not behave as pure servers or as pure clients. For

example, a file server can ask another compter for a timestamt to register the last change of a file.

– When all application must behave at the same time as client and server we can organize the communication in two basic ways:

• Every application can open a communication channel with each other application (network configuration): P2P applications

• There is a commincation server and all applications open one communication channel with it (star configuration): multiple chat servers.

Page 38: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Network communication architecture

• Every application opens an exclusive channel qith each other application present in the session

• There may be up to n*(n-1)/2 channels open for n applications

• Advantages: – It avoids bottlencks in the communications

• Drawbacks: – All applications must be aware of all other taking part in the session – The dynamic is more complicated when managing consistency when

applications enter and quit the session

Page 39: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Star communication architecture

• The applications open a channel with the server and send their communication requests to the server. This server takes the message and forwards it to its final destination

• There are up to n channels open for n applications

• Advantages: – The managing og the communication parameters is more easy to manage

– The problem of incomming and outgoing of applications is more easy to tackle

• Drawbacks: – The server can get oveloaded

– The channels may get overloaded.

Page 40: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Replicated Architecutres

• Every application has a copy of the application and the data

• The modifications (data) are distributed to all participants in some way

• Synchronization is normally achieved by distributing the events, not the state of the data

• Problems with latecommers

• Communication architecture may be that of a star or network type

Page 41: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Replicated Architecture

Data

DataData

view

Data

Appl

Page 42: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Semi-replicated Architectures

• Data are kept centralized by a single application

• Every client mantains its own actualized view of the data

• There is a single data model, while the views and controllers are replicated

• Permits the use of different interfaces (browser)

• Synchronisation by events or by state

• Communication architecture normaly centralized (the data are located at the server)

Page 43: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Semi-replicated Architecture

Data

Data

Data

Page 44: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Centralized Architecture

• Data and view are mantained centralized

• Every client has a graphic server for displaying the view

• Synchonization by state (the view)

• Communications architecture centralized

• It provoques a big traffic of data over the network (the whole view is transmitted)

• Are frecuently of general use (like netmeeting)

Page 45: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Full centralized Architecture

view / commands

view / commands

Page 46: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Nowadays there is a lot of middleware which make distributed programming

much easier

Libraries for distributedprogramming (middleware)

RPC, CORBA, RMI

Page 47: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Goals of the Middleware

• Provide a framework for making development of distributed system easier

• Hide (encapsulate) communications details• Make distributing programming similar to

local programming• Standardization of communication

protocols and data format• This help comes not for free !!!

Page 48: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

Web-Based Distributed Systems

• Applications talk to each other using HTTP protocol

• Trough port 80 (usually the only available)• Thin clients – Fat Servers• Use of Web and Application servers• The server is “extended” to implement new

services

Page 49: Advanced Java Programming: programming of distributed application using TCP/IP Santiago, Aug. 2008 Nelson Baloian,

J2EE Basic Architecture

Database ServerWeb Server

ApplicationServer

Client:Web Browser

Communication viaJDBC

HTML PagesServlets JSP pages

EJB