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Return to the Table of Contents

Chapter 3
TCP

This is a directory of program listings from Chapter 3 of the book:

Foundations of Python Network Programming
Third Edition, October 2014
by Brandon Rhodes and John Goerzen

You can learn more about the book by visiting the root of this GitHub source code repository.

These scripts were written for Python 3, but can also run successfully under Python 2. Simply use 3to2 to convert them to the older syntax.

There are only two scripts featured in this chapter, both of which illustrate the TCP stream oriented protocol through a small client and server. Neither script needs its client and server to be run on different hosts to illustrate the features of TCP, though their command line arguments do permit it. The tcp_sixteen.py script simply sends and receives sixteen bytes of data in each direction:

$ python3 tcp_sixteen.py server '' &>server.log &
$ python3 tcp_sixteen.py client localhost
Client has been assigned socket name ('127.0.0.1', 34183)
The server said b'Farewell, client'
$ cat server.log
Listening at ('0.0.0.0', 1060)
Waiting to accept a new connection
We have accepted a connection from ('127.0.0.1', 34183)
  Socket name: ('127.0.0.1', 1060)
  Socket peer: ('127.0.0.1', 34183)
  Incoming sixteen-octet message: b'Hi there, server'
  Reply sent, socket closed
Waiting to accept a new connection

The tcp_deadlock.py script, by contrast, illustrates how incautious use of a stream protocol can fill the operating system network buffers and lead to deadlock.