Java tutorial
/* * Copyright 2001-2005 The Apache Software Foundation * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package org.eredlab.g4.ccl.net; import java.io.IOException; import java.net.DatagramPacket; import java.net.InetAddress; import java.util.Date; /*** * The TimeUDPClient class is a UDP implementation of a client for the * Time protocol described in RFC 868. To use the class, merely * open a local datagram socket with * {@link org.apache.commons.net.DatagramSocketClient#open open } * and call {@link #getTime getTime } or * {@link #getTime getDate } to retrieve the time. Then call * {@link org.apache.commons.net.DatagramSocketClient#close close } * to close the connection properly. Unlike * {@link org.apache.commons.net.TimeTCPClient}, * successive calls to {@link #getTime getTime } or * {@link #getDate getDate } are permitted * without re-establishing a connection. That is because UDP is a * connectionless protocol and the Time protocol is stateless. * <p> * <p> * @author Daniel F. Savarese * @see TimeTCPClient ***/ public final class TimeUDPClient extends DatagramSocketClient { /*** The default time port. It is set to 37 according to RFC 868. ***/ public static final int DEFAULT_PORT = 37; /*** * The number of seconds between 00:00 1 January 1900 and * 00:00 1 January 1970. This value can be useful for converting * time values to other formats. ***/ public static final long SECONDS_1900_TO_1970 = 2208988800L; private byte[] __dummyData = new byte[1]; private byte[] __timeData = new byte[4]; /*** * Retrieves the time from the specified server and port and * returns it. The time is the number of seconds since * 00:00 (midnight) 1 January 1900 GMT, as specified by RFC 868. * This method reads the raw 32-bit big-endian * unsigned integer from the server, converts it to a Java long, and * returns the value. * <p> * @param host The address of the server. * @param port The port of the service. * @return The time value retrieved from the server. * @exception IOException If an error occurs while retrieving the time. ***/ public long getTime(InetAddress host, int port) throws IOException { long time; DatagramPacket sendPacket, receivePacket; sendPacket = new DatagramPacket(__dummyData, __dummyData.length, host, port); receivePacket = new DatagramPacket(__timeData, __timeData.length); _socket_.send(sendPacket); _socket_.receive(receivePacket); time = 0L; time |= (((__timeData[0] & 0xff) << 24) & 0xffffffffL); time |= (((__timeData[1] & 0xff) << 16) & 0xffffffffL); time |= (((__timeData[2] & 0xff) << 8) & 0xffffffffL); time |= ((__timeData[3] & 0xff) & 0xffffffffL); return time; } /*** Same as <code> getTime(host, DEFAULT_PORT); </code> ***/ public long getTime(InetAddress host) throws IOException { return getTime(host, DEFAULT_PORT); } /*** * Retrieves the time from the server and returns a Java Date * containing the time converted to the local timezone. * <p> * @param host The address of the server. * @param port The port of the service. * @return A Date value containing the time retrieved from the server * converted to the local timezone. * @exception IOException If an error occurs while fetching the time. ***/ public Date getDate(InetAddress host, int port) throws IOException { return new Date((getTime(host, port) - SECONDS_1900_TO_1970) * 1000L); } /*** Same as <code> getTime(host, DEFAULT_PORT); </code> ***/ public Date getDate(InetAddress host) throws IOException { return new Date((getTime(host, DEFAULT_PORT) - SECONDS_1900_TO_1970) * 1000L); } }