Java in a Nutshell, 5th Edition [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

اینجــــا یک کتابخانه دیجیتالی است

با بیش از 100000 منبع الکترونیکی رایگان به زبان فارسی ، عربی و انگلیسی

Java in a Nutshell, 5th Edition [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

| نمايش فراداده ، افزودن یک نقد و بررسی
افزودن به کتابخانه شخصی
ارسال به دوستان
جستجو در متن کتاب
بیشتر
تنظیمات قلم

فونت

اندازه قلم

+ - پیش فرض

حالت نمایش

روز نیمروز شب
جستجو در لغت نامه
بیشتر
لیست موضوعات
توضیحات
افزودن یادداشت جدید


Package java.net

Java 1.0


The java.net
package provides a powerful and flexible infrastructure for
networking. This introduction describes the most commonly used
classes in brief. Note that as of Java 1.4, the New I/O API of
java.nio and java.nio.channels
can be used for high-performance nonblocking networking. See also the
javax.net.ssl package for classes for secure
networking using SSL.

The
URL class represents an Internet uniform resource
locator (URL). It provides a very simple interface to networking: the
object referred to by the URL can be downloaded with a single call,
or streams may be opened to read from or write to the object. At a
slightly more complex level, a URLConnection
object can be obtained from a given URL object.
The URLConnection class provides additional
methods that allow you to work with URLs in more sophisticated ways.
Java 1.4 introduced the URI class; it provides a
powerful API for manipulating URI and URL strings but does not have
any networking capabilities itself. Java 5.0 defines APIs for
defining and registering cache, cookie, and proxy handlers to be used
by built-in protocol handlers when network resources are requested
through the URL class. See
RequestCache, CookieHandler,
ProxySelector, and Proxy.

If you want to do more than simply
download an object referenced by a URL, you can do your own
networking with the Socket class. This class
allows you to connect to a specified port on a specified Internet
host and read and write data using the InputStream
and OutputStream classes of the
java.io package. If you want to implement a server
to accept connections from clients, you can use the related
ServerSocket class. Both Socket
and ServerSocket use the
InetAddress address class, which represents an
Internet address. Added in Java 1.4, Inet4Address
and Inet6Address are subclasses that represent the
addresses used by version 4 and version 6 of the IP protocol. Java
1.4 also introduced the SocketAddress class as a
high-level representation of a network address that is not tied to a
specific networking protocol. An IP-specific
InetSocketAddress subclass encapsulates an
InetAddress and a port number.

The java.net package allows you
to do low-level networking with DatagramPacket
objects, which may be sent and received over the network through a
DatagramSocket object.
MulticastSocket extends
DatagramSocket to support multicast networking.


Interfaces


public interface

ContentHandlerFactory ;
public interface

DatagramSocketImplFactory ;
public interface

FileNameMap ;
public interface

SocketImplFactory ;
public interface

SocketOptions ;
public interface

URLStreamHandlerFactory ;

Enumerated Types


public enum

Authenticator.RequestorType ;
public enum

Proxy.Type ;

Classes


public abstract class

Authenticator ;
public abstract class

CacheRequest ;
public abstract class

CacheResponse ;
public abstract class

SecureCacheResponse extends CacheResponse;
public abstract class

ContentHandler ;
public abstract class

CookieHandler ;
public final class

DatagramPacket ;
public class

DatagramSocket ;
public class

MulticastSocket extends DatagramSocket;
public abstract class

DatagramSocketImpl implements SocketOptions;
public class

InetAddress implements Serializable;
public final class

Inet4Address extends InetAddress;
public final class

Inet6Address extends InetAddress;
public final class

NetPermission extends java.security.BasicPermission;
public final class

NetworkInterface ;
public final class

PasswordAuthentication ;
public class

Proxy ;
public abstract class

ProxySelector ;
public abstract class

ResponseCache ;
public class

ServerSocket ;
public class

Socket ;
public abstract class

SocketAddress implements Serializable;
public class

InetSocketAddress extends SocketAddress;
public abstract class

SocketImpl implements SocketOptions;
public final class

SocketPermission extends java.security.Permission implements Serializable;
public final class

URI implements Comparable<URI>, Serializable;
public final class

URL implements Serializable;
public class

URLClassLoader extends java.security.SecureClassLoader;
public abstract class

URLConnection ;
public abstract class

HttpURLConnection extends URLConnection;
public abstract class

JarURLConnection extends URLConnection;
public class

URLDecoder ;
public class

URLEncoder ;
public abstract class

URLStreamHandler ;

Exceptions


public class

HttpRetryException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

MalformedURLException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

ProtocolException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

SocketException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

BindException extends SocketException;
public class

ConnectException extends SocketException;
public class

NoRouteToHostException extends SocketException;
public class

PortUnreachableException extends SocketException;
public class

SocketTimeoutException extends java.io.InterruptedIOException;
public class

UnknownHostException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

UnknownServiceException extends java.io.IOException;
public class

URISyntaxException extends Exception;


    / 1191